2,191 research outputs found
Joint Wireless Information and Energy Transfer in a K-User MIMO Interference Channel
Recently, joint wireless information and energy transfer (JWIET) methods have
been proposed to relieve the battery limitation of wireless devices. However,
the JWIET in a general K-user MIMO interference channel (IFC) has been
unexplored so far. In this paper, we investigate for the first time the JWIET
in K-user MIMO IFC, in which receivers either decode the incoming information
data (information decoding, ID) or harvest the RF energy (energy harvesting,
EH). In the K-user IFC, we consider three different scenarios according to the
receiver mode -- i) multiple EH receivers and a single ID receiver, ii)
multiple IDs and a single EH, and iii) multiple IDs and multiple EHs. For all
scenarios, we have found a common necessary condition of the optimal
transmission strategy and, accordingly, developed the transmission strategy
that satisfies the common necessary condition, in which all the transmitters
transferring energy exploit a rank-one energy beamforming. Furthermore, we have
also proposed an iterative algorithm to optimize the covariance matrices of the
transmitters that transfer information and the powers of the energy beamforming
transmitters simultaneously, and identified the corresponding achievable
rate-energy tradeoff region. Finally, we have shown that by selecting EH
receivers according to their signal-to-leakage-and-harvested energy-ratio
(SLER), we can improve the achievable rate-energy region further.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1303.169
Energy Cooperation in Battery-Free Wireless Communications with Radio Frequency Energy Harvesting
Radio frequency (RF) energy harvesting techniques are becoming a potential method to power battery-free wireless networks. In RF energy harvesting communications, energy cooperation enables shaping and optimization of the energy arrivals at the energy-receiving node to improve the overall system performance. In this paper, we proposed an energy cooperation scheme that enables energy cooperation in battery-free wireless networks with RF harvesting. We first study the battery-free wireless network with RF energy harvesting then state the problem that optimizing the system performance with limited harvesting energy through new energy cooperation protocol. Finally, from the extensive simulation results, our energy cooperation protocol performs better than the original battery-free wireless network solution.特
Optimal Save-Then-Transmit Protocol for Energy Harvesting Wireless Transmitters
In this paper, the design of a wireless communication device relying
exclusively on energy harvesting is considered. Due to the inability of
rechargeable energy sources to charge and discharge at the same time, a
constraint we term the energy half-duplex constraint, two rechargeable energy
storage devices (ESDs) are assumed so that at any given time, there is always
one ESD being recharged. The energy harvesting rate is assumed to be a random
variable that is constant over the time interval of interest. A
save-then-transmit (ST) protocol is introduced, in which a fraction of time
{\rho} (dubbed the save-ratio) is devoted exclusively to energy harvesting,
with the remaining fraction 1 - {\rho} used for data transmission. The ratio of
the energy obtainable from an ESD to the energy harvested is termed the energy
storage efficiency, {\eta}. We address the practical case of the secondary ESD
being a battery with {\eta} < 1, and the main ESD being a super-capacitor with
{\eta} = 1. The optimal save-ratio that minimizes outage probability is
derived, from which some useful design guidelines are drawn. In addition, we
compare the outage performance of random power supply to that of constant power
supply over the Rayleigh fading channel. The diversity order with random power
is shown to be the same as that of constant power, but the performance gap can
be large. Furthermore, we extend the proposed ST protocol to wireless networks
with multiple transmitters. It is shown that the system-level outage
performance is critically dependent on the relationship between the number of
transmitters and the optimal save-ratio for single-channel outage minimization.
Numerical results are provided to validate our proposed study.Comment: This is the longer version of a paper to appear in IEEE Transactions
on Wireless Communication
Energy Harvesting Wireless Communications: A Review of Recent Advances
This article summarizes recent contributions in the broad area of energy
harvesting wireless communications. In particular, we provide the current state
of the art for wireless networks composed of energy harvesting nodes, starting
from the information-theoretic performance limits to transmission scheduling
policies and resource allocation, medium access and networking issues. The
emerging related area of energy transfer for self-sustaining energy harvesting
wireless networks is considered in detail covering both energy cooperation
aspects and simultaneous energy and information transfer. Various potential
models with energy harvesting nodes at different network scales are reviewed as
well as models for energy consumption at the nodes.Comment: To appear in the IEEE Journal of Selected Areas in Communications
(Special Issue: Wireless Communications Powered by Energy Harvesting and
Wireless Energy Transfer
Joint Wireless Information and Energy Transfer with Reduced Feedback in MIMO Interference Channels
To determine the transmission strategy for joint wireless information and
energy transfer (JWIET) in the MIMO interference channel (IFC), the information
access point (IAP) and energy access point (EAP) require the channel state
information (CSI) of their associated links to both the information-decoding
(ID) mobile stations (MSs) and energy-harvesting (EH) MSs (so-called local
CSI). In this paper, to reduce th e feedback overhead of MSs for the JWIET in
two-user MIMO IFC, we propose a Geodesic energy beamforming scheme that
requires partial CSI at the EAP. Furthermore, in the two-user MIMO IFC, it is
proved that the Geodesic energy beamforming is the optimal strategy. By adding
a rank-one constraint on the transmit signal covariance of IAP, we can further
reduce the feedback overhead to IAP by exploiting Geodesic information
beamforming. Under the rank-one constraint of IAP's transmit signal, we prove
that Geodesic information/energy beamforming approach is the optimal strategy
for JWIET in the two-user MIMO IFC. We also discuss the extension of the
proposed rank-one Geodesic information/energy beamforming strategies to general
K-user MIMO IFC. Finally, by analyzing the achievable rate-energy performance
statistically under imperfect partial CSIT, we propose an adaptive bit
allocation strategy for both EH MS and ID MS.Comment: accepted to IEEE Journal of Selected Areas in Communications (IEEE
JSAC), Special Issue on Wireless Communications Powered by Energy Harvesting
and Wireless Energy Transfe
- …