622 research outputs found
Information-Theoretic Analysis of an Energy Harvesting Communication System
In energy harvesting communication systems, an exogenous recharge process
supplies energy for the data transmission and arriving energy can be buffered
in a battery before consumption. Transmission is interrupted if there is not
sufficient energy. We address communication with such random energy arrivals in
an information-theoretic setting. Based on the classical additive white
Gaussian noise (AWGN) channel model, we study the coding problem with random
energy arrivals at the transmitter. We show that the capacity of the AWGN
channel with stochastic energy arrivals is equal to the capacity with an
average power constraint equal to the average recharge rate. We provide two
different capacity achieving schemes: {\it save-and-transmit} and {\it
best-effort-transmit}. Next, we consider the case where energy arrivals have
time-varying average in a larger time scale. We derive the optimal offline
power allocation for maximum average throughput and provide an algorithm that
finds the optimal power allocation.Comment: Published in IEEE PIMRC, September 201
Age Minimization in Energy Harvesting Communications: Energy-Controlled Delays
We consider an energy harvesting source that is collecting measurements from
a physical phenomenon and sending updates to a destination within a
communication session time. Updates incur transmission delays that are function
of the energy used in their transmission. The more transmission energy used per
update, the faster it reaches the destination. The goal is to transmit updates
in a timely manner, namely, such that the total age of information is minimized
by the end of the communication session, subject to energy causality
constraints. We consider two variations of this problem. In the first setting,
the source controls the number of measurement updates, their transmission
times, and the amounts of energy used in their transmission (which govern their
delays, or service times, incurred). In the second setting, measurement updates
externally arrive over time, and therefore the number of updates becomes fixed,
at the expense of adding data causality constraints to the problem. We
characterize age-minimal policies in the two settings, and discuss the
relationship of the age of information metric to other metrics used in the
energy harvesting literature.Comment: Appeared in Asilomar 201
Age-Minimal Transmission in Energy Harvesting Two-hop Networks
We consider an energy harvesting two-hop network where a source is
communicating to a destination through a relay. During a given communication
session time, the source collects measurement updates from a physical
phenomenon and sends them to the relay, which then forwards them to the
destination. The objective is to send these updates to the destination as
timely as possible; namely, such that the total age of information is minimized
by the end of the communication session, subject to energy causality
constraints at the source and the relay, and data causality constraints at the
relay. Both the source and the relay use fixed, yet possibly different,
transmission rates. Hence, each update packet incurs fixed non-zero
transmission delays. We first solve the single-hop version of this problem, and
then show that the two-hop problem is solved by treating the source and relay
nodes as one combined node, with some parameter transformations, and solving a
single-hop problem between that combined node and the destination.Comment: Appeared in IEEE Globecom 201
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