78 research outputs found
Optimal Resource Allocation in Ultra-low Power Fog-computing SWIPT-based Networks
In this paper, we consider a fog computing system consisting of a
multi-antenna access point (AP), an ultra-low power (ULP) single antenna device
and a fog server. The ULP device is assumed to be capable of both energy
harvesting (EH) and information decoding (ID) using a time-switching
simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT) scheme. The ULP
device deploys the harvested energy for ID and either local computing or
offloading the computations to the fog server depending on which strategy is
most energy efficient. In this scenario, we optimize the time slots devoted to
EH, ID and local computation as well as the time slot and power required for
the offloading to minimize the energy cost of the ULP device. Numerical results
are provided to study the effectiveness of the optimized fog computing system
and the relevant challenges
On the effect of blockage objects in dense MIMO SWIPT networks
Simultaneous information and power transfer (SWIPT) is characterised by the
ambiguous role of multi-user interference. In short, the beneficial effect of
multi-user interference on RF energy harvesting is obtained at the price of a
reduced link capacity, thus originating nontrivial trade-offs between the
achievable information rate and the harvestable energy. Arguably, in indoor
environments, this trade-off might be affected by the propagation loss due to
blockage objects like walls. Hence, a couple of fundamental questions arise.
How much must the network elements be densified to counteract the blockage
attenuation? Is blockage always detrimental on the achievable rate-energy
trade-off? In this paper, we analyse the performance of an indoor
multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) SWIPT-enabled network in the attempt to
shed a light of those questions. The effects of the obstacles are examined with
the help of a stochastic approach in which energy transmitters (also referred
to as power heads) are located by using a Poisson Point Process and walls are
generated through a Manhattan Poisson Line Process. The stochastic behaviour of
the signal attenuation and the multi-user interference is studied to obtain the
Joint Complementary Cumulative Distribution Function (J-CCDF) of information
rate and harvested power. Theoretical results are validated through Monte Carlo
simulations. Eventually, the rate-energy trade-off is presented as a function
of the frequency of walls to emphasise the cross-dependences between the
deployment of the network elements and the topology of the venue
Effective capacity based resource allocation for Rayleigh-fading parallel channels
International audienceWe address the problem of allocating different powers amongst parallel channels when effective capacity is the performance metric and sum-power is constrained. We assume that Chase-Combining-HARQ mechanism is applied. Closed-form expressions for the powers are exhibited. Numerical comparisons with other power allocations obtained through either ergodic capacity or throughput optimizations are done
Energy-Efficient Power Optimization in Heterogeneous Networks: A Quasi-Variational Inequality Approach
International audience—This work deals with the power allocation problem in a multipoint-to-multipoint network, which is heterogenous in the sense that each transmit and receiver pair can arbitrarily choose whether to selfishly maximize its own rate or energy efficiency. This is achieved by modeling the transmit and receiver pairs as rational players that engage in a non-cooperative game in which the utility function changes according to each player's nature. The underlying game is reformulated as a quasi variational inequality (QVI) problem using convex fractional program theory. The equivalence between the QVI and the non-cooperative game provides us with all the mathematical tools to study the uniqueness of its Nash equilibrium (NE) points and to derive novel algorithms that allow the network to converge to these points in an iterative manner both with and without the need for a centralized processing. Numerical results are used to validate the proposed solutions in different operating conditions
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