Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) for wireless communication and networks : potentials and design challenges

Abstract

Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are mostly considered by the military for surveillance and reconnaissance operations, and by hobbyists for aerial photography. However, in recent years, the UAV operations have been extended for civilian and commercial purposes due to their agile and cost-effective deployment. UAVs appear to be more prolific platforms to enable wireless communication due to their better line-of-sight (LOS) channel conditions as compared with the fixed base stations (BSs) in terrestrial communication which suffer from severe path loss, shadowing, and multipath fading in more challenging propagation environments. In UAV-enabled wireless communications, the UAV can either act as a complementary aerial BS to provide on-demand communication or as an aerial user equipment (UE) which is operated by the existing cellular network. Several challenges exist in the design of UAV communications which include but not limited to channel modeling, optimal deployment, interference generation, performance analysis, limited on-board battery lifetime, trajectory optimization, and unavailability of regulations and standards which are specific for UAV communication and networking. This thesis particularly investigates some important design challenges for safe and reliable functionalities of UAV for wireless communication and networking. UAV communication has its own distinctive channel characteristics compared to the widely used cellular or satellite systems. However, several challenges exist in UAV channel modeling. For example, the propagation characteristics of UAV channels are under explored for spatial and temporal variations in non-stationary channels. Therefore, first and foremost, this thesis provides an extensive review of the measurement methods proposed for UAV channel modeling and discusses channel modeling efforts for air-to-ground and air-to-air channels. Furthermore, knowledge-gaps are identified to realize accurate UAV channel models. The efficient deployment strategy is imperative to compensate the adverse impact of interference on the coverage area performance of multiple UAVs. As a result, this thesis proposes an optimal deployment strategy for multiple UAVs in presence of downlink co-channel interference in the worst-case scenario. In particular, this work presents coordinated multi-UAV strategy in two schemes. In the first scheme, symmetric placement of UAVs is assumed at a common optimal altitude and transmit power. In the second scheme, asymmetric deployment of UAVs with different altitudes and transmit powers is assumed. The impact of various system parameters, such as signal-to interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) threshold, separation distance between UAVs, and the number of UAVs and their formations are carefully studied to achieve the maximum coverage area inside and to reduce the unnecessary coverage expansion outside the target area. Fundamental analysis is required to obtain the optimal trade-off between the design parameters and performance metrics of any communication systems. This thesis particularly considers two emerging scenarios for evaluating performance of UAV communication systems. In the first scenario, the uplink UAV communication system is considered where the ground user follows the random waypoint (RWP) model for user mobility, the small-scale channel fading follows the Nakagami-m model, and the uplink interference is modeled by Gamma approximation. Specifically, the closed-form expressions for the probability density function (PDF), the cumulative distribution function (CDF), the outage probability, and the average bit error rate (BER) of the considered UAV system are derived as performance metrics. In the second scenario, the downlink hybrid caching system is considered where UAVs and ground small-cell BSs (SBSs) are distributed according to two independent homogeneous Poisson point processes (PPPs), and downlink interference is modeled by the Laplace transforms. Specifically, the analytical expressions of the successful content delivery probability and energy efficiency of the considered network are derived as performance metrics. In both scenarios, results are presented to demonstrate the interplay between the communication performance and the design parameters

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