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Wireless Information Transfer with Opportunistic Energy Harvesting

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors considered a point-to-point wireless link over the narrowband flat-fading channel subject to time-varying co-channel interference and derived the optimal mode switching rule at the receiver to achieve various trade-offs between wireless information transfer and energy harvesting.
Abstract
Energy harvesting is a promising solution to prolong the operation of energy-constrained wireless networks. In particular, scavenging energy from ambient radio signals, namely wireless energy harvesting (WEH), has recently drawn significant attention. In this paper, we consider a point-to-point wireless link over the narrowband flat-fading channel subject to time-varying co-channel interference. It is assumed that the receiver has no fixed power supplies and thus needs to replenish energy opportunistically via WEH from the unintended interference and/or the intended signal sent by the transmitter. We further assume a single-antenna receiver that can only decode information or harvest energy at any time due to the practical circuit limitation. Therefore, it is important to investigate when the receiver should switch between the two modes of information decoding (ID) and energy harvesting (EH), based on the instantaneous channel and interference condition. In this paper, we derive the optimal mode switching rule at the receiver to achieve various trade-offs between wireless information transfer and energy harvesting. Specifically, we determine the minimum transmission outage probability for delay-limited information transfer and the maximum ergodic capacity for no-delay-limited information transfer versus the maximum average energy harvested at the receiver, which are characterized by the boundary of so-called "outage-energy" region and "rate-energy" region, respectively. Moreover, for the case when the channel state information (CSI) is known at the transmitter, we investigate the joint optimization of transmit power control, information and energy transfer scheduling, and the receiver's mode switching. The effects of circuit energy consumption at the receiver on the achievable rate-energy trade-offs are also characterized. Our results provide useful guidelines for the efficient design of emerging wireless communication systems powered by opportunistic WEH.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Simultaneous energy harvesting and information processing considering multi‐relay multi‐antenna using maximum ratio transmission and antenna selection strategies

TL;DR: Ability of energy harvesting is increased compared with single‐relay or single‐antenna system and thus the system performance will be improved considerably and the maximum ratio transmit method has better performance compared with Antenna Selection one.
Journal ArticleDOI

Resource Allocation for Simultaneous Wireless Information and Power Transfer Systems: A Tutorial Overview

TL;DR: In this article , the authors provide a comprehensive tutorial overview of SWIPT from the perspective of resource allocation design, including the fundamental concepts, system architectures, and RF energy harvesting (EH) models.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Performance analysis in wireless power transfer system over Nakagami fading channels

TL;DR: A single-hop wireless powered communication system in which one source receives energy from one power transfer station and uses this energy to transmit its information to the destination and derives closed-form expressions for outage probability, throughput and average symbol error probability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Embracing non-orthogonalmultiple access in future wireless networks

TL;DR: A comprehensive survey of the impact of the emerging communication technique, non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA), on future wireless networks and the applications of NOMA to other advanced communication techniques are provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Achievable Rate Region of Energy-Harvesting Based Secure Two-Way Buffer-Aided Relay Networks

TL;DR: Analysis of an energy-harvesting based secure two-way relay network showed that the average achievable secrecy rate region can be significantly improved and there exists an inherent trade-off among transmission delay, requirement of transmit power consumption, and achievable secure sum-rate.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Interference Alignment and Degrees of Freedom of the $K$ -User Interference Channel

TL;DR: For the fully connected K user wireless interference channel where the channel coefficients are time-varying and are drawn from a continuous distribution, the sum capacity is characterized as C(SNR)=K/2log (SNR)+o(log( SNR), which almost surely has K/2 degrees of freedom.
Journal ArticleDOI

MIMO Broadcasting for Simultaneous Wireless Information and Power Transfer

TL;DR: This paper studies a multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) wireless broadcast system consisting of three nodes, where one receiver harvests energy and another receiver decodes information separately from the signals sent by a common transmitter, and all the transmitter and receivers may be equipped with multiple antennas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Capacity of fading channels with channel side information

TL;DR: The Shannon capacity of a fading channel with channel side information at the transmitter and receiver, and at the receiver alone is obtained, analogous to water-pouring in frequency for time-invariant frequency-selective fading channels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fading channels: information-theoretic and communications aspects

TL;DR: This paper describes the statistical models of fading channels which are frequently used in the analysis and design of communication systems, and focuses on the information theory of fading channel, by emphasizing capacity as the most important performance measure.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new achievable rate region for the interference channel

TL;DR: A new achievable rate region for the general interference channel which extends previous results is presented and evaluated and the capacity of a class of Gaussian interference channels is established.
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