Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://repositorio.ufc.br/handle/riufc/60062
Tipo: Artigo de Evento
Título: Cognitive Incremental Relaying Networks with Spectrum Sharing and Hardware Impairments
Título em inglês: Cognitive Incremental Relaying Networks with Spectrum Sharing and Hardware Impairments
Autor(es): Gomes, Samuel Borges Ferreira
Costa, Daniel Benevides da
Dias, Ugo Silva
Sousa Junior, Rafael Timóteo de
Palavras-chave: Incremental relaying;Cognitive radio;Cooperative networks;Hardware impairments;Multiple relays;Spectrum shar ing
Data do documento: 2018
Instituição/Editor/Publicador: https://www.sbrt.org.br/sbrt2018
Resumo: In this paper, we investigate the outage performance of underlay cognitive amplify-and-forward incremental relaying networks with multiple relays and subject to hardware impairments. Unlike regular cooperative diversity networks, which make an inefficient use of the channel resources because relays always forward the source signal regardless the channel conditions, incremental relaying exploits limited feedback from the destination terminal, and sends a single bit to indicate success. If the destination provides a negative bit via feedback, the relay retransmits an amplified version of the source signal. The end-to-end signal-to-noise-and-distortion ratio (SNDR) of incremental relaying over independent non-identical Rayleigh fading channels is formulated for partial relay selection (PR) and opportunistic relay selection (OR) schemes, based on which the respective outage probabilities are evaluated. Our simulation results show that the incremental relaying protocol can achieve maximum diversity with a more efficient channel utilization and better performance compared to fixed cooperation.
Abstract: In this paper, we investigate the outage performance of underlay cognitive amplify-and-forward incremental relaying networks with multiple relays and subject to hardware impairments. Unlike regular cooperative diversity networks, which make an inefficient use of the channel resources because relays always forward the source signal regardless the channel conditions, incremental relaying exploits limited feedback from the destination terminal, and sends a single bit to indicate success. If the destination provides a negative bit via feedback, the relay retransmits an amplified version of the source signal. The end-to-end signal-to-noise-and-distortion ratio (SNDR) of incremental relaying over independent non-identical Rayleigh fading channels is formulated for partial relay selection (PR) and opportunistic relay selection (OR) schemes, based on which the respective outage probabilities are evaluated. Our simulation results show that the incremental relaying protocol can achieve maximum diversity with a more efficient channel utilization and better performance compared to fixed cooperation.
URI: http://www.repositorio.ufc.br/handle/riufc/60062
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