Researcher profile

Nikola Zlatanov

Nikola Zlatanov contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

38 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

A Method For Bounding Tail Probabilities

We present a method for upper and lower bounding the right and the left tail probabilities of continuous random variables (RVs). For the right tail probability of RV $X$ with probability density function $f (x)$, this method requires first setting a continuous, positive, and strictly decreasing function $g (x)$ such that $-f (x)/g&#39; (x)$ is a decreasing and increasing function, $\forall x>x_0$, which results in upper and lower bounds, respectively, given in the form $-f (x) g (x)/g&#39; (x)$, $\forall x>x_0$, where $x_0$ is some point. Similarly, for the upper and lower bounds on the left tail probability of $X$, this method requires first setting a continuous, positive, and strictly increasing function $g (x)$ such that $f (x)/g&#39; (x)$ is an increasing and decreasing function, $\forall x<x_0$, which results in upper and lower bounds, respectively, given in the form $f (x) g (x)/g&#39; (x)$, $\forall x<x_0$. We provide some examples of good candidates for the function $g (x)$. We also establish connections between the new bounds and Markov&#39;s inequality and Chernoff&#39;s bound. In addition, we provide an iterative method for obtaining ever tighter lower and upper bounds, under certain conditions. As an application, we use the proposed method to derive a novel closed-form asymptotic expression of the converse bound on the capacity of the additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) channel in the finite-blocklength regime, which is tighter than the closed-form asymptotic expression by Polyanskiy-Poor-VerdĂș. Finally, we provide numerical examples where we show the tightness of the bounds obtained by the proposed method.

preprint2026arXiv

Recurrent Transformer-Based Near- and Far-Field THz Wideband Channel Estimation for UM-MIMO

The integration of terahertz communications and ultra-massive multiple-input multiple-output (UM-MIMO) systems in 6G networks is motivated by their ability to enable unprecedented data rates, mitigate spectrum congestion, and enhance overall network performance. However, the enlarged antenna apertures and higher carrier frequencies in these systems increase the Rayleigh distance, causing users to span both the near-field and conventional far-field regions. Accurate spatial precoding thus requires exact channel estimation at the base station - a task made more challenging by the hybrid coexistence of near- and far-field effects and the limited number of digital chains available in hybrid beamforming architectures. In this paper, we propose a block recurrent transformer model to address this challenge. We demonstrate that a single transformer block equipped with state memory can be trained once and then iteratively applied for hybrid-field channel estimation. Furthermore, we train the model such that it generalizes to wireless channels with varying scatterer distances, different numbers of propagation paths, and wideband operation. Simulation results show that the proposed method achieves performance gains of approximately 5 dB and 7.5 dB in normalized mean squared error (NMSE) over state-of-the-art solutions in narrowband and wideband scenarios, respectively.

preprint2022arXiv

Chemical Reactions-based Detection Mechanism for Molecular Communications

In molecular communications, the direct detection of signaling molecules may be challenging due to a lack of suitable sensors and interference in the environment. Motivated by research in molecular biology, we investigate an indirect detection mechanism using chemical reactions between the signaling molecules and a molecular probe to produce an easy-to-measure product at the receiver. We consider two implementations of the proposed detection mechanism, i.e., unrestricted probe movement and probes restricted to a volume around the receiver. The reaction-diffusion equations describing the concentrations of the reactant and product molecules in the system are non-linear and coupled, and cannot be solved in closed form. Therefore, we develop an efficient iterative algorithm by discretizing the time variable and solving for the space variables of the equations in each time step. Our results show that the concentrations of the product molecules and the signalling molecules share a similar characteristic over time, i.e., a single peak and a long tail. The peak and tail values of the product molecule concentration can be controlled by choosing probes with suitable parameters. By carefully choosing the molecular probe and optimizing the decision threshold, the BER can be improved significantly and outperform that of a direct detection system.

preprint2022arXiv

Learning Optimal Phase-Shifts of Holographic Metasurface Transceivers

Holographic metasurface transceivers (HMT) is an emerging technology for enhancing the coverage and rate of wireless communication systems. However, acquiring accurate channel state information in HMT-assisted wireless communication systems is critical for achieving these goals. In this paper, we propose an algorithm for learning the optimal phase-shifts at a HMT for the far-field channel model. Our proposed algorithm exploits the structure of the channel gains in the far-field regions and learns the optimal phase-shifts in presence of noise in the received signals. We prove that the probability that the optimal phase-shifts estimated by our proposed algorithm deviate from the true values decays exponentially in the number of pilot signals. Extensive numerical simulations validate the theoretical guarantees and also demonstrate significant gains as compared to the state-of-the-art policies.

preprint2022arXiv

Parametric Channel Model Estimation for Large Intelligent Surface-Based Transceiver-assisted Communication System

The number of connected mobile devices and the amount of data traffic through these devices are expected to grow many-fold in future communication networks. To support the scale of this huge data traffic, more and more base stations and wireless terminals are required to be deployed in existing networks. Nevertheless, practically deploying a large number of base stations having massive antenna arrays will substantially increase the hardware cost and power consumption of the network. A promising approach for enhancing the coverage and rate of wireless communication systems is the large intelligent surface-based transceiver (LISBT), which uses a spatially continuous surface for signal transmission and receiving. A typical LIS consists of a planar array having a large number of reflecting metamaterial elements (e.g., low-cost printed dipoles), each of which could act as a phase shift. It is also considered to be a cost effective and energy efficient solution. Accurate channel state information (CSI) in LISBT-assisted wireless communication systems is critical for achieving these goals. In this paper, we propose a channel estimation scheme based on the physical parameters of the system. that requires only five pilot signals to perfectly estimate the channel parameters assuming there is no noise at the receiver. In the presence of noise, we propose an iterative estimation algorithm that decreases the channel estimation error due to noise. The proposed scheme&#39;s training overhead and computational cost do not grow with the number of antennas, unlike previous work on enormous multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO). The channel estimate scheme based on the physical properties of the Large intelligent surface-based transceiver (LISBT)-assisted wireless communication systems is the subject of our future study.

preprint2022arXiv

UB3: Best Beam Identification in Millimeter Wave Systems via Pure Exploration Unimodal Bandits

Millimeter wave (mmWave) communications have a broad spectrum and can support data rates in the order of gigabits per second, as envisioned in 5G systems. However, they cannot be used for long distances due to their sensitivity to attenuation loss. To enable their use in the 5G network, it requires that the transmission energy be focused in sharp pencil beams. As any misalignment between the transmitter and receiver beam pair can reduce the data rate significantly, it is important that they are aligned as much as possible. To find the best transmit-receive beam pair, recent beam alignment (BA) techniques examine the entire beam space, which might result in a large amount of BA latency. Recent works propose to adaptively select the beams such that the cumulative reward measured in terms of received signal strength or throughput is maximized. In this paper, we develop an algorithm that exploits the unimodal structure of the received signal strengths of the beams to identify the best beam in a finite time using pure exploration strategies. Strategies that identify the best beam in a fixed time slot are more suitable for wireless network protocol design than cumulative reward maximization strategies that continuously perform exploration and exploitation. Our algorithm is named Unimodal Bandit for Best Beam (UB3) and identifies the best beam with a high probability in a few rounds. We prove that the error exponent in the probability does not depend on the number of beams and show that this is indeed the case by establishing a lower bound for the unimodal bandits. We demonstrate that UB3 outperforms the state-of-the-art algorithms through extensive simulations. Moreover, our algorithm is simple to implement and has lower computational complexity.

preprint2020arXiv

Deep Reinforcement Learning-Aided Random Access

We consider a system model comprised of an access point (AP) and K Internet of Things (IoT) nodes that sporadically become active in order to send data to the AP. The AP is assumed to have N time-frequency resource blocks that it can allocate to the IoT nodes that wish to send data, where N < K. The main problem is how to allocate the N time-frequency resource blocks to the IoT nodes in each time slot such that the average packet rate is maximized. For this problem, we propose a deep reinforcement learning (DRL)-aided random access (RA) scheme, where an intelligent DRL agent at the AP learns to predict the activity of the IoT nodes in each time slot and grants time-frequency resource blocks to the IoT nodes predicted as active. Next, the IoT nodes that are missclassified as non-active by the DRL agent, as well as unseen or newly arrived nodes in the cell, employ the standard RA scheme in order to obtain time-frequency resource blocks. We leverage expert knowledge for faster training of the DRL agent. Our numerical results show significant improvements in terms of average packet rate when the proposed DRL-aided RA scheme is implemented compared to the existing solution used in practice, the standard RA scheme.

preprint2020arXiv

Dynamic Time-Frequency Division Duplex

In this paper, we introduce dynamic time-frequency-division duplex (D-TFDD), which is a novel duplexing scheme that combines time-division duplex (TDD) and frequency-division duplex (FDD). In D-TFDD, a user receives from the base station (BS) on the downlink in one frequency band and transmits to the BS on the uplink in another frequency band, as in FDD. Next, the user shares its uplink transmission (downlink reception) on the corresponding frequency band with the uplink transmission or the downlink reception of another user in a D-TDD fashion. Hence, in a given frequency band, the BS communicates with user 1 (U1) and user 2 (U2) in a D-TDD fashion. The proposed D-TFDD scheme does not require inter-cell interference (ICI) knowledge and only requires channel state information (CSI) of the local BS-U1 and BS-U2 channels. Thereby, it is practical for implementation. The proposed D-TFDD scheme increases the throughput region between the BS and the two users in a given frequency band, and significantly decreases the outage probabilities on the corresponding BS-U1 and BS-U2 channels. Most importantly, the proposed D-TFDD scheme doubles the diversity gain on both the corresponding BS-U1 and the BS-U2 channels compared to the diversity gain of existing duplexing schemes, which results in very large performance gains.

preprint2020arXiv

Fractionally-Spaced Equalization and Decision Feedback Sequence Detection for Diffusive MC

In this paper, we consider diffusive molecular communication (MC) systems affected by signal-dependent diffusive noise, inter-symbol interference, and external noise. We design linear and nonlinear fractionally-spaced equalization schemes and a detection scheme which combines decision feedback and sequence detection (DFSD). In contrast to the symbol-rate equalization schemes in the MC literature, the proposed equalization and detection schemes exploit multiple samples of the received signal per symbol interval to achieve lower bit error rates (BERs) than existing schemes. The proposed DFSD scheme achieves a BER which is very close to that achieved by maximum likelihood sequence detection, but with lower computational complexity.

preprint2020arXiv

Learning to Optimize Energy Efficiency in Energy Harvesting Wireless Sensor Networks

We study wireless power transmission by an energy source to multiple energy harvesting nodes with the aim to maximize the energy efficiency. The source transmits energy to the nodes using one of the available power levels in each time slot and the nodes transmit information back to the energy source using the harvested energy. The source does not have any channel state information and it only knows whether a received codeword from a given node was successfully decoded or not. With this limited information, the source has to learn the optimal power level that maximizes the energy efficiency of the network. We model the problem as a stochastic Multi-Armed Bandits problem and develop an Upper Confidence Bound based algorithm, which learns the optimal transmit power of the energy source that maximizes the energy efficiency. Numerical results validate the performance guarantees of the proposed algorithm and show significant gains compared to the benchmark schemes.

preprint2020arXiv

Optimal Centralized Dynamic-Time-Division-Duplex

In this paper, we derive the optimal centralized dynamic-time-division-duplex (D-TDD) scheme for a wireless network comprised of $K$ full-duplex nodes impaired by self-interference and additive white Gaussian noise. As a special case, we also provide the optimal centralized D-TDD scheme when the nodes are half-duplex as well as when the wireless network is comprised of both half-duplex and full-duplex nodes. Thereby, we derive the optimal adaptive scheduling of the reception, transmission, simultaneous reception and transmission, and silence at every node in the network in each time slot such that the rate region of the network is maximized. The performance of the optimal centralized D-TDD can serve as an upper-bound to any other TDD scheme, which is useful in qualifying the relative performance of TDD schemes. The numerical results show that the proposed centralized D-TDD scheme achieves significant rate gains over existing centralized D-TDD schemes.

preprint2020arXiv

Optimal Detection Interval for Absorbing Receivers in Molecular Communication Systems with Interference

We consider a molecular communication system comprised of a transmitter, an absorbing receiver, and an interference source. Assuming amplitude modulation, we analyze the dependence of the bit error rate (BER) on the detection interval, which is the time within one transmission symbol interval during which the receiver is active to absorb and detect the number of information-carrying molecules. We then propose efficient algorithms to determine the optimal detection interval that minimizes the BER of the molecular communication system assuming no inter-symbol interference (ISI). Simulation and numerical evaluations are provided to highlight further insights into the optimal results. For example, we demonstrate that the optimal detection interval can be very small compared to the transmission symbol interval. Moreover, our numerical results show that significant BER improvements are achieved by using the optimal detection interval for systems without and with ISI.

preprint2016arXiv

Capacity of the Gaussian Two-Hop Full-Duplex Relay Channel with Residual Self-Interference

In this paper, we investigate the capacity of the Gaussian two-hop full-duplex (FD) relay channel with residual self-interference. This channel is comprised of a source, an FD relay, and a destination, where a direct source-destination link does not exist and the FD relay is impaired by residual self-interference. We adopt the worst-case linear self-interference model with respect to the channel capacity, and model the residual self-interference as a Gaussian random variable whose variance depends on the amplitude of the transmit symbol of the relay. For this channel, we derive the capacity and propose an explicit capacity-achieving coding scheme. Thereby, we show that the optimal input distribution at the source is Gaussian and its variance depends on the amplitude of the transmit symbol of the relay. On the other hand, the optimal input distribution at the relay is discrete or Gaussian, where the latter case occurs only when the relay-destination link is the bottleneck link. The derived capacity converges to the capacity of the two-hop ideal FD relay channel without self-interference and to the capacity of the two-hop half-duplex (HD) relay channel in the limiting cases when the residual self-interference is zero and infinite, respectively. Our numerical results show that significant performance gains are achieved with the proposed capacity-achieving coding scheme compared to the achievable rates of conventional HD relaying and/or conventional FD relaying.

preprint2016arXiv

Capacity of the Two-Hop Relay Channel with Wireless Energy Transfer from Relay to Source and Energy Transmission Cost

In this paper, we investigate a communication system comprised of an energy harvesting (EH) source which harvests radio frequency (RF) energy from an out-of-band full-duplex relay node and exploits this energy to transmit data to a destination node via the relay node. We assume two scenarios for the battery of the EH source. In the first scenario, we assume that the EH source is not equipped with a battery and thereby cannot store energy. As a result, the RF energy harvested during one symbol interval can only be used in the following symbol interval. In the second scenario, we assume that the EH source is equipped with a battery having unlimited storage capacity in which it can store the harvested RF energy. As a result, the RF energy harvested during one symbol interval can be used in any of the following symbol intervals. For both system models, we derive the channel capacity subject to an average power constraint at the relay and an additional energy transmission cost at the EH source. We compare the derived capacities to the achievable rates of several benchmark schemes. Our results show that using the optimal input distributions at both the EH source and the relay is essential for high performance. Moreover, we demonstrate that neglecting the energy transmission cost at the source can result in a severe overestimation of the achievable performance.

preprint2016arXiv

Cooperative Wireless Backhauling

We consider wireless backhauling for a scenario where two small-cell base stations (SC-BSs) employ the same time and frequency resources for offloading their data to a common macro-cell base station (MC-BS). The two SC-BSs allocate a part of the shared resource to exchange data in order to be able to cooperate to boost the backhaul capacity. For this scenario, we develop the optimal transmission strategy which, based on the channel state information, determines whether the SC-BSs should exchange data and cooperate or transmit their data independently to the MC-BS. Our numerical results demonstrate the superiority of the proposed cooperative~wireless backhauling protocol compared to existing protocols in the literature.

preprint2016arXiv

Multi-Objective Resource Allocation in Full-Duplex SWIPT Systems

In this paper, we investigate the resource allocation algorithm design for full-duplex simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (FD-SWIPT) systems. The considered system comprises a FD radio base station, multiple single-antenna half-duplex (HD) users, and multiple energy harvesters equipped with multiple antennas. We propose a multi-objective optimization framework to study the trade-off between uplink transmit power minimization, downlink transmit power minimization, and total harvested energy maximization. The considered optimization framework takes into account heterogeneous quality of service requirements for uplink and downlink communication and wireless power transfer. The non-convex multi-objective optimization problem is transformed into an equivalent rank-constrained semidefinite program (SDP) and solved optimally by SDP relaxation. The solution of the proposed framework results in a set of Pareto optimal resource allocation policies. Numerical results unveil an interesting trade-off between the considered conflicting system design objectives and reveal the improved power efficiency facilitated by FD in SWIPT systems compared to traditional HD systems.

preprint2016arXiv

Rate Maximization of Decode-and-Forward Relaying Systems with RF Energy Harvesting

We consider a three-node decode-and-forward (DF) half-duplex relaying system, where the source first harvests RF energy from the relay, and then uses this energy to transmit information to the destination via the relay. We assume that the information transfer and wireless power transfer phases alternate over time in the same frequency band, and their {\it time fraction} (TF) may change or be fixed from one transmission epoch (fading state) to the next. For this system, we maximize the achievable average data rate. Thereby, we propose two schemes: (1) jointly optimal power and TF allocation, and (2) optimal power allocation with fixed TF. Due to the small amounts of harvested power at the source, the two schemes achieve similar information rates, but yield significant performance gains compared to a benchmark system with fixed power and fixed TF allocation.

preprint2016arXiv

Robust Beamforming for SWIPT Systems with Non-linear Energy Harvesting Model

This paper investigates resource allocation for simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT) downlink systems based on a non-linear energy harvesting model. The resource allocation algorithm design is formulated as a non-convex optimization problem for the maximization of the total harvested power. The proposed problem formulation not only takes into account imperfect channel state information (CSI) but also guarantees the quality-of-service (QoS) of information transfer. A novel iterative algorithm is proposed to obtain the globally optimal solution of the considered non-convex optimization problem. In each iteration, a rank-constrained semidefinite program (SDP) is solved optimally by SDP relaxation. Simulation results demonstrate the significant gains in harvested power and the robustness against CSI imperfection for the proposed optimal resource allocation, compared to a baseline scheme designed for perfect CSI and the conventional linear energy harvesting model.

preprint2016arXiv

Robust Resource Allocation for Full-Duplex Cognitive Radio Systems

In this paper, we investigate resource allocation algorithm design for full-duplex (FD) cognitive radio systems. The secondary network employs a FD base station for serving multiple half-duplex downlink and uplink users simultaneously. We study the resource allocation design for minimizing the maximum interference leakage to primary users while providing quality of service for secondary users. The imperfectness of the channel state information of the primary users is taken into account for robust resource allocation algorithm design. The algorithm design is formulated as a non-convex optimization problem and solved optimally by applying semidefinite programming (SDP) relaxation. Simulation results not only show the significant reduction in interference leakage compared to baseline schemes, but also confirm the robustness of the proposed algorithm.

preprint2015arXiv

Achievable Rates for the Fading Half-Duplex Single Relay Selection Network Using Buffer-Aided Relaying

In the half-duplex single relay selection network, comprised of a source, $M$ half-duplex relays, and a destination, only one relay is active at any given time, i.e., only one relay receives or transmits, and the other relays are inactive, i.e., they do not receive nor transmit. The capacity of this network, when all links are affected by independent slow time-continuous fading and additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN), is still unknown, and only achievable average rates have been reported in the literature so far. In this paper, we present new achievable average rates for this network which are larger than the best known average rates. These new average rates are achieved with a buffer-aided relaying protocol. Since the developed buffer-aided protocol introduces unbounded delay, we also devise a buffer-aided protocol which limits the delay at the expense of a decrease in rate. Moreover, we discuss the practical implementation of the proposed buffer-aided relaying protocols and show that they do not require more resources for channel state information acquisition than the existing relay selection protocols.

preprint2015arXiv

Multi-Objective Beamforming for Energy-Efficient SWIPT Systems

In this paper, we study the resource allocation algorithm design for energy-efficient simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT) systems. The considered system comprises a transmitter, an information receiver, and multiple energy harvesting receivers equipped with multiple antennas. We propose a multi-objective optimization framework to study the trade-off between the maximization of the energy efficiency of information transmission and the maximization of wireless power transfer efficiency. The proposed problem formulation takes into account the per antenna circuit power consumption of the transmitter and the imperfect channel state information of the energy harvesting receivers. The adopted non-convex multi-objective optimization problem is transformed into an equivalent rank-constrained semidefinite program (SDP) and optimally solved by SDP relaxation. Numerical results unveil an interesting trade-off between the considered conflicting system design objectives and reveal the benefits of multiple transmit antennas for improving system energy efficiency.

preprint2015arXiv

On the Capacity of the Two-Hop Half-Duplex Relay Channel

Although extensively investigated, the capacity of the two-hop half-duplex (HD) relay channel is not fully understood. In particular, a capacity expression which can be easily evaluated is not available and an explicit coding scheme which achieves the capacity is not known either. In this paper, we derive a new expression for the capacity of the two-hop HD relay channel by simplifying previously derived converse expressions. Compared to previous results, the new capacity expression can be easily evaluated. Moreover, we propose an explicit coding scheme which achieves the capacity. To achieve the capacity, the relay does not only send information to the destination by transmitting information-carrying symbols but also with the zero symbols resulting from the relay&#39;s silence during reception. As examples, we compute the capacities of the two-hop HD relay channel for the cases when the source-relay and relay-destination links are both binary-symmetric channels (BSCs) and additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) channels, respectively, and numerically compare the capacities with the rates achieved by conventional relaying where the relay receives and transmits in a codeword-by-codeword fashion and switches between reception and transmission in a strictly alternating manner. Our numerical results show that the capacities of the two-hop HD relay channel for BSC and AWGN links are significantly larger than the rates achieved with conventional relaying.

preprint2015arXiv

On the Capacity of the Two-Hop Half-Duplex Relay Channel

Although extensively investigated, the capacity of the two-hop half-duplex (HD) relay channel is not fully understood. In particular, a capacity expression which can be evaluated straightforwardly is not available and an explicit coding scheme which achieves the capacity is not known either. In this paper, we derive a new expression for the capacity of the two-hop HD relay channel based on a simplified converse. Compared to previous results, this capacity expression can be easily evaluated. Moreover, we propose an explicit coding scheme which achieves the capacity. To achieve the capacity, the relay does not only send information to the destination by transmitting information-carrying symbols but also with the zero symbols resulting from the relay&#39;s silence during reception. As examples, we compute the capacities of the two-hop HD relay channel for the cases when the source-relay and relay-destination links are both binary-symmetric channels (BSCs) and additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) channels, respectively, and numerically compare the capacities with the rates achieved by conventional relaying where the relay receives and transmits in a codeword-by-codeword fashion and switches between reception and transmission in a strictly alternating manner. Our numerical results show that the capacities of the two-hop HD relay channel for BSC and AWGN links are significantly larger than the rates achieved with conventional relaying.

preprint2015arXiv

Practical Non-linear Energy Harvesting Model and Resource Allocation for SWIPT Systems

In this letter, we propose a practical non-linear energy harvesting model and design a resource allocation algorithm for simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT) systems. The algorithm design is formulated as a non-convex optimization problem for the maximization of the total harvested power at energy harvesting receivers subject to minimum required signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratios (SINRs) at multiple information receivers. We transform the considered non-convex objective function from sum-of-ratios form into an equivalent objective function in subtractive form, which enables the derivation of an efficient iterative resource allocation algorithm. In each iteration, a rank-constrained semidefinite program (SDP) is solved optimally by SDP relaxation. Numerical results unveil a substantial performance gain that can be achieved if the resource allocation design is based on the proposed non-linear energy harvesting model instead of the traditional linear model.

preprint2014arXiv

A Delay-Constrained Protocol with Adaptive Mode Selection for Bidirectional Relay Networks

In this paper, we consider a bidirectional relay network with half-duplex nodes and block fading where the nodes transmit with a fixed transmission rate. Thereby, user 1 and user 2 exchange information only via a relay node, i.e., a direct link between both users is not present. Recently in [1], it was shown that a considerable gain in terms of sum throughput can be obtained in bidirectional relaying by optimally selecting the transmission modes or, equivalently, the states of the nodes, i.e., the transmit, the receive, and the silent states, in each time slot based on the qualities of the involved links. To enable adaptive transmission mode selection, the relay has to be equipped with two buffers for storage of the data received from the two users. However, the protocol proposed in [1] was delay-unconstrained and provides an upper bound for the performance of practical delay-constrained protocols. In this paper, we propose a heuristic but efficient delay-constrained protocol which can approach the performance upper bound reported in [1], even in cases where only a small average delay is permitted. In particular, the proposed protocol does not only take into account the instantaneous qualities of the involved links for adaptive mode selection but also the states of the queues at the buffers. The average throughput and the average delay of the proposed delay-constrained protocol are evaluated by analyzing the Markov chain of the states of the queues.

preprint2014arXiv

Adaptive Mode Selection for Bidirectional Relay Networks -- Fixed Rate Transmission

In this paper, we consider the problem of sum throughput maximization for bidirectional relay networks with block fading. Thereby, user 1 and user 2 exchange information only via a relay node, i.e., a direct link between both users is not present. We assume that channel state information at the transmitter (CSIT) is not available and/or only one coding and modulation scheme is used at the transmitters due to complexity constraints. Thus, the nodes transmit with a fixed predefined rate regardless of the channel state information (CSI). In general, the nodes in the network can assume one of three possible states in each time slot, namely the transmit, receive, and silent state. Most of the existing protocols assume a fixed schedule for the sequence of the states of the nodes. In this paper, we abandon the restriction of having a fixed and predefined schedule and propose a new protocol which, based on the CSI at the receiver (CSIR), selects the optimal states of the nodes in each time slot such that the sum throughput is maximized. To this end, the relay has to be equipped with two buffers for storage of the information received from the two users. Numerical results show that the proposed protocol significantly outperforms the existing protocols.

preprint2014arXiv

Capacity of the State-Dependent Half-Duplex Relay Channel Without Source-Destination Link

We derive the capacity of the state-dependent half-duplex relay channel without source-destination link. The output of the state-dependent half-duplex relay channel depends on the randomly varying channel states of the source-relay and relay-destination links, which are known causally at all three nodes. For this channel, we prove a converse and show the achievability of the capacity based on a buffer-aided relaying protocol with adaptive link selection. This protocol chooses in each times slot one codeword to be transmitted over either the source-relay or the relay-destination channel depending on the channel states. Our proof of the converse reveals that state-dependent half-duplex relay networks offer one additional degree of freedom which has been previously overlooked. Namely, the freedom of the half-duplex relay to choose when to receive and when to transmit.

preprint2014arXiv

Multiple-access Fading Channel with Wireless Power Transfer and Energy Harvesting

We consider the achievable average rates of a multiple-access system, which consists of N energy-harvesting users (EHUs) that transmit information over a block fading multiple-access channel (MAC) and a base station (BS) that broadcasts radio frequency (RF) energy to the EHUs for wireless power transfer. The information (over the uplink) and power (over the downlink) can be transmitted either in time division duplex or frequency division duplex. For the case when the EHUs battery capacities and the number of transmission slots are both infinite, we determine the optimal power allocation for the BS and the optimal rates and power allocations for the EHUs that maximize the achievable rate region of the MAC. The resulting online solution is asymptotically optimal, and also applicable for a finite number of transmission slots and finite battery capacities.

preprint2014arXiv

Optimal Power Allocation for Three-phase Bidirectional DF Relaying with Fixed Rates

Wireless systems that carry delay-sensitive information (such as speech and/or video signals) typically transmit with fixed data rates, but may occasionally suffer from transmission outages caused by the random nature of the fading channels. If the transmitter has instantaneous channel state information (CSI) available, it can compensate for a significant portion of these outages by utilizing power allocation. In this paper, we consider optimal power allocation for a conventional dual-hop bidirectional decode-and-forward (DF) relaying system with a three-phase transmission protocol. The proposed strategy minimizes the average power consumed by the end nodes and the relay, subject to some maximum allowable system outage probability (OP), or equivalently, minimizes the system OP while meeting average power constraints at the end nodes and the relay. We show that in the proposed power allocation scheme, the end nodes and the relay adjust their output powers to the minimum level required to avoid outages, but will sometimes be silent, in order to conserve power and prolong their lifetimes. For the proposed scheme, the end nodes use the instantaneous CSI of their respective source-relay links and the relay uses the instantaneous CSI of both links.

preprint2014arXiv

Optimal Power Control for Analog Bidirectional Relaying with Long-Term Relay Power Constraint

Wireless systems that carry delay-sensitive information (such as speech and/or video signals) typically transmit with fixed data rates, but may occasionally suffer from transmission outages caused by the random nature of the fading channels. If the transmitter has instantaneous channel state information (CSI) available, it can compensate for a significant portion of these outages by utilizing power allocation. In a conventional dual-hop bidirectional amplify-and-forward (AF) relaying system, the relay already has instantaneous CSI of both links available, as this is required for relay gain adjustment. We therefore develop an optimal power allocation strategy for the relay, which adjusts its instantaneous output power to the minimum level required to avoid outages, but only if the required output power is below some cutoff level; otherwise, the relay is silent in order to conserve power and prolong its lifetime. The proposed scheme is proven to minimize the system outage probability, subject to an average power constraint at the relay and fixed output powers at the end nodes.

preprint2013arXiv

Achievable Rate Region of the Bidirectional Buffer-Aided Relay Channel with Block Fading

The bidirectional relay channel, in which two users communicate with each other through a relay node, is a simple but fundamental and practical network architecture. In this paper, we consider the block fading bidirectional relay channel and propose efficient transmission strategies that exploit the block fading property of the channel. Thereby, we consider a decode-and-forward relay and assume that a direct link between the two users is not present. Our aim is to characterize the long-term achievable rate region and to develop protocols which achieve all points of the obtained rate region. Specifically, in the bidirectional relay channel, there exist six possible transmission modes: four point-to-point modes (user 1-to-relay, user 2-to-relay, relay-to-user 1, relay-to-user 2), a multiple-access mode (both users to the relay), and a broadcast mode (the relay to both users). Most existing protocols assume a fixed schedule for using a subset of the aforementioned transmission modes. Motivated by this limitation, we develop protocols which are not restricted to adhere to a predefined schedule for using the transmission modes. In fact, based on the instantaneous channel state information (CSI) of the involved links, the proposed protocol selects the optimal transmission mode in each time slot to maximize the long-term achievable rate region. Thereby, we consider two different types of transmit power constraints: 1) a joint long-term power constraint for all nodes, and 2) a fixed transmit power for each node. Furthermore, to enable the use of a non-predefined schedule for transmission mode selection, the relay has to be equipped with two buffers for storage of the information received from both users. As data buffering increases the end-to-end delay, we consider both delay-unconstrained and delay-constrained transmission in the paper.

preprint2013arXiv

Adaptive Mode Selection and Power Allocation in Bidirectional Buffer-aided Relay Networks

In this paper, we consider the problem of sum rate maximization in a bidirectional relay network with fading. Hereby, user 1 and user 2 communicate with each other only through a relay, i.e., a direct link between user 1 and user 2 is not present. In this network, there exist six possible transmission modes: four point-to-point modes (user 1-to-relay, user 2-to-relay, relay-to-user 1, relay-to-user 2), a multiple access mode (both users to the relay), and a broadcast mode (the relay to both users). Most existing protocols assume a fixed schedule of using a subset of the aforementioned transmission modes, as a result, the sum rate is limited by the capacity of the weakest link associated with the relay in each time slot. Motivated by this limitation, we develop a protocol which is not restricted to adhere to a predefined schedule for using the transmission modes. Therefore, all transmission modes of the bidirectional relay network can be used adaptively based on the instantaneous channel state information (CSI) of the involved links. To this end, the relay has to be equipped with two buffers for the storage of the information received from users 1 and 2, respectively. For the considered network, given a total average power budget for all nodes, we jointly optimize the transmission mode selection and power allocation based on the instantaneous CSI in each time slot for sum rate maximization. Simulation results show that the proposed protocol outperforms existing protocols for all signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs). Specifically, we obtain a considerable gain at low SNRs due to the adaptive power allocation and at high SNRs due to the adaptive mode selection.

preprint2013arXiv

Adaptive Mode Selection in Bidirectional Buffer-aided Relay Networks with Fixed Transmit Powers

We consider a bidirectional network in which two users exchange information with the help of a buffer-aided relay. In such a network without direct link between user 1 and user 2, there exist six possible transmission modes, i.e., four point-to-point modes (user 1-to-relay, user 2-to-relay, relay-to-user 1, relay-to-user 2), a multiple access mode (both users to the relay), and a broadcast mode (the relay to both users). Because of the buffering capability at the relay, the transmissions in the network are not restricted to adhere to a predefined schedule, and therefore, all the transmission modes in the bidirectional relay network can be used adaptively based on the instantaneous channel state information (CSI) of the involved links. For the considered network, assuming fixed transmit powers for both the users and the relay, we derive the optimal transmission mode selection policy which maximizes the sum rate. The proposed policy selects one out of the six possible transmission modes in each time slot based on the instantaneous CSI. Simulation results confirm the effectiveness of the proposed protocol compared to existing protocols.

preprint2013arXiv

Buffer-Aided Relaying with Adaptive Link Selection - Fixed and Mixed Rate Transmission

We consider a simple network consisting of a source, a half-duplex DF relay with a buffer, and a destination. We assume that the direct source-destination link is not available and all links undergo fading. We propose two new buffer-aided relaying schemes. In the first scheme, neither the source nor the relay have CSIT, and consequently, both nodes are forced to transmit with fixed rates. In contrast, in the second scheme, the source does not have CSIT and transmits with fixed rate but the relay has CSIT and adapts its transmission rate accordingly. In the absence of delay constraints, for both fixed rate and mixed rate transmission, we derive the throughput-optimal buffer-aided relaying protocols which select either the source or the relay for transmission based on the instantaneous SNRs of the source-relay and the relay-destination links. In addition, for the delay constrained case, we develop buffer-aided relaying protocols that achieve a predefined average delay. Compared to conventional relaying protocols, which select the transmitting node according to a predefined schedule independent of the link instantaneous SNRs, the proposed buffer-aided protocols with adaptive link selection achieve large performance gains. In particular, for fixed rate transmission, we show that the proposed protocol achieves a diversity gain of two as long as an average delay of more than three time slots can be afforded. Furthermore, for mixed rate transmission with an average delay of $E{T}$ time slots, a multiplexing gain of $r=1-1/(2E{T})$ is achieved. Hence, for mixed rate transmission, for sufficiently large average delays, buffer-aided half-duplex relaying with and without adaptive link selection does not suffer from a multiplexing gain loss compared to full-duplex relaying.

preprint2012arXiv

Buffer-Aided Relaying with Adaptive Link Selection

In this paper, we consider a simple network consisting of a source, a half-duplex decode-and-forward relay, and a destination. We propose a new relaying protocol employing adaptive link selection, i.e., in any given time slot, based on the channel state information of the source-relay and the relay-destination link a decision is made whether the source or the relay transmits. In order to avoid data loss at the relay, adaptive link selection requires the relay to be equipped with a buffer such that data can be queued until the relay-destination link is selected for transmission. We study both delay constrained and delay unconstrained transmission. For the delay unconstrained case, we characterize the optimal link selection policy, derive the corresponding throughput, and develop an optimal power allocation scheme. For the delay constrained case, we propose to starve the buffer of the relay by choosing the decision threshold of the link selection policy smaller than the optimal one and derive a corresponding upper bound on the average delay. Furthermore, we propose a modified link selection protocol which avoids buffer overflow by limiting the queue size. Our analytical and numerical results show that buffer-aided relaying with adaptive link selection achieves significant throughput gains compared to conventional relaying protocols with and without buffers where the relay employs a fixed schedule for reception and transmission.

preprint2011arXiv

Cooperative Diversity with Mobile Nodes: Capacity Outage Rate and Duration

The outage probability is an important performance measure for cooperative diversity schemes. However, in mobile environments, the outage probability does not completely describe the behavior of cooperative diversity schemes since the mobility of the involved nodes introduces variations in the channel gains. As a result, the capacity outage events are correlated in time and second-order statistical parameters of the achievable information-theoretic capacity such as the average capacity outage rate (AOR) and the average capacity outage duration (AOD) are required to obtain a more complete description of the properties of cooperative diversity protocols. In this paper, assuming slow Rayleigh fading, we derive exact expressions for the AOR and the AOD of three well-known cooperative diversity protocols: variable-gain amplify-and-forward, decode-and-forward, and selection decode-and-forward relaying. Furthermore, we develop asymptotically tight high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) approximations, which offer important insights into the influence of various system and channel parameters on the AOR and AOD. In particular, we show that on a double-logarithmic scale, similar to the outage probability, the AOR asymptotically decays with the SNR with a slope that depends on the diversity gain of the cooperative protocol, whereas the AOD asymptotically decays with a slope of -1/2 independent of the diversity gain.

preprint2010arXiv

An efficient approximation to the correlated Nakagami-m sums and its application in equal gain diversity receivers

There are several cases in wireless communications theory where the statistics of the sum of independent or correlated Nakagami-m random variables (RVs) is necessary to be known. However, a closed-form solution to the distribution of this sum does not exist when the number of constituent RVs exceeds two, even for the special case of Rayleigh fading. In this paper, we present an efficient closed-form approximation for the distribution of the sum of arbitrary correlated Nakagami-m envelopes with identical and integer fading parameters. The distribution becomes exact for maximal correlation, while the tightness of the proposed approximation is validated statistically by using the Chi-square and the Kolmogorov-Smirnov goodness-of-fit tests. As an application, the approximation is used to study the performance of equal-gain combining (EGC) systems operating over arbitrary correlated Nakagami-m fading channels, by utilizing the available analytical results for the error-rate performance of an equivalent maximal-ratio combining (MRC) system.

preprint2010arXiv

Outage rates and outage durations of opportunistic relaying systems

Opportunistic relaying is a simple yet efficient cooperation scheme that achieves full diversity and preserves the spectral efficiency among the spatially distributed stations. However, the stations&#39; mobility causes temporal correlation of the system&#39;s capacity outage events, which gives rise to its important second-order outage statistical parameters, such as the average outage rate (AOR) and the average outage duration (AOD). This letter presents exact analytical expressions for the AOR and the AOD of an opportunistic relaying system, which employs a mobile source and a mobile destination (without a direct path), and an arbitrary number of (fixed-gain amplify-and-forward or decode-and-forward) mobile relays in Rayleigh fading environment.