DocumentCode :
61648
Title :
Randomized Masking in Cognitive Radio Networks
Author :
Moshksar, Kamyar ; Khandani, Amir K.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, Canada
Volume :
61
Issue :
7
fYear :
2013
fDate :
Jul-13
Firstpage :
2635
Lastpage :
2647
Abstract :
A decentralized network of one Primary User (PU) and several Secondary Users (SU) is studied. PU is licensed to exploit the resources, while the party of SUs intend to share the resources with PU. Each SU must guarantee to not disturb the performance of PU beyond a certain level, while maintaining a satisfactory quality of service for itself. It is proposed that each secondary transmitter adopts a Randomized Masking (RM) strategy with full average transmission power where it remains silent or transmits a symbol in its codeword independently from transmission slot to transmission slot. We consider a setup where the primary transmitter is unaware of channel coefficients, code-books of secondary users and the number of secondary users. SUs are anonymous to each other, i.e, they are unaware of each others´ code-books, however, each SU is smart in the sense that it is aware of the code-book of PU, channel coefficients and the number of active SUs. Invoking the concept of ε-outage capacity, we define the (ε,ν)-admissible region as the set of masking probabilities for each SU such that the probability of outage for PU is maintained under a threshold varepsilon in a case where PU sets its transmission rate at a fraction ν of its ε-outage capacity as if there were no SUs in the network. The masking probability of SUs is designed through maximizing the average (with respect to channel coefficients) achievable rate per SU over the (ε,ν)-admissible region. In our analysis, the primary receiver treats interference as noise, however, each secondary receiver has the option to decode and cancel the interference caused by PU, while treating the signals of other SUs as noise. In another approach, referred to as Continuous Transmission with Power Control (CTPC), each SU transmits continuously (no masking is applied), however, it adjusts its transmission power in order to yield the largest value for average achievable rate per - U. The schemes RM and CTPC are compared for different values of transmission power for each SU and PU and distance between different users. It is observed that neither of RM or CTPC always outperforms the other in various scenarios in terms of the underlying system parameters. A combination of RM and CTPC referred to as Randomized Masking with Power Control (RMPC) is also investigated where each SU controls both its probability of masking and average transmission power. It is demonstrated through simulations that RMPC can outperform both RM and CTPC.
Keywords :
channel capacity; cognitive radio; interference suppression; power control; probability; quality of service; radio receivers; radio transmitters; random processes; wireless channels; ε-outage capacity; ε-outage probability; CTPC; RMPC; channel coefficient; codebook; codeword; cognitive radio network; continuous transmission with power control; decentralized network; interference cancellation; interference decoding; license; masking probability; primary receiver; primary transmitter; primary user; quality of service; randomized masking with power control; resource sharing; secondary receiver; secondary transmitter; secondary user; symbol transmission; Decoding; Integrated circuits; Interference; Radio transmitters; Random variables; Receivers; Cognitive radio; decentralized resource allocation; outage capacity; power control; randomized masking;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Communications, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0090-6778
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TCOMM.2013.050813.120450
Filename :
6516164
Link To Document :
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