Electrical and Electronic Engineering - Theses

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    Resource optimization for future wireless communications and energy harvesting systems with coordinated transmission
    Luo, Bing ( 2019)
    Dense-cell deployment with coordinated multiple point transmission has been widely investigated to minimize inter-cell interference. Depending on the knowledge of channel state information and whether joint coding and signal processing are performed at the cooperative transmitters, coordinated transmission can be divided into coherent and non-coherent transmission. In the first half of the thesis, we study optimal power allocation for capacity maximization with coherent and non-coherent transmission, in which K coordinated transmitters coherently/non-coherently allocate power across N subchannels under joint total and individual power constraints. This allows the system to limit the overall energy consumption for cost and/or green factors, while also preventing individual transmitters to overdrive their high-powered amplifiers. For coherent coordinated transmission, we derive a new optimal co-phasing power allocation which shows that the optimal power allocation must follow a particular proportional rule. This result highlights that the optimal power allocation for transmitters with individual power constraints is different from waterfilling, as more power is not necessarily allocated to the subchannels with better channel conditions. In the non-coherent coordinated transmission case, we show that the optimal power allocation solution has an interesting sparse feature that among N subchannels, at most K-1 subchannels can be allocated power for joint transmission by multiple transmitters, and the rest of the subchannels must be served by a single transmitter. As wireless devices (e.g., Internet of things device and wireless sensor) become more pervasive, there is an ever-increasing interest for powering electronic devices wirelessly. In order to avoid the high radiation intensity and expand coverage, distributed but coordinated wireless power transfer (WPT) using energy beamforming is considered as a promising technology to address the energy scarcity problem. In the second half of the thesis, we study an optimal distributed energy beamforming strategy for total harvested power maximization, where K coordinated energy transmitters (CETs) coherently transmit energy over N subchannels. Under joint total and individual antenna power constraints, we derive the optimal power allocation rule which reveals that all K CETs will participate in energy beamforming with T < K CETs transmitting with their maximum individual powers due to the total power constraint. Nevertheless, the optimal WPT strategy is that no more than T+1 subchannels are selected for power allocation regardless of the channel conditions. Finally, we analyse a distributed multi-antenna WPT system, where each CET k is equipped with M antennas and has a transmit power constraint Pk. We show that the optimal power allocation has similar properties as coherent wireless information transmission. However, the optimal WPT strategy is that no more than K subchannels are selected for power allocation regardless of the channel conditions or the number of antennas in each CET.