NOMA for throughput and EE maximization in Energy Harvesting Enabled Networks (1803.09225v2)
Abstract: Wireless power transfer via radio-frequency (RF) radiation is regarded as a potential solution to energize energy-constrained users, who are deployed close to the base stations (near-by users). However, energy transfer requires much more transmit power than normal information transfer, which makes it very challenging to provide the quality of service in terms of throughput for all near-by users and cell-edge users. Thus, it is of practical interest to employ non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) to improve the throughput of all network users, while fulfilling the energy harvesting requirements of the near-by users. To realize both energy harvesting and information decoding, we consider a transmit time-switching (transmit-TS) protocol. We formulate two important beamfoming problems of users' max-min throughput optimization and energy efficiency maximization under power constraint and energy harvesting thresholds at the nearly-located users. For these problems, the optimization objective and energy harvesting are non-convex in beamforming vectors. Thus, we develop efficient path-following algorithms to solve them. In addition, we also consider conventional power splitting (PS)-based energy harvesting receiver. Our numerical results confirm that the proposed transmit-TS based algorithms clearly outperform PS-based algorithms in terms of both, throughput and energy efficiency.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.