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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Relaying Protocols for Wireless Networks

Nasiri Khormuji, Majid January 2008 (has links)
Motivated by current applications in multihop transmission and ad hoc networks, the classical three-node relay channel consisting of a source-destination pair and a relay has received significant attention. One of the crucial aspects of the relay channel is the design of proper relaying protocols, i.e., how the relay should take part into transmission. The thesis addresses this problem and provides a partial answer to that. In this thesis, we propose and study two novel relaying protocols. The first one is based on constellation rearrangement (CR) and is suitable for higher-order modulation schemes. With CR, the relay uses a bit-symbol mapping that is different from the one used by the source. We find the optimal bit-symbol mappings for both the source and the relay and the associated optimal detectors, and show that the improvement over conventional relaying with Gray mapping at the source and the relay can amount to a power gain of several dB. This performance improvement comes at no additional power or bandwidth expense, and at virtually no increase in complexity. The second one is a half-duplex decode-and-forward (DF) relaying scheme based on partial repetition (PR) coding at the relay. With PR, if the relay decodes the received message successfully, it re-encodes the message using the same channel code as the one used at the source, but retransmits only a fraction of the codeword. We analyze the proposed scheme and optimize the cooperation level (i.e., the fraction of the message that the relay should transmit). We compare our scheme with conventional repetition in which the relay retransmits the entire decoded message, and with parallel coding, and additionally with dynamic DF. The finite SNR analysis reveals that the proposed partial repetition can provide a gain of several dB over conventional repetition. Surprisingly, the proposed scheme is able to achieve the same performance as that of parallel coding for some relay network configurations, but at a much lower complexity. Additionally, the thesis treats the problem of resource allocation for collaborative transmit diversity using DF protocols with different type of CSI feedback at the source. One interesting observation that emerges is that the joint powerbandwidth allocation only provides marginal gain over the relaying protocols with optimal bandwidth allocation. / QC 20101119
12

Transmission Strategies for the Gaussian Parallel Relay Channel

Changiz Rezaei, Seyed Saeed January 2010 (has links)
Cooperative wireless communication has received significant attention during recent years due to several reasons. First, since the received power decreases rapidly with distance, the idea of multi-hopping is becoming of particular importance. In multi-hopped communication, the source exploits some intermediate nodes as relays. Then the source sends its message via those relays to the destination. Second, relays can emulate some kind of distributed transmit antennas to form spatial diversity and combat multi-path fading effect of the wireless channel. Parallel Relay Channel is an information theoretical model for a communication system whereby a sender aims to communicate to a receiver with the help of relay nodes. It represents the simplest model for a multi–hop wireless network and a full understanding of the limits of communication over such a channel can potentially shed light on the design of more efficient wireless networks. However, the capacity of the relay channel has been established only for few special cases and little progress has been made toward solving the general case since the early 1980s. In this dissertation, motivated by practical constraints, we study the information theoretical limits of the half-duplex Gaussian Parallel Relay channel , as well as, the transmission strategies for the parallel relay channel with bandwidth mismatch between the first and the second hops. Chapter 2 investigates the problem of communication for a network composed of two half-duplex parallel relays with additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN). There is no direct link between the source and the destination. However, the relays can communicate with each other through the channel between them. Two protocols, i.e., \emph{Simultaneous} and \emph{Successive} relaying, associated with two possible relay scheduling are proposed. The simultaneous relaying protocol is based on \emph{Broadcast-multiaccess with Common Message (BCM)} scheme. For the successive relaying protocol: (i) a \emph{Non-Cooperative} scheme based on the \emph{Dirty Paper Coding (DPC)}, and (ii) a \emph{Cooperative} scheme based on the \emph{Block Markov Encoding (BME)} are considered. The composite scheme of employing BME in \emph{at most} one relay and DPC in \emph{at least} another one is shown to achieve at least the same rate when compared to the \emph{Cooperative} and \emph{Non-Cooperative} schemes. A \emph{``Simultaneous-Successive Relaying based on Dirty paper coding scheme" (SSRD)} is also proposed. The optimum scheduling of the relays and hence the capacity of the half-duplex Gaussian parallel relay channel in the low and high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) scenarios is derived. In the low SNR scenario, it is revealed that under certain conditions for the channel coefficients, the ratio of the achievable rate of the simultaneous relaying based on BCM to the cut-set bound tends to be 1. On the other hand, as SNR goes to infinity, it is proved that successive relaying, based on the DPC, asymptotically achieves the capacity of the network. Schein and Gallager introduced the Gaussian parallel relay channel in 2000. They proposed the Amplify-and-Forward (AF) and the Decode-and-Forward (DF) strategies for this channel. For a long time, the best known achievable rate for this channel was based on the AF and DF with time sharing (AF-DF). Recently, a Rematch-and-Forward (RF) scheme for the scenario in which different amounts of bandwidth can be assigned to the first and second hops were proposed. In chapter 3, we propose a \emph{Combined Amplify-and-Decode Forward (CADF)} scheme for the Gaussian parallel relay channel. We prove that the CADF scheme always gives a better achievable rate compared to the RF scheme, when there is a bandwidth mismatch between the first hop and the second hop. Furthermore, for the equal bandwidth case (Schein's setup), we show that the time sharing between the CADF and the DF schemes (CADF-DF) leads to a better achievable rate compared to the time sharing between the RF and the DF schemes (RF-DF) as well as the AF-DF.
13

Transmission Strategies for the Gaussian Parallel Relay Channel

Changiz Rezaei, Seyed Saeed January 2010 (has links)
Cooperative wireless communication has received significant attention during recent years due to several reasons. First, since the received power decreases rapidly with distance, the idea of multi-hopping is becoming of particular importance. In multi-hopped communication, the source exploits some intermediate nodes as relays. Then the source sends its message via those relays to the destination. Second, relays can emulate some kind of distributed transmit antennas to form spatial diversity and combat multi-path fading effect of the wireless channel. Parallel Relay Channel is an information theoretical model for a communication system whereby a sender aims to communicate to a receiver with the help of relay nodes. It represents the simplest model for a multi–hop wireless network and a full understanding of the limits of communication over such a channel can potentially shed light on the design of more efficient wireless networks. However, the capacity of the relay channel has been established only for few special cases and little progress has been made toward solving the general case since the early 1980s. In this dissertation, motivated by practical constraints, we study the information theoretical limits of the half-duplex Gaussian Parallel Relay channel , as well as, the transmission strategies for the parallel relay channel with bandwidth mismatch between the first and the second hops. Chapter 2 investigates the problem of communication for a network composed of two half-duplex parallel relays with additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN). There is no direct link between the source and the destination. However, the relays can communicate with each other through the channel between them. Two protocols, i.e., \emph{Simultaneous} and \emph{Successive} relaying, associated with two possible relay scheduling are proposed. The simultaneous relaying protocol is based on \emph{Broadcast-multiaccess with Common Message (BCM)} scheme. For the successive relaying protocol: (i) a \emph{Non-Cooperative} scheme based on the \emph{Dirty Paper Coding (DPC)}, and (ii) a \emph{Cooperative} scheme based on the \emph{Block Markov Encoding (BME)} are considered. The composite scheme of employing BME in \emph{at most} one relay and DPC in \emph{at least} another one is shown to achieve at least the same rate when compared to the \emph{Cooperative} and \emph{Non-Cooperative} schemes. A \emph{``Simultaneous-Successive Relaying based on Dirty paper coding scheme" (SSRD)} is also proposed. The optimum scheduling of the relays and hence the capacity of the half-duplex Gaussian parallel relay channel in the low and high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) scenarios is derived. In the low SNR scenario, it is revealed that under certain conditions for the channel coefficients, the ratio of the achievable rate of the simultaneous relaying based on BCM to the cut-set bound tends to be 1. On the other hand, as SNR goes to infinity, it is proved that successive relaying, based on the DPC, asymptotically achieves the capacity of the network. Schein and Gallager introduced the Gaussian parallel relay channel in 2000. They proposed the Amplify-and-Forward (AF) and the Decode-and-Forward (DF) strategies for this channel. For a long time, the best known achievable rate for this channel was based on the AF and DF with time sharing (AF-DF). Recently, a Rematch-and-Forward (RF) scheme for the scenario in which different amounts of bandwidth can be assigned to the first and second hops were proposed. In chapter 3, we propose a \emph{Combined Amplify-and-Decode Forward (CADF)} scheme for the Gaussian parallel relay channel. We prove that the CADF scheme always gives a better achievable rate compared to the RF scheme, when there is a bandwidth mismatch between the first hop and the second hop. Furthermore, for the equal bandwidth case (Schein's setup), we show that the time sharing between the CADF and the DF schemes (CADF-DF) leads to a better achievable rate compared to the time sharing between the RF and the DF schemes (RF-DF) as well as the AF-DF.
14

Slepian-Wolf coded nested quantization (SEC-NQ) for Wyner-Ziv coding: high-rate performance analysis, code design, and application to cooperative networks

Liu, Zhixin 15 May 2009 (has links)
No description available.
15

Optimal Power Allocation for a Successive Refinable Source with Multiple Descriptions over a Fading Relay Channel Using Broadcast/Multicast Strategies

Shi, Kun January 2009 (has links)
In a wireless fading relay system with multicast/broadcast transmission, one of the most crucial challenges is the optimization of a transmission rate under multiuser channel diversity. Previously reported solutions for mitigating the vicious effect due to multi-user channel diversity have been mainly based on superposition coded multicast, where an optimal power allocation to each layer of modulated signals is determined. Many previous studies investigated a harmonic interplay between the successively re nable (SR) content source and a layered modulation via superposition coding (SPC) over the multicast/broadcast channels. By jointly considering the successive re nement characteristic at the source and the dependency of the layered modulation at the channel, a graceful fexibility can be achieved on a group of users with di erent channel realizations. Here most of the receivers are supposed to obtain the base quality layer information modulated in a lower rate, while the receivers with better channel realizations will obtain more information by re ning the base quality layer information using the enhancement quality layer information. In particular, the optimal power allocation for a SR source over a fading relay channel using broadcast/multicast strategy can be determined such that the minimum distortion of total received information is produced. However, a quality layer of data in a successively refined source may not be decodable if there is any loss of channel codewords, even if the corresponding longterm channel realization is su cient for decoding. To overcome this problem, one of the previous studies introduced a framework of coded video multicast, where multiple description coding (MDC) is applied to an SR content source and is further mapped into a layered modulation via SPC at the channel. Up till now, there has not been a rigorous proof provided on the bene t of manipulating the two coding techniques, (i.e. MDC and SPC), nor has any systematic optimization approach been developed for quantifying the parameter selection. Cooperative relaying in wireless networks has recently received much attention. Because the received signal can be severely degraded due to fading in wireless communications, time, frequency and spatial diversity techniques are introduced to overcome fading. Spatial diversity is typically envisioned as having multiple transmit and/or receive antennas. Cooperation can be used here to provide higher rates and results in a more robust system. Recently proposed cooperation schemes, which take into account the practical constraint that the relay cannot transmit and receive at the same time, include amplify-forward(AF), decode-forward(DF), and compress-forward(CF). In this study, in a fading relay scenario, a proposed framework is investigated to tackle the task of layered power allocation, where an in-depth study is conducted on achieving an optimal power allocation in SPC, such that the information distortion perceived at the users can be minimized. This thesis provides a comprehensive formulation on the information distortion at the receivers and a suite of solution approaches for the developed optimization problem by jointly considering MDC and SPC parameter selection over the fading relay channel.
16

Optimal Power Allocation for a Successive Refinable Source with Multiple Descriptions over a Fading Relay Channel Using Broadcast/Multicast Strategies

Shi, Kun January 2009 (has links)
In a wireless fading relay system with multicast/broadcast transmission, one of the most crucial challenges is the optimization of a transmission rate under multiuser channel diversity. Previously reported solutions for mitigating the vicious effect due to multi-user channel diversity have been mainly based on superposition coded multicast, where an optimal power allocation to each layer of modulated signals is determined. Many previous studies investigated a harmonic interplay between the successively re nable (SR) content source and a layered modulation via superposition coding (SPC) over the multicast/broadcast channels. By jointly considering the successive re nement characteristic at the source and the dependency of the layered modulation at the channel, a graceful fexibility can be achieved on a group of users with di erent channel realizations. Here most of the receivers are supposed to obtain the base quality layer information modulated in a lower rate, while the receivers with better channel realizations will obtain more information by re ning the base quality layer information using the enhancement quality layer information. In particular, the optimal power allocation for a SR source over a fading relay channel using broadcast/multicast strategy can be determined such that the minimum distortion of total received information is produced. However, a quality layer of data in a successively refined source may not be decodable if there is any loss of channel codewords, even if the corresponding longterm channel realization is su cient for decoding. To overcome this problem, one of the previous studies introduced a framework of coded video multicast, where multiple description coding (MDC) is applied to an SR content source and is further mapped into a layered modulation via SPC at the channel. Up till now, there has not been a rigorous proof provided on the bene t of manipulating the two coding techniques, (i.e. MDC and SPC), nor has any systematic optimization approach been developed for quantifying the parameter selection. Cooperative relaying in wireless networks has recently received much attention. Because the received signal can be severely degraded due to fading in wireless communications, time, frequency and spatial diversity techniques are introduced to overcome fading. Spatial diversity is typically envisioned as having multiple transmit and/or receive antennas. Cooperation can be used here to provide higher rates and results in a more robust system. Recently proposed cooperation schemes, which take into account the practical constraint that the relay cannot transmit and receive at the same time, include amplify-forward(AF), decode-forward(DF), and compress-forward(CF). In this study, in a fading relay scenario, a proposed framework is investigated to tackle the task of layered power allocation, where an in-depth study is conducted on achieving an optimal power allocation in SPC, such that the information distortion perceived at the users can be minimized. This thesis provides a comprehensive formulation on the information distortion at the receivers and a suite of solution approaches for the developed optimization problem by jointly considering MDC and SPC parameter selection over the fading relay channel.
17

Cooperative Protocols for Relay and Interference Channels with Half-Duplex Constraint

Bagheri, Hossein January 2010 (has links)
Enabling cooperation among nodes of a wireless network can significantly reduce the required transmit power as well as the induced intra-network interference. Due to the practical half-duplexity constraint of the cooperating nodes, they are prohibited to simultaneously transmit and receive data at the same time-frequency resource. The purpose of this dissertation is to illustrate the value of cooperation in such an environment. To understand how to cooperate efficiently, information theory is employed as a useful tool, which not only determines the fundamental limits of communication (i.e., capacity) over the considered network, but also provides insights into the design of a proper transmission scheme for that network. In this thesis, two simple but yet important types of wireless networks, namely Relay Channel, and Interference Channel are studied. In fact, these models constitute building blocks for larger networks. The first considered channel is a diamond-shaped relay channel consisting of a source, a destination, and two parallel relays. The second analyzed channel is an interference channel composed of two transmitter-receiver pairs with out-of-band transmitter cooperation, also referred to as conferencing encoders. While characterizing the capacity of these channels are difficult, a simpler and a more common approach is to find an achievable scheme for each channel that ensures a small gap from the capacity for all channel parameters. In chapter 2, the diamond relay channel is investigated in detail. Because of the half-duplex nature of the relays, each relay is either in transmit or receive mode, making four modes possible for the two-relay combination, specifically, 1) broadcast mode (both relays receive) 2,3) routing modes (one relay transmits, another receives) 4) multiple-access mode (both relays transmit). An appropriate scheduling ( i.e., timing over the modes) and transmission scheme based on the decode-and-forward strategy are proposed and shown to be able to achieve either the capacity for certain channel conditions or at most 3.6 bits below the capacity for general channel conditions. Particularly, by assuming each transmitter has a constant power constraint over all modes, a parameter Δ is defined, which captures some important features of the channel. It is proven that for Δ=0 the capacity of the channel can be attained by successive relaying, i.e., using modes 2 and 3 defined above in a successive manner. This strategy may have an infinite gap from the capacity of the channel when Δ≠0. To achieve rates as close as 0.71 bits to the capacity, it is shown that the cases of Δ>0 and Δ<0 should be treated differently. Using new upper bounds based on the dual problem of the linear program associated with the cut-set bounds, it is proven that the successive relaying strategy needs to be enhanced by an additional broadcast mode (mode 1), or multiple access mode (mode 4), for the cases of Δ<0 and Δ>0, respectively. Furthermore, it is established that under average power constraints the aforementioned strategies achieve rates as close as 3.6 bits to the capacity of the channel. In chapter 3, a two-user Gaussian Interference Channel (GIC) is considered, in which encoders are connected through noiseless links with finite capacities. The setup can be motivated by downlink cellular systems, where base stations are connected via infrastructure backhaul networks. In this setting, prior to each transmission block the encoders communicate with each other over the cooperative links. The capacity region and the sum-capacity of the channel are characterized within some constant number of bits for some special classes of symmetric and Z interference channels. It is also established that properly sharing the total limited cooperation capacity between the cooperative links may enhance the achievable region, even when compared to the case of unidirectional transmitter cooperation with infinite cooperation capacity. To obtain the results, genie-aided upper bounds on the sum-capacity and cut-set bounds on the individual rates are compared with the achievable rate region. The achievable scheme enjoys a simple type of Han-Kobayashi signaling, together with the zero-forcing, and basic relaying techniques.
18

Slepian-Wolf coded nested quantization (SEC-NQ) for Wyner-Ziv coding: high-rate performance analysis, code design, and application to cooperative networks

Liu, Zhixin 15 May 2009 (has links)
No description available.
19

Relaying Protocols for Wireless Networks

Nasiri Khormuji, Majid January 2008 (has links)
<p>Motivated by current applications in multihop transmission and ad hoc networks, the classical three-node relay channel consisting of a source-destination pair and a relay has received significant attention. One of the crucial aspects of the relay channel is the design of proper relaying protocols, i.e., how the relay should take part into transmission. The thesis addresses this problem and provides a partial answer to that.</p><p>In this thesis, we propose and study two novel relaying protocols. The first one is based on constellation rearrangement (CR) and is suitable for higher-order modulation schemes. With CR, the relay uses a bit-symbol mapping that is different from the one used by the source. We find the optimal bit-symbol mappings for both the source and the relay and the associated optimal detectors, and show that the improvement over conventional relaying with Gray mapping at the source and the relay can amount to a power gain of several dB. This performance improvement comes at no additional power or bandwidth expense, and at virtually no increase in complexity. The second one is a half-duplex decode-and-forward (DF) relaying scheme based on partial repetition (PR) coding at the relay. With PR, if the relay decodes the received message successfully, it re-encodes the message using the same channel code as the one used at the source, but retransmits only a fraction of the codeword. We analyze the proposed scheme and optimize the cooperation level (i.e., the fraction of the message that the relay should transmit). We compare our scheme with conventional repetition in which the relay retransmits the entire decoded message, and with parallel coding, and additionally with dynamic DF. The finite SNR analysis reveals that the proposed partial repetition can provide a gain of several dB over conventional repetition. Surprisingly, the proposed scheme is able to achieve the same performance as that of parallel coding for some relay network configurations, but at a much lower complexity.</p><p>Additionally, the thesis treats the problem of resource allocation for collaborative transmit diversity using DF protocols with different type of CSI feedback at the source. One interesting observation that emerges is that the joint powerbandwidth allocation only provides marginal gain over the relaying protocols with optimal bandwidth allocation. </p>
20

Cooperative Protocols for Relay and Interference Channels with Half-Duplex Constraint

Bagheri, Hossein January 2010 (has links)
Enabling cooperation among nodes of a wireless network can significantly reduce the required transmit power as well as the induced intra-network interference. Due to the practical half-duplexity constraint of the cooperating nodes, they are prohibited to simultaneously transmit and receive data at the same time-frequency resource. The purpose of this dissertation is to illustrate the value of cooperation in such an environment. To understand how to cooperate efficiently, information theory is employed as a useful tool, which not only determines the fundamental limits of communication (i.e., capacity) over the considered network, but also provides insights into the design of a proper transmission scheme for that network. In this thesis, two simple but yet important types of wireless networks, namely Relay Channel, and Interference Channel are studied. In fact, these models constitute building blocks for larger networks. The first considered channel is a diamond-shaped relay channel consisting of a source, a destination, and two parallel relays. The second analyzed channel is an interference channel composed of two transmitter-receiver pairs with out-of-band transmitter cooperation, also referred to as conferencing encoders. While characterizing the capacity of these channels are difficult, a simpler and a more common approach is to find an achievable scheme for each channel that ensures a small gap from the capacity for all channel parameters. In chapter 2, the diamond relay channel is investigated in detail. Because of the half-duplex nature of the relays, each relay is either in transmit or receive mode, making four modes possible for the two-relay combination, specifically, 1) broadcast mode (both relays receive) 2,3) routing modes (one relay transmits, another receives) 4) multiple-access mode (both relays transmit). An appropriate scheduling ( i.e., timing over the modes) and transmission scheme based on the decode-and-forward strategy are proposed and shown to be able to achieve either the capacity for certain channel conditions or at most 3.6 bits below the capacity for general channel conditions. Particularly, by assuming each transmitter has a constant power constraint over all modes, a parameter Δ is defined, which captures some important features of the channel. It is proven that for Δ=0 the capacity of the channel can be attained by successive relaying, i.e., using modes 2 and 3 defined above in a successive manner. This strategy may have an infinite gap from the capacity of the channel when Δ≠0. To achieve rates as close as 0.71 bits to the capacity, it is shown that the cases of Δ>0 and Δ<0 should be treated differently. Using new upper bounds based on the dual problem of the linear program associated with the cut-set bounds, it is proven that the successive relaying strategy needs to be enhanced by an additional broadcast mode (mode 1), or multiple access mode (mode 4), for the cases of Δ<0 and Δ>0, respectively. Furthermore, it is established that under average power constraints the aforementioned strategies achieve rates as close as 3.6 bits to the capacity of the channel. In chapter 3, a two-user Gaussian Interference Channel (GIC) is considered, in which encoders are connected through noiseless links with finite capacities. The setup can be motivated by downlink cellular systems, where base stations are connected via infrastructure backhaul networks. In this setting, prior to each transmission block the encoders communicate with each other over the cooperative links. The capacity region and the sum-capacity of the channel are characterized within some constant number of bits for some special classes of symmetric and Z interference channels. It is also established that properly sharing the total limited cooperation capacity between the cooperative links may enhance the achievable region, even when compared to the case of unidirectional transmitter cooperation with infinite cooperation capacity. To obtain the results, genie-aided upper bounds on the sum-capacity and cut-set bounds on the individual rates are compared with the achievable rate region. The achievable scheme enjoys a simple type of Han-Kobayashi signaling, together with the zero-forcing, and basic relaying techniques.

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