Multi-Objective Power Allocation for Energy Efficient Wireless Information and Power Transfer Systems (1504.02360v1)
Abstract: Simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT) provides a promising solution for enabling perpetual wireless networks. As energy efficiency (EE) is an im- portant evaluation of system performance, this thesis studies energy-efficient resource allocation algorithm designs in SWIPT systems. We first investigate the trade-off between the EE for information transmission, the EE for power transfer, and the total transmit power in a basic SWIPT system with separated receivers. A multi-objective optimization problem is formulated under the constraint of maximum transmit power. We propose an algorithm which achieves flexible resource allocation for energy efficiencies maxi- mization and transmit power minimization. The trade-off region of the system design objectives is shown in simulation results. Further, we consider secure communication in a SWIPT system with power splitting receivers. Artificial noise is injected to the com- munication channel to combat the eavesdropping capability of potential eavesdroppers. A power-efficient resource allocation algorithm is developed when multiple legitimate information receivers and multi-antenna potential eavesdroppers co-exist in the system. Simulation results demonstrate a significant performance gain by the proposed optimal algorithm compared to suboptimal baseline schemes.