Title :
A Composite Approach to Self-Sustainable Transmissions: Rethinking OFDM
Author :
Maso, Marco ; Lakshminarayana, Subhash ; Quek, Tony Q. S. ; Poor, H. Vincent
Author_Institution :
Math. & Algorithmic Sci. Lab., Huawei France Res. Center, Boulogne-Billancourt, France
Abstract :
This paper proposes two novel strategies to extend the battery life of an orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) receiver by exploiting the concept of wireless power transfer (WPT). First, a new receiver architecture is devised that does not discard the cyclic prefix (CP) but instead exploits it to extract power from the received signal, realizing a WPT between the transmitter and the receiver. Subsequently, a flexible composite transmit strategy is designed, in which the OFDM transmitter transmits to the receiver two independent signals coexisting in the same band. It is shown that, by means of this approach, the transmitter can arbitrarily increase the power concentrated within the CP at the OFDM receiver, without increasing the redundancy of the transmission. Feasibility conditions for the self-sustainability of the transmission are derived, in terms of power consumption at the receiver, for both legacy and composite transmission. Numerical findings show that, under reasonable conditions, the amount of power carried in the CP can be made sufficient to decode the information symbols, making the transmission fully self-sustainable. The potential of the proposed approach is confirmed by the encouraging results obtained when the full self-sustainability constraint is relaxed, and partially self-sustainable OFDM transmissions are analyzed.
Keywords :
OFDM modulation; decoding; inductive power transmission; power consumption; radio receivers; radio transmitters; telecommunication power management; OFDM receiver; OFDM transmitter; WPT; battery life; composite approach; composite transmission; cyclic prefix; independent signals; information symbol decoding; legacy transmission; orthogonal frequency division multiplexing receiver; power consumption; receiver architecture; self-sustainability; self-sustainable transmissions; wireless power transfer; Batteries; Digital signal processing; OFDM; Radio frequency; Receivers; Transmitters; Vectors; CIA; Energy harvesting; OFDM; adaptive transmissions; green communications; self-sustainable;
Journal_Title :
Communications, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TCOMM.2014.2361124