Title :
Joint Spatial and Temporal Spectrum Sharing for Demand Response Management in Cognitive Radio Enabled Smart Grid
Author :
Qian Li ; Zhiyong Feng ; Wei Li ; Gulliver, T.A. ; Ping Zhang
Author_Institution :
Key Lab. of Universal Wireless Commun., Beijing Univ. of Posts & Telecommun., Beijing, China
Abstract :
Real-time demand response management (DRM) in smart grid (SG) requires a reliable wireless communication network with sufficient spectrum resources. However, the allocated spectrum for wireless communications is heavily under-utilized in the spatial and temporal dimensions. To solve the spectrum scarcity problem, cognitive radio (CR) and dynamic spectrum sharing have been proposed, but this can result in poor reliability. In this paper, the influence of wireless communication reliability on DRM is analyzed and the relationship between outage and DRM performance is derived. Outage results from not only interference and noise, but also the unavailability of spectrum resources. Therefore, joint spatial and temporal spectrum sharing is proposed to improve spectrum utilization. The SG network is divided into a Temporal Spectrum Sharing Region (TSSR) and a Free Spatial Spectrum Sharing Region (Free-SSSR). SG nodes in the TSSR can utilize the licensed spectrum when primary users (PUs) are idle, while in the Free-SSSR they can simultaneously share this spectrum with the PUs without using power control. Performance results are presented which show that joint spatial and temporal spectrum sharing can increase the SG spectrum utilization opportunities and lower the outage probability, which is beneficial for DRM performance.
Keywords :
cognitive radio; demand side management; radio networks; radio spectrum management; radiofrequency interference; smart power grids; telecommunication network reliability; CR; DRM performance; PU; SG network; SG nodes; TSSR; cognitive radio; demand response management; dynamic spectrum sharing; free spatial spectrum sharing region; free-SSSR; interference; outage probability; power control; primary users; smart grid; spectrum allocation; spectrum scarcity problem; spectrum utilization improvement; temporal spectrum sharing region; wireless communication network reliability; Interference; Joints; Load management; Real-time systems; Reliability; Smart grids; Wireless communication; Cognitive radio; demand response management; smart grid; spectrum sharing;
Journal_Title :
Smart Grid, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TSG.2013.2292528