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In cognitive radio (CR), the spectrum sensing of the primary user (PU) may consume some electrical power from the battery capacity of the secondary user (SU), yielding to decrease the transmission power of the SU. In this paper, a multislot simultaneous spectrum sensing and energy harvesting model is proposed, which uses the harvested radio frequency (RF) energy of the PU signal to supply the spectrum...
In this paper, we investigate the coexistence problem between Wi-Fi and a pre-standard form of LTE over unlicensed bands, namely, LTE-Unlicensed (LTE-U). We address two coexistence problems. First, the different access mechanisms for Wi-Fi and LTE-U can lead to an increase in the collision rate and higher latency for both systems. We propose a modified Wi-Fi operation mode, whereby Wi-Fi stations...
Recently, some CSMA/CD-alike protocols have been proposed for full-duplex (FD) WiFi networks, in which users are able to monitor the channel and transmit data simultaneously so as to avoid data collisions and improve the spectrum efficiency. However, along with its benefits, the residual self- interference (RSI) brought by FD becomes a new challenge for the network. As the RSI increases with the transmit...
In multi-channel cognitive radio ad hoc networks (CRAHNs), packet fragmentation is impacted by new factors besides those in traditional wireless networks due to the unique CR functions. For example, spectrum handoff is the technique for a secondary user (SU) to continue its transmission when a primary user (PU) reoccupies its current transmitting channel. Then, a short frame is less likely to be affected...
Abstract-In cognitive radio networks, secondary users (SUs) face two conflicting objectives. Each SU seeks to minimize the sensing duration while maximizing the detection probability of primary users (PU) to avoid interfering with their transmissions. Both objectives have a substantial effect on energy efficiency. This paper investigates a noncooperative setting for selecting the sensing duration...
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