This article studies the secondary users’ sum-throughput in an in-band full-duplex (I-FD) cognitive wireless powered backscatter communication network. The secondary network consists of a hybrid access point (H-AP) and a… Click to show full abstract
This article studies the secondary users’ sum-throughput in an in-band full-duplex (I-FD) cognitive wireless powered backscatter communication network. The secondary network consists of a hybrid access point (H-AP) and a finite number of geographically distributed secondary backscatter sensors (SBSs), each capable of using either the conventional or backscatter communication. The secondary network shares the primary network’s spectrum using an underlay spectrum sharing model. In this model, the H-AP and SBSs operate in I-FD mode to achieve improved spectral and time efficiency. Moreover, when an SBS has little available energy, it switches to the low-energy consumption backscatter method instead of the conventional transmission method. The goal is to maximize the sum-throughput of the SBSs. It is shown that such a problem is a convex optimization problem. Closed-form expressions for the optimal allocated time and energy to SBSs are derived and solved via a low complexity and efficient algorithm called joint optimal time and energy allocation (JOTEA). Numerical results illustrate that the JOTEA algorithm achieves a higher sum-throughput than the benchmark equal time allocation method. Furthermore, if the self-interference cancellation circuit considerably cancels self-interference in the H-AP, the I-FD mode achieves a higher sum-throughput performance than that of the half-duplex mode. Moreover, using backscatter communication results in a further increase in the sum-throughput.
               
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