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      Downlink Power Control in Two-Tier Cellular Networks with Energy-Harvesting Small Cells as Stochastic Games

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          Abstract

          Energy harvesting in cellular networks is an emerging technique to enhance the sustainability of power-constrained wireless devices. This paper considers the co-channel deployment of a macrocell overlaid with small cells. The small cell base stations (SBSs) harvest energy from environmental sources whereas the macrocell base station (MBS) uses conventional power supply. Given a stochastic energy arrival process for the SBSs, we derive a power control policy for the downlink transmission of both MBS and SBSs such that they can achieve their objectives (e.g., maintain the signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) at an acceptable level) on a given transmission channel. We consider a centralized energy harvesting mechanism for SBSs, i.e., there is a central energy storage (CES) where energy is harvested and then distributed to the SBSs. When the number of SBSs is small, the game between the CES and the MBS is modeled as a single-controller stochastic game and the equilibrium policies are obtained as a solution of a quadratic programming problem. However, when the number of SBSs tends to infinity (i.e., a highly dense network), the centralized scheme becomes infeasible, and therefore, we use a mean field stochastic game to obtain a distributed power control policy for each SBS. By solving a system of partial differential equations, we derive the power control policy of SBSs given the knowledge of mean field distribution and the available harvested energy levels in the batteries of the SBSs.

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          Most cited references17

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          Enabling Wireless Power Transfer in Cellular Networks: Architecture, Modeling and Deployment

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            Power Allocation Strategies in Energy Harvesting Wireless Cooperative Networks

            , , (2013)
            In this paper, a wireless cooperative network is considered, in which multiple source-destination pairs communicate with each other via an energy harvesting relay. The focus of this paper is on the relay's strategies to distribute the harvested energy among the multiple users and their impact on the system performance. Specifically, a non-cooperative strategy is to use the energy harvested from the i-th source as the relay transmission power to the i-th destination, to which asymptotic results show that its outage performance decays as logSNR over SNR. A faster decaying rate, 1 over SNR, can be achieved by the two centralized strategies proposed this the paper, where the water filling based one can achieve optimal performance with respect to several criteria, with a price of high complexity. An auction based power allocation scheme is also proposed to achieve a better tradeoff between the system performance and complexity. Simulation results are provided to confirm the accuracy of the developed analytical results and facilitate a better performance comparison.
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              Downlink Cellular Network Analysis With Multi-Slope Path Loss Models

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                1510.07932

                Numerical methods,Information systems & theory,Networking & Internet architecture

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