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      Open-Access Full-Duplex Wireless in the ORBIT Testbed

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          Abstract

          In order to support experimentation with full-duplex (FD) wireless, we recently integrated an open-access FD transceiver in the ORBIT testbed. In this report, we present the design and implementation of the FD transceiver and interfaces, and provide examples and guidelines for experimentation. In particular, an ORBIT node with a National Instruments (NI)/Ettus Research Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP) N210 software-defined radio (SDR) was equipped with the Columbia FlexICoN Gen-1 customized RF self-interference (SI) canceller box. The RF canceller box includes an RF SI canceller that is implemented using discrete components on a printed circuit board (PCB) and achieves 40dB RF SI cancellation across 5MHz bandwidth. We provide an FD transceiver baseline program and present an example FD experiment, where 90dB overall SI cancellation is achieved across both the RF and digital domains, demonstrating the FD capability in the ORBIT testbed. We also discuss potential FD wireless experiments that can be conducted based on the implemented open-access FD transceiver and baseline program.

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          Integrated full duplex radios

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            Resource Allocation and Rate Gains in Practical Full-Duplex Systems

            Full-duplex communication has the potential to substantially increase the throughput in wireless networks. However, the benefits of full-duplex are still not well understood. In this paper, we characterize the full-duplex rate gains in both single-channel and multi-channel use cases. For the single-channel case, we quantify the rate gain as a function of the remaining self-interference and SNR values. We also provide a sufficient condition under which the sum of uplink and downlink rates on a full-duplex channel is concave in the transmission power levels. Building on these results, we consider the multi-channel case. For that case, we introduce a new realistic model of a small form-factor (e.g., smartphone) full-duplex receiver and demonstrate its accuracy via measurements. We study the problem of jointly allocating power levels to different channels and selecting the frequency of maximum self-interference suppression, where the objective is maximizing the sum of the rates over uplink and downlink OFDM channels. We develop a polynomial time algorithm which is nearly optimal in practice under very mild restrictions. To reduce the running time, we develop an efficient nearly-optimal algorithm under the high SINR approximation. Finally, we demonstrate via numerical evaluations the capacity gains in the different use cases and obtain insights into the impact of the remaining self-interference and wireless channel states on the performance.
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              Author and article information

              Journal
              09 January 2018
              Article
              1801.03069
              2f7c8b20-5442-46bd-8b89-a61ff2edc739

              http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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              cs.NI eess.SP

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