Energy Provision Minimization in Wireless Powered Communication Networks With Network Throughput Demand: TDMA or NOMA?

2019 
Recently, the newly emerging wireless powered communication network (WPCN) has drawn significant interests, where the network nodes are powered by the energy harvested from the radio-frequency (RF) signal. This paper focuses on the widely studied WPCN, where one hybrid sink (H-sink) coordinates the wireless energy/information transmissions to/from a set of one-hop nodes powered by the harvested RF energy only, and aims to minimize the network-throughput constrained H-sink’s energy provision (EP). Specifically, we investigate the performance of two important MAC protocols: time-division multiple access (TDMA) and non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA). For both the TDMA-based WPCN (T-WPCN) and NOMA-based WPCN (N-WPCN), we first formulate the EP minimization problems as the non-linear optimization problems, then transform them into convex problems, and finally propose an efficient algorithm, which jointly uses the golden-section search and bisection search methods to determine the optimal time allocation of H-sink’s energy transfer and each node’s information transmission as well as the optimal H-sink’s transmit power. Furthermore, for the scenarios where the circuit power is negligible, we first prove that the optimal H-sink’s transmit power is the maximum allowable value, then prove theoretically that the NOMA and TDMA achieve the same EP, and also present a more efficient algorithm for the EP minimization problem. Simulation results demonstrate that the TDMA outperforms NOMA when the circuit power is non-negligible because the circuit energy consumption of NOMA accounts for a large percentage of the total energy consumption.
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