Kamal AgrawalShankar PrakriyaMark F. Flanagan
In this article, we investigate the performance of a three-node battery-assisted full-duplex relay (FDR) network which employs simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT). The relay augments the harvested energy with battery energy to improve the link performance. Considering both time-switching (TS) and power-splitting (PS) protocols for energy harvesting, we analyze the outage probability and throughput performance with amplify-and-forward (AF) and decode-and-forward (DF) FDRs. For the case of both AF and DF FDRs, we show that a unique value of battery energy exists that maximizes the throughput. Expressions are derived for the throughput-optimal TS and PS parameters. For a desired target throughput, the selection of optimum TS and PS parameters to maximize battery lifetime is discussed. It is demonstrated that for both EH protocols, with low transmit power and a small amount of battery energy, the performance of DF FDRs is superior to that of AF FDRs. In contrast to the case of half-duplex relaying, both TS and PS FDRs achieve a similar throughput at low transmit power, while PS FDR outperforms TS FDR at higher transmit power. Also, when the target throughput is low, TS FDR is more energy-efficient than PS FDR. Monte Carlo simulations confirm the accuracy of the analysis.
Kamal AgrawalMark F. FlanaganShankar Prakriya
Dechuan ChenJin LiJianwei HuXingang ZhangShuai ZhangDong Wang
Sandeep Kumar SinghKamal AgrawalKeshav SinghShankar PrakriyaChih–Peng Li
Shashibhushan SharmaSanjay Dhar RoySumit Kundu