Wireless Information and Energy Transfer in Multi-Antenna Interference Channel
Chao Shen, Wei-Chiang Li, Tsung-Hui Chang

TL;DR
This paper explores practical schemes for wireless information and energy transfer in multi-antenna interference channels, demonstrating that simple time-splitting methods can outperform ideal simultaneous transfer under certain conditions.
Contribution
It introduces and analyzes practical time splitting schemes (TDMS and TDMA) for WIET in multi-user MISO interference channels, providing semi-analytical solutions and convex optimization approaches.
Findings
Time splitting schemes can outperform ideal simultaneous transfer.
Stronger cross-link channels can enhance sum rate performance.
No single scheme dominates others in all scenarios.
Abstract
This paper considers the transmitter design for wireless information and energy transfer (WIET) in a multiple-input single-output (MISO) interference channel (IFC). The design problem is to maximize the system throughput (i.e., the weighted sum rate) subject to individual energy harvesting constraints and power constraints. Different from the conventional IFCs without energy harvesting, the cross-link signals in the considered scenario play two opposite roles in information detection (ID) and energy harvesting (EH). It is observed that the ideal scheme, where the receivers can simultaneously perform ID and EH from the received signal, may not always achieve the best tradeoff between information transfer and energy harvesting, but simple practical schemes based on time splitting may perform better. We therefore propose two practical time splitting schemes, namely time division mode…
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