On the Throughput and Energy Efficiency of Cognitive MIMO Transmissions
Sami Akin, Mustafa Cenk Gursoy

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the throughput and energy efficiency of cognitive MIMO systems considering QoS constraints, interference limitations, and imperfect sensing, providing insights into optimal antenna use and power management.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model for cognitive MIMO systems under practical constraints and derives key performance metrics including effective capacity and energy efficiency bounds.
Findings
Beamforming in the maximal-eigenvalue eigenspace minimizes energy per bit.
Increasing antennas benefits energy efficiency under strict interference constraints.
Beyond a certain number of antennas, throughput gains plateau with loose interference constraints.
Abstract
In this paper, throughput and energy efficiency of cognitive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems operating under quality-of-service (QoS) constraints, interference limitations, and imperfect channel sensing, are studied. It is assumed that transmission power and covariance of the input signal vectors are varied depending on the sensed activities of primary users (PUs) in the system. Interference constraints are applied on the transmission power levels of cognitive radios (CRs) to provide protection for the PUs whose activities are modeled as a Markov chain. Considering the reliability of the transmissions and channel sensing results, a state-transition model is provided. Throughput is determined by formulating the effective capacity. First derivative of the effective capacity is derived in the low-power regime and the minimum bit energy requirements in the presence of QoS…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced MIMO Systems Optimization · Cognitive Radio Networks and Spectrum Sensing · Cooperative Communication and Network Coding
