Effective Capacity in Cognitive Radio Broadcast Channels
Marwan Hammouda, Sami Akin, J\"urgen Peissig

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the effective capacity of a cognitive radio broadcast channel with multiple sensing strategies, power constraints, and transmission policies, providing insights into optimal operation under various interference and sensing conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model for effective capacity in cognitive radio broadcast channels considering multiple sensing algorithms, power constraints, and transmission policies, with numerical validation.
Findings
Majority sensing rule outperforms others with good sensing results
Greedy transmission policy benefits strict interference constraints
Lower transmission rates are advantageous under loose interference constraints
Abstract
In this paper, we investigate effective capacity by modeling a cognitive radio broadcast channel with one secondary transmitter (ST) and two secondary receivers (SRs) under quality-of-service constraints and interference power limitations. We initially describe three different cooperative channel sensing strategies with different hard-decision combining algorithms at the ST, namely OR, Majority, and AND rules. Since the channel sensing occurs with possible errors, we consider a combined interference power constraint by which the transmission power of the secondary users (SUs) is bounded when the channel is sensed as both busy and idle. Furthermore, regarding the channel sensing decision and its correctness, there exist possibly four different transmission scenarios. We provide the instantaneous ergodic capacities of the channel between the ST and each SR in all of these scenarios.…
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