Design and Optimal Configuration of Full-Duplex MAC Protocol for Cognitive Radio Networks Considering Self-Interference
Le Thanh Tan, Long Bao Le

TL;DR
This paper introduces an adaptive full-duplex MAC protocol for cognitive radio networks that optimizes spectrum utilization and self-interference mitigation, demonstrating significant throughput improvements over existing protocols.
Contribution
It proposes a novel FD MAC protocol without requiring synchronization, along with an optimization algorithm for sensing time and transmit power to maximize throughput.
Findings
Optimal sensing time and transmit power exist for maximum throughput.
The proposed protocol outperforms existing half-duplex and single-stage FD MAC protocols.
Self-interference cancellation quality significantly impacts throughput.
Abstract
In this paper, we propose an adaptive Medium Access Control (MAC) protocol for full-duplex (FD) cognitive radio networks in which FD secondary users (SUs) perform channel contention followed by concurrent spectrum sensing and transmission, and transmission only with maximum power in two different stages (called the FD sensing and transmission stages, respectively) in each contention and access cycle. The proposed FD cognitive MAC (FDC-MAC) protocol does not require synchronization among SUs and it efficiently utilizes the spectrum and mitigates the self-interference in the FD transceiver. We then develop a mathematical model to analyze the throughput performance of the FDC-MAC protocol where both half-duplex (HD) transmission (HDTx) and FD transmission (FDTx) modes are considered in the transmission stage. Then, we study the FDC-MAC configuration optimization through adaptively…
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