On the Structure of the Optimal Detector for Sub-THz Multi-Hop Relays with Unknown Prior: Over-the-Air Diffusion
Ozgur Ercetin, Mohaned Chraiti

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel diffusion-based framework for optimal decoding in multi-hop sub-THz relay systems, achieving near-optimal performance without requiring channel state information at relays.
Contribution
It models AF relay chains as diffusion processes, deriving a simplified Gaussian equivalent channel that enables CSI-free Bayesian decoding using DDIMs.
Findings
Reduces mean-squared error, symbol error rate, and bit error rate.
Achieves near-optimal decoding performance without per-hop CSI.
Validates effectiveness through simulations under AWGN and Rician fading.
Abstract
Amplify and forward (AF) relaying is a viable strategy to extend the coverage of sub-terahertz (sub-THz) links, but inevitably propagates noise, leading to cumulative degradation across multiple hops. At the receiver, optimal decoding is desirable, yet challenging under non-Gaussian input distributions (video, voice, etc), for which neither the Minimum Mean Square Error (MMSE) estimator nor the mutual information admits a closed form. A further open question is whether knowledge of Channel State Information (CSI) and noise statistics at the intermediate relays is necessary for optimal detection. Aiming for an optimal decoder, this paper introduces a new framework that interprets the AF relay chain as a variance-preserving diffusion process and employs denoising diffusion implicit models (DDIMs) for signal recovery. We show that each AF hop is mathematically equivalent to a diffusion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCooperative Communication and Network Coding · Millimeter-Wave Propagation and Modeling · Wireless Communication Security Techniques
