An investigation on the use of SNR distributions for the optimisation of coarse-fine spectrum sensing for cognitive radio


Autoria(s): Lawton, Brendan
Contribuinte(s)

Murphy, Colin C.

Irish Research Council for Science Engineering and Technology

Data(s)

24/03/2014

2013

2013

Resumo

This thesis investigates the optimisation of Coarse-Fine (CF) spectrum sensing architectures under a distribution of SNRs for Dynamic Spectrum Access (DSA). Three different detector architectures are investigated: the Coarse-Sorting Fine Detector (CSFD), the Coarse-Deciding Fine Detector (CDFD) and the Hybrid Coarse-Fine Detector (HCFD). To date, the majority of the work on coarse-fine spectrum sensing for cognitive radio has focused on a single value for the SNR. This approach overlooks the key advantage that CF sensing has to offer, namely that high powered signals can be easily detected without extra signal processing. By considering a range of SNR values, the detector can be optimised more effectively and greater performance gains realised. This work considers the optimisation of CF spectrum sensing schemes where the security and performance are treated separately. Instead of optimising system performance at a single, constant, low SNR value, the system instead is optimised for the average operating conditions. The security is still provided such that at the low SNR values the safety specifications are met. By decoupling the security and performance, the system’s average performance increases whilst maintaining the protection of licensed users from harmful interference. The different architectures considered in this thesis are investigated in theory, simulation and physical implementation to provide a complete overview of the performance of each system. This thesis provides a method for estimating SNR distributions which is quick, accurate and relatively low cost. The CSFD is modelled and the characteristic equations are found for the CDFD scheme. The HCFD is introduced and optimisation schemes for all three architectures are proposed. Finally, using the Implementing Radio In Software (IRIS) test-bed to confirm simulation results, CF spectrum sensing is shown to be significantly quicker than naive methods, whilst still meeting the required interference probability rates and not requiring substantial receiver complexity increases.

Accepted Version

Not peer reviewed

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

Lawton, B. 2013. An investigation on the use of SNR distributions for the optimisation of coarse-fine spectrum sensing for cognitive radio. PhD Thesis, University College Cork.

219

http://hdl.handle.net/10468/1486

Idioma(s)

en

en

Publicador

University College Cork

Direitos

© 2013, Brendan Lawton

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/

Palavras-Chave #Cognitive radio #Software radio #Artificial intelligence #Wireless communication systems
Tipo

Doctoral thesis

Doctoral

PHD (Engineering)