Bounds on Minimum Energy per Bit for Optical Wireless Relay Channels
Abstract
An optical wireless relay channel (OWRC) is the classical three node network consisting of source, re- lay and destination nodes with optical wireless connectivity. The channel law is assumed Gaussian. This paper studies the bounds on minimum energy per bit required for reliable communication over an OWRC. It is shown that capacity of an OWRC is concave and energy per bit is monotonically increasing in square of the peak optical signal power, and consequently the minimum energy per bit is inversely pro- portional to the square root of asymptotic capacity at low signal to noise ratio. This has been used to develop upper and lower bound on energy per bit as a function of peak signal power, mean to peak power ratio, and variance of channel noise. The upper and lower bounds on minimum energy per bit derived in this paper correspond respectively to the decode and forward lower bound and the min-max cut upper bound on OWRC capacity
Keywords
Optical wireless (OW), network information theory (NIT), optical wireless relay channel (OWRC), channel capacity, energy per bit EbPersistent identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/11012/36476Document type
Peer reviewedDocument version
Final PDFSource
Radioengineering. 2014, vol. 23, č. 3, s. 761-767. ISSN 1210-2512http://www.radioeng.cz/fulltexts/2014/14_03_0761_0767.pdf
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