4.7 Article

Enabling Wireless Power Transfer in Cellular Networks: Architecture, Modeling and Deployment

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages 902-912

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TWC.2013.122313.130727

Keywords

Power transmission; cellular networks; energy harvesting; stochastic processes; adaptive arrays; mobile communication

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Microwave power transfer (MPT) delivers energy wirelessly from stations called power beacons (PBs) to mobile devices by microwave radiation. This provides mobiles practically infinite battery lives and eliminates the need of power cords and chargers. To enable MPT for mobile recharging, this paper proposes a new network architecture that overlays an uplink cellular network with randomly deployed PBs for powering mobiles, called a hybrid network. The deployment of the hybrid network under an outage constraint on data links is investigated based on a stochastic-geometry model where single-antenna base stations (BSs) and PBs form independent homogeneous Poisson point processes (PPPs) with densities lambda(b) and lambda(p), respectively, and single-antenna mobiles are uniformly distributed in Voronoi cells generated by BSs. In this model, mobiles and PBs fix their transmission power at p and q, respectively; a PB either radiates isotropically, called isotropic MPT, or directs energy towards target mobiles by beamforming, called directed MPT. The model is used to derive the tradeoffs between the network parameters (p, lambda(b), q, lambda(p)) under the outage constraint. First, consider the deployment of the cellular network. It is proved that the outage constraint is satisfied so long as the product p lambda(alpha/2)(b) is above a given threshold where a is the path-loss exponent. Next, consider the deployment of the hybrid network assuming infinite energy storage at mobiles. It is shown that for isotropic MPT, the product q lambda(p)lambda(alpha/2)(b) has to be above a given threshold so that PBs are sufficiently dense; for directed MPT, z(m)q lambda(p)lambda(alpha/2)(b) with z(m) denoting the array gain should exceed a different threshold to ensure short distances between PBs and their target mobiles. Furthermore, similar results are derived for the case of mobiles having small energy storage.

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