Adaptive Transmission for Distributed Detection in Energy Harvesting Wireless Sensor Networks

We consider a wireless sensor network, consisting of N heterogeneous sensors and a fusion center (FC), tasked with detecting a known signal in uncorrelated Gaussian noises. Each sensor can harvest randomly arriving energy and store it in a finite-size battery. Sensors communicate directly with the F...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inarXiv.org
Main Authors Ardeshiri, Ghazaleh, Vosoughi, Azadeh
Format Paper
LanguageEnglish
Published Ithaca Cornell University Library, arXiv.org 03.03.2021
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ISSN2331-8422

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Summary:We consider a wireless sensor network, consisting of N heterogeneous sensors and a fusion center (FC), tasked with detecting a known signal in uncorrelated Gaussian noises. Each sensor can harvest randomly arriving energy and store it in a finite-size battery. Sensors communicate directly with the FC over orthogonal fading channels. Each sensor adapts its transmit symbol power, such that the larger its stored energy and its quantized channel gain are, the higher its transmit symbol power is. To strike a balance between energy harvesting and energy consumption, we formulate two constrained optimization problems (P1) and (P2), where in both problems we seek the jointly optimal local decision thresholds and channel gain quantization thresholds. While in (P1) we maximize the Jdivergence of the received signal densities at the FC, in (P2) we minimize the average total transmit power, subject to certain constraints. We solve (P1) and (P2), assuming that the batteries reach their steady-state. Our simulation results demonstrate the effectiveness of our optimization on enhancing the detection performance in (P1), and lowering the average total transmit power in (P2). They also reveal how the energy harvesting rate, the battery size, the sensor observation and communication channel parameters impact obtained solutions.
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ISSN:2331-8422