Abstract

The integration of both sensing and communication functions is a crucial feature for future communication systems. This paper considers a novel scenario where a radar covers multiple small-cell base stations which operate in different spectra. Due to the limited spectra resource, the radar needs to reuse the spectra of one BS for tracking. To suppress interference and improve performance, we propose a framework including two stages and the corresponding communication and sensing algorithms. Specifically, at the detection stage, we aim to minimize the system transmit power while maintaining the performance of both radar and communication. At the tracking stage, our goal is to maximize the radar sensing performance under a given power budget, while ensuring communication quality. Due to the complexity of the original problem, we address it by introducing auxiliary variables and proposing a penalty dual decomposition-based algorithm, enabling us to solve a more tractable form of the problem. In the inner loop, we propose a concave–convex procedure-based algorithm to handle the optimization problem, while adopting the block coordinate descent algorithm to iteratively update the variables. In the outer loop, we update the penalty term or Lagrange multipliers. Furthermore, we propose a radar target parameter estimation algorithm based on successive interference cancellation, which aims to mitigate communication interference. Finally, numerical simulations demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed system, and the superior performance of our proposed algorithms over benchmark algorithms.

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