Abstract

In this paper, the access point (AP) in a wireless network is assumed to provide energy supply via wireless energy transfer to multiple terminals in the downlink, and all the terminals use the harvested energy to transmit their collected data to the AP in the uplink in a time division multiple access (TDMA) manner. Each terminal is provisioned with a finite energy storage and a finite data buffer to store the harvested energy and to buffer the arrived data traffic, respectively. Due to the limited data buffer and energy storage size, there might be data loss due to either data buffer overflow or energy storage depletion. Firstly, we aim at maximizing the long-term weighted sum-rate through energy beamforming vector design, power allocations, rate control, time allocations, and transmission mode selection subject to average transmit power, peak transmit power, data loss ratio requirements, practical data buffer as well as energy storage constraints. Secondly, the weighted max-min scheduling scheme is proposed to guarantee the fair access requirement by multiple terminals. Numerical analyses are presented to show that, the proposed adaptive design can substantially improve the average achievable rate region, while the proposed weighted max-min fair scheduling can effectively ensure the fair access requirements.

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