Abstract

Energy harvesting with combination of multiple cooperating radio access technologies (multi-RAT) is regarded as a promising network paradigm to improve the energy efficiency of 5G networks. In this paper, we propose a resource-on-demand energy scheduling strategy for multi-RAT wireless networks, where the varying energy demand of the network can be satisfied by both grid power and harvested energy. Due to the high sensitivity to uncertainties of energy harvesting, a dynamic network energy queue model is designed first considering the inherently stochastic and intermittent nature of the harvested energy. Then, to minimize time-averaged grid power consumption and make effective utilization of harvested energy, the energy scheduling is formulated as a stochastic optimization problem subject to data queue stability and harvested energy availability, considering the high ynamics of wireless channel states and renewable energy sources. Following the Lyapunov optimization framework, the stochastic grid power minimization problem is decomposed into a network flow control subproblem, a network energy management subproblem, and a network resource allocation subproblem, respectively. In order to solve these subproblems, we develop a dynamic adaptive resource-on-demand (DAROD) algorithm to effectively reduce the grid power consumption cost by allocating the resource efficiently based on the dynamic demands of multi-RAT networks. Finally, the tradeoff between grid power consumption cost and network delay is achieved, in which the increase of network delay is approximately linear with the network control parameter $V$ and the decrease of grid power consumption cost is at the speed of $1/V$ . Extensive simulations are conducted to verify the theoretical analysis and show the effectiveness of our proposed algorithm.

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