Abstract

In this paper, we provide a holistic overview of the aspect of electromagnetic radiation (EMR) and its efficient control in wireless communication networks. Especially, we focus on the emerging technology of wireless power transfer (WPT). Our global perspective is to suggest methods for the effective control of EMR while keeping at high levels the QoS experienced by users as well as the charging efficiency of WPT. First, we provide formal definitions of EMR in wireless communications and propose related performance metrics and EMR evaluations in wireless communication networks. Then, we focus on EMR control in efficient wireless power transfer, under different WPT models. For the well-known scalar model, we assume finite energy reserves and batteries, and introduce the low radiation efficient charging problem. For this problem, we identify its computational complexity and provide efficient algorithms and heuristics. A vectorial model of WPT is then employed, allowing a more precise management of radiation, via directly exploiting interesting super-additive and cancellative phenomena of received power; we provide algorithms which achieve satisfactory tradeoffs of charging efficiency and radiation. Then, we present a more futuristic model and the method of peer-to-peer wireless power transfer where no strong, central charger stations are used, thus keeping radiation at almost zero levels. Another method of controlling EMR in the case of mobile nodes is adapting the charger change in a dynamic, on-line way so as to avoid unnecessarily large fixed changing ranges. Finally, we discuss some future challenges and related research directions, toward efficiently combining high WPT provisioning and low EMR. Such directions include the effective management of mobility in the network, the use of diverse WPT signal phase-configuration as well as efficient chargers’ scheduling strategies.

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