Abstract

Wireless powered communication (WPC) is able to provide wireless devices (WDs) practically infinite energy by using the radio frequency energy harvesting technique. The electricity of WDs for the wireless information transmission (WIT) is converted from the received electromagnetic signals of wireless energy transfer (WET). Power beacon (PB) is usually deployed as the dedicated energy source in WPC networks and the performance of WET is sensitive to the path-loss effect. Thus, both WET and WIT are significantly influenced by the locations of the PBs. To enable efficient transmission in WPC, this paper analytically investigates the impact of the PB deployment strategies on the WPC performance when WDs are clustered around the access points (APs). Specifically, we propose the PB deployment strategy based on the truncated Poisson cluster process (PCP) model. The distribution of PBs is correlated to the locations of WDs by choosing APs as their common parent points. Then, we derive the semi-closed form expressions for the energy outage probability and the transmission success probability. We further present the expressions of the meta distributions of WET and WIT, and investigate the proportion of the WDs in one cluster that achieves successful transmission while satisfying the reliability constraint. Moreover, the distance distribution between the WD and the intra-cluster PBs is analytically derived for the proposed correlated PCP model. By comparing the performance with other deployment strategies, it is shown that the preference of the PB deployment strategy depends on the PB density. The analytical and numerical results can provide insightful guidelines for designing practical WPC systems.

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