Abstract

In this paper, we investigate the resource allocation problem for the symbiotic radio system, in which the passive backscatter transmission is parasitic in the primary transmission, and the cooperative receiver simultaneously detects the signals transmitted from the active primary transmitter (PT) and the backscatter device (BD). In particular, channel fading is considered, and the ergodic weighted sum rate of the primary and backscatter transmissions is maximized by jointly optimizing the transmit power at the PT and the reflection coefficient at the BD under either long-term or short-term transmit-power constraint over the fading states. Two practical transmission setups are considered, where the relationship between the primary and backscatter transmissions is either commensal or parasitic. For the commensal setup, we fix the reflection coefficient as the maximum value and derive the optimal power allocation scheme based on the standard convex optimization procedure. For the parasitic setup, the weighted sum-rate maximization problem is non-convex, and we resort to the concave–convex procedure to derive a suboptimal solution. Simulation results demonstrate that in the commensal setup, the BD may realize transmission while causing no harmful interference to the primary system; in the parasitic setup, a higher backscatter data rate can be achieved through slightly sacrificing the primary transmission rate.

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