Abstract

This paper studies a simultaneous lightwave information and power transfer (SLIPT)-enabled multi-user (MU) multiple input single output (MISO) visible light communication (VLC) network, where multiple user equipments (UEs) are simultaneously allowed to receive information by the photodiode (PD) and harvest energy by the solar panel, respectively. To improve the system spectral efficiency, an achievable sum rate maximization problem is formulated subject to the minimum energy harvesting (EH) requirement of each UE, the total transmit power constraint of the LEDs and the dimming control constraint of the LEDs, by jointly optimizing the beamforming vector and the direct current (DC) bias vector of the LEDs. To be general, the practical non-linear EH model and the information capacity model of the VLC channel are adopted. To solve the non-convex optimization problem, the objective function is equivalently transformed at first by using the epigraph reformulation, and then the transformed problem is relaxed with the semi-definite relaxation (SDR) method. Based on this, an iterative algorithm is designed to approximately obtain the maximal achievable sum rate based on the successive convex approximation (SCA). Simulation results indicate that there exists a non-trivial trade-off between the achievable sum rate and the harvested energy, and that DC bias vector dominates the amount of the harvested energy compared with the beamforming vector. Besides, for a given relatively high EH requirement, the achievable sum rate increases with the increment of the dimming level, especially for relatively small dimming level. Once the dimming level is larger than a specific value, with the increment of the dimming level, more transmit power will be allocated for illumination, resulting in the decrement of the achievable sum rate.

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