We compare the energy efficiency of some transmission
schemes in wireless sensor networks. By constraining
the system to end-to-end throughput requirements, we assume
that the nodes in multi-hop and cooperative schemes operate
at a spectral efficiency which is twice that of the single-hop
transmission. By taking into account the energy consumption of
the RF circuitry, we show that cooperation may be considerably
more energy efficient than non-cooperative schemes even in small
transmission ranges, specially if a feedback channel is available.
SpectralEfficiency Analysis in OFDM and OFDM/OQAM based Cognitive Radio Networks The future wireless communication is expected to be able to improve the efficiency of spectrum usage. To solve ...
improved spectralefficiency, low latency, reduced operating costs, multi-antenna support, and seamless integration with the Internet and existing mobile communication systems. The LTE physical ...
Trellis coded modulation (TCM) is a well known scheme that reduces power requirements without any bandwidth expansion....spatial multiplexing gains are retained and spectralefficiency