4.7 Article

Blind Energy-Based Detection for Spatial Spectrum Sensing

Journal

IEEE WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS LETTERS
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages 98-101

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/LWC.2014.2377233

Keywords

Cognitive radio; energy detection; random matrix theory (RMT); spatial spectrum sensing

Funding

  1. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [DUT14RC(3)103]

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Conventional energy detection (ED) spectrum sensing method requires the knowledge of noise power and consequently suffers from noise uncertainty. In this letter we propose a novel blind spatial spectrum sensing method to conquer this problem. We utilize an Electronically Steerable Parasitic Antenna Receptor (ESPAR) which can divide the space into several sectors and switch receive beampattern to each sector in a time-division fashion. The difference of received signal energies among sectors heavily depends on the presence/absence of the primary user (PU) signal. Motivated by this fact, we introduce a blind energy-based spatial spectrum sensing algorithm using the ratio of maximum-minimum energy (MMEN). The MMEN spectrum sensing method can overcome the noise uncertainty problem and achieve higher accuracy performance with lower computational complexity. Theoretical performance analysis of the proposed MMEN method is also provided. Simulation results are presented to verify the efficiency of the proposed algorithm.

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