seminar:M. Cenk Gürsoy,June 02, 2010 Wednesday, FENS G032, 13:00 P.M.
ENERGY EFFICIENCY IN WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS –The Impact of Quality of Service Constraints, Secrecy, and Channel Uncertainty
M. Cenk Gürsoy (the University of Nebraska-Lincoln)
Abstract: Next generation wireless systems will be designed to
provide high-data-rate communications anytime and anywhere in a secure,
reliable, and robust fashion while making efficient use of resources.
This wireless vision will enable mobile multimedia communications.
Indeed, one of the features of fourth generation (4G) wireless systems
is the ability to support multimedia services at low transmission
costs. However, before this vision is realized, many technical
challenges have to be addressed.
In most wireless systems, an important consideration is energy
efficiency. Especially in mobile applications, energy resources are
scarce and have to be conserved. Moreover, with emerging applications
in wireless ad-hoc and wireless sensor networks, energy-efficient
operation is becoming a critical issue, especially when the
replenishment of energy resources is not easy, rendering the lifetime
of the wireless network highly dependent on energy consumption. In
addition to energy efficiency, other pivotal concerns in
next-generation wireless systems are providing certain quality of
service guarantees such as delay bounds in multimedia applications,
securing the transmissions, and operating reliably under
randomly-varying channel conditions.
In this talk, we will discuss the impact of quality of service
constraints, secrecy requirements, and channel uncertainty on the
energy efficiency of a wireless system. Following an
information-theoretic approach, we will establish the fundamental
performance limits and quantify the increased energy requirements in
the presence of these considerations. In particular, we will consider
different performance metrics, such as effective capacity under buffer
limitations, secrecy capacity, and ergodic Shannon capacity, to measure
the throughput. We will identify the minimum energy required to send
one bit of information reliably. In a general setting in which
multiple-antennas are available at both the transmitter and receiver,
we will determine the optimal transmission strategies for
energy-efficient operation, and characterize the key tradeoffs.
Bio: M. Cenk Gursoy received the B.S. degree in electrical and
electronic engineering from Bogazici University, Istanbul, Turkey, in
1999 with high distinction, and the Ph.D. degree in electrical
engineering from Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA, in 2004. He
was a recipient of the Gordon Wu Graduate Fellowship from Princeton
University between 1999 and 2003. In the summer of 2000, he worked at
Lucent Technologies, Holmdel, NJ, where he conducted performance
analysis of DSL modems. Since September 2004, he has been an Assistant
Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering at the University
of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL). His research interests are in the general
areas of wireless communications, information theory, communication
networks, and signal processing. He has been a member of the technical
program committees of major IEEE conferences in these areas. He is
currently serving as a member of the editorial board of the IEEE
Transactions on Wireless Communications and the Elsevier Journal
Physical Communication. He received an NSF CAREER Award in 2006. More
recently, in 2009, he received the EURASIP Journal of Wireless
Communications and Networking Best Paper Award, the UNL College
Distinguished Teaching Award, and the Holling Family Master Teacher
Award (a UNL University-wide Teaching Award).
June 02, 2010 Wednesday, FENS G032, 13:00 P.M.