Etd

Intelligent and Resilient Radio Resource Allocation for 5G and Beyond Wireless Communications

Public Deposited

Downloadable Content

open in viewer

This dissertation presents a comprehensive investigation of radio resource allocation for 5G and beyond wireless communication systems with an emphasis on resilience, intelligence, and security. It focuses on enhancing multi-input multi-output (MIMO) systems and intelligent reflective surface (IRS)-based mmWave communications by using machine learning, graph theory, graph neural networks, and low-rank approximation techniques. The study first proposes novel multi-streaming techniques for mmWave MIMO systems, emphasizing the optimum selection of subchannels and subantenna arrays via innovative beamforming methods. These methods, exploiting bipartite graph modeling and bi-clustering algorithms, significantly improve the system throughput while adhering to constant modulus and total power constraints. Second, the research considers a downlink multi-user-MIMO-millimeter wave communication system with imperfect channel state information (CSI) at the Base Station. It proposes a low-rank/Sparse Matrix Decomposition technique to mitigate sparsely distributed estimation errors, thus improving the sum-rate and establishing an effective measure for adversarial detection over the channel matrix. Further, the study explores adversarial attacks on a Graph Neural Network (GNN)-based radio resource management system in point-to-point (P2P) communications. It proposes four distinct adversarial attacks, each addressing different constraints, with the aim of manipulating the system behavior. Through an innovative eigenvalue analysis, this work also presents a mechanism to detect the presence of these attacks, highlighting significant changes in the system’s eigenvalue distribution under attack conditions. Lastly, the dissertation considers a multiuser system’s physical layer security with a Beyond Diagonal Reconfigurable Intelligent Surface (BD-RIS), in the presence of multiple eavesdroppers. It presents a hybrid approach combining Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) and Block Coordinate Descent (BCD) to optimize both the transmitter’s precoding and the BD-RIS beamforming matrix. The proposed approach enhances the sum-secrecy-rate and maintains a high level of service quality. Overall, this dissertation contributes to enhancing resource allocation performance measures such as spectral efficiency, energy efficiency, and fairness in next-generation wireless communication systems. It also paves the way for novel adversarial attack detection and prevention mechanisms, offering valuable insights into secure BD-RIS-based design.

Creator
Contributors
Degree
Unit
Publisher
Identifier
  • etd-111496
Keyword
Advisor
Committee
Defense date
Year
  • 2023
Date created
  • 2023-06-24
Resource type
Source
  • etd-111496
Rights statement
Last modified
  • 2023-10-09

Relations

In Collection:

Items

Items

Permanent link to this page: https://digital.wpi.edu/show/jq085p691