Outage Constrained Design in NOMA-Based D2D Offloading Systems
Non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) is a new multiple access method that has been considered in 5G cellular communications in recent years, and can provide better throughput than traditional orthogonal multiple access (OMA) to save communication bandwidth. Device-to-device (D2D) communication, as a key technology of 5G, can reuse network resources to improve the spectrum utilization of the entire communication network. Combining NOMA technology with D2D is an effective solution to improve mobile edge computing (MEC) communication throughput and user access density. Considering the estimation error of channel, we investigate the power of the transmit nodes optimization problem of NOMA-based D2D networks under the rates outage probability (OP) constraints of all single users. Specifically, under the channel statistical error model, the total system transmit power is minimized with the rate OP constraint of a single device. Unfortunately, the problem presented is thorny and non-convex. After equivalent transformation of the rate OP constraints by the Bernstein inequality, an algorithm based on semi-definite relaxation (SDR) can efficiently solve this challenging non-convex problem. Numerical results show that the channel estimation error increases the power consumption of the system. We also compare NOMA with the OMA mode, and the numerical results show that the D2D offloading systems based on NOMA are superior to OMA.