We introduce four schemes to decode the signal at the destination node which are the direct scheme, the non-cooperative scheme, the cooperative scheme and the adaptive scheme. Except the direct scheme, the destination node uses the relayed signal in all other schemes.
Direct Scheme In the direct scheme, the destination decodes the data using the signal received from the source node on the first phase where the second phase transmission is omitted so that the relay node is not involved in transmission. The decoding signal received from the source node is written as: : r_{d,s} = h_{d,s} x_{s} + n_{d,s} \quad While the advantage of the direct scheme is its simplicity in terms of the decoding processing, the received signal power can be severely low if the distance between the source node and the destination node is large. Thus, in the following we consider non-cooperative scheme which exploits signal relaying to improve the signal quality.
Non-cooperative Scheme In the non-cooperative scheme, the destination decodes the data using the signal received from the relay on the second phase, which results in the signal power boosting gain. The signal received from the relay node which retransmits the signal received from the source node is written as: : r_{d,r} = h_{d,r} r_{r,s} + n_{d,r} = h_{d,r} h_{r,s} x_{s} + h_{d,r} n_{r,s} + n_{d,r} \quad where h_{d,r} is the channel from the relay to the destination nodes and n_{r,s} is the noise signal added to h_{d,r}. The reliability of decoding can be low since the degree of freedom is not increased by signal relaying. There is no increase in the diversity order since this scheme exploits only the relayed signal and the direct signal from the source node is either not available or is not accounted for. When we can take advantage of such a signal and increase in diversity order results. Thus, in the following we consider the cooperative scheme which decodes the combined signal of both the direct and relayed signals.
Cooperative Scheme For cooperative decoding, the destination node combines two signals received from the source and the relay nodes which results in the diversity advantage. The whole received signal vector at the destination node can be modeled as: : \mathbf{r} = [r_{d,s} \quad r_{d,r}]^T = [h_{d,s} \quad h_{d,r} h_{r,s}]^T x_{s} + \left[1 \quad \sqrt{|h_{d,r}|^2+1} \right]^T n_{d} = \mathbf{h} x_{s} + \mathbf{q} n_{d} where r_{d,s} and r_{d,r} are the signals received at the destination node from the source and relay nodes, respectively. As a linear decoding technique, the destination combines elements of the received signal vector as follows: : y = \mathbf{w}^H \mathbf{r} where \mathbf{w} is the linear combining weight which can be obtained to maximize
signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the combined signals subject to given the complexity level of the weight calculation.
Adaptive Scheme Adaptive scheme selects one of the three modes described above which are the direct, the non-cooperative, and the cooperative schemes relying on the network
channel state information and other network parameters. == Trade-off ==