Abstract
The increasingly crowded wireless spectrum has led to the need of new paradigms in wireless communication and the cognitive radio techniques that can offer promising solutions to the spectrum scarcity. In cognitive radio networks licensed primary users and unlicensed secondary users are allowed to coexist in the same frequency spectrum. Beamforming and MIMO technology can be used to minimize the interference from the secondary users to the primary users while improving the quality of communication when each node is equipped with multiple antennas to form an antenna array. However, equipping multiple antennas at each radio node is not feasible in many applications. In this paper, we consider the radio network with single antenna at each node. We first propose a cooperative network architecture in the network layer. The architecture consists of cooperative clusters used for distributed beamforming, and a routing backbone used for avoiding the interference to the primary users in the relay route that optimizes the QoS and energy consumption of the secondary user network. Then we propose a computationally efficient secondary users selection scheme in the link layer for the communication between two cooperative clusters while minimizing the interference to the primary users. The simulation results show that the proposed protocols and algorithms are effective and efficient.