Summary: | This paper investigates non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA), cooperative relaying, and energy harvesting to support device-to-device (D2D) transmission. In particular, we deploy multiple relay nodes and a cell-center D2D device which can operate in full-duplex (FD) or half-duplex (HD) mode to communicate with a cell-edge D2D device. In this context, there are two possible signal transmission paths from the base station (BS) to the far D2D user either through multiple decode-and-forward (DF) relay nodes or through a near D2D user. Consequently, we propose three schemes to support D2D-NOMA systems, namely non-energy harvesting relaying (Non-EHR), energy harvesting relaying (EHR) and quantize-map-forward relaying (QMFR) schemes. For each of the proposed schemes, closed-form expressions of the outage probabilities of both D2D users are derived. Extensive Monte-Carlo simulation results are provided to validate the derived analytical expressions. The study results show that the proposed schemes can improve the outage performance compared to conventional orthogonal multiple access (OMA) schemes. Moreover, it is shown that the Non-EHR scheme achieves the best outage performance among the three considered schemes.
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