Wireless Powered MEC Systems via Discrete Pinching Antennas: TDMA Versus NOMA

  • Peng Liu
  • , Zesong Fei*
  • , Meng Hua*
  • , Guangji Chen
  • , Xinyi Wang
  • , Ruiqi Liu
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Pinching antennas (PAs), a new type of reconfigurable and flexible antenna structures, have recently attracted significant research interest due to their ability to create line-of-sight links and mitigate large-scale path loss. Owing to their potential benefits, integrating PAs into wireless powered mobile edge computing (MEC) systems is regarded as a viable solution to improve both the efficiency of the energy transfer and task offloading. Unlike prior studies that assume ideal continuous PA placement along waveguides, this paper investigates a practical discrete PA-assisted wireless powered MEC framework, where devices first harvest energy from PA-emitted radio-frequency signals and then adopt a partial offloading mode, allocating part of the harvested energy to local computing and the remainder to uplink offloading. The uplink phase considers both the time-division multiple access (TDMA) and non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA), each examined under three levels of PA activation flexibility. For each configuration, we formulate a joint optimization problem to maximize the total computation bits and conduct a theoretical performance comparison between the TDMA and NOMA schemes. To address the resulting mixed-integer nonlinear problems, we develop a two-layer algorithm that combines closed-form solutions based on Karush-Kuhn-Tucker (KKT) conditions with a cross-entropy-based learning method. Numerical results validate the superiority of the proposed design in terms of the harvested energy and computation performance, revealing that TDMA and NOMA achieve comparable performance under coarser PA activation levels, whereas finer activation granularity enables TDMA to achieve superior computation performance over NOMA.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)12034-12049
Number of pages16
JournalIEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications
Volume25
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2026
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Discrete pinching antennas
  • NOMA
  • TDMA
  • mobile edge computing
  • wireless power transfer

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