Dr. Mohammadali Mohammadi

Research Fellow

Address:

ECIT Institute, Queen's University Belfast

Queen's Road, Queen's Island, Catalyst Inc

Belfast, BT3 9DT, Northern Ireland, U.K.


Email:   m.mohammadi@qub.ac.uk

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Brief Biography 

Mohammadali Mohammadi (Senior Member, IEEE) received the B.Sc. degree in electrical engineering from the Isfahan University of Technology, Isfahan, Iran, and the M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees in wireless communication engineering from the K. N. Toosi University of Technology, Tehran, Iran in 2007 and 2012, respectively. From November 2010 to November 2011, he was a Visiting Researcher with the Research School of Engineering, the Australian National University, Australia. In 2013, he joined Shahrekord University, Iran, as an Assistant Professor, and was promoted to an Associate Professor before joining Queen’s University Belfast in 2021, as a Research Fellow. He has coauthored two book chapters, “Full-Duplex Non-orthogonal Multiple Access Systems,” invited chapter in Full-Duplex Communication for Future Networks (Springer-Verlag, 2020) and “Full-Duplex wireless-powered communications”, invited chapter in Wireless Information and Power Transfer: A New Green Communications Paradigm (Springer-Verlag, 2017). His research interests span diverse areas, such as full-duplex communications, wireless power transfer, OTFS modulation, reconfigurable intelligent surface, and cell-free massive MIMO. He has published more than 70 research papers in accredited international peer reviewed journals and conferences in the area of wireless communication. He was a recipient of the Exemplary Reviewer Award for IEEE Transactions on Communications in 2020 and 2022, and IEEE Communications Letters in 2023. Furthermore, he has actively served as a Technical Program Committee Member of a variety of conferences, such as ICC, VTC, 

Research Interests

My general research interests are the application of mathematical, statistical, random matrix, optimization theories, and signal processing to wireless communications and information theory.