31 research outputs found
A comprehensive survey on hybrid communication in context of molecular communication and terahertz communication for body-centric nanonetworks
With the huge advancement of nanotechnology over the past years, the devices are shrinking into micro-scale, even nano-scale. Additionally, the Internet of nano-things (IoNTs) are generally regarded as the ultimate formation of the current sensor networks and the development of nanonetworks would be of great help to its fulfilment, which would be ubiquitous with numerous applications in all domains of life. However, the communication between the devices in such nanonetworks is still an open problem. Body-centric nanonetworks are believed to play an essential role in the practical application of IoNTs. BCNNs are also considered as domain specific like wireless sensor networks and always deployed on purpose to support a particular application. In these networks, electromagnetic and molecular communications are widely considered as two main promising paradigms and both follow their own development process. In this survey, the recent developments of these two paradigms are first illustrated in the aspects of applications, network structures, modulation techniques, coding techniques and security to then investigate the potential of hybrid communication paradigms. Meanwhile, the enabling technologies have been presented to apprehend the state-of-art with the discussion on the possibility of the hybrid technologies. Additionally, the inter-connectivity of electromagnetic and molecular body-centric nanonetworks is discussed. Afterwards, the related security issues of the proposed networks are discussed. Finally, the challenges and open research directions are presented
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Modern Applications in Optics and Photonics: From Sensing and Analytics to Communication
Optics and photonics are among the key technologies of the 21st century, and offer potential for novel applications in areas such as sensing and spectroscopy, analytics, monitoring, biomedical imaging/diagnostics, and optical communication technology. The high degree of control over light fields, together with the capabilities of modern processing and integration technology, enables new optical measurement systems with enhanced functionality and sensitivity. They are attractive for a range of applications that were previously inaccessible. This Special Issue aims to provide an overview of some of the most advanced application areas in optics and photonics and indicate the broad potential for the future
Application-motivated, holistic benchmarking of a full quantum computing stack
Quantum computing systems need to be benchmarked in terms of practical tasks they would be expected to do. Here, we propose 3 "application-motivated" circuit classes for benchmarking: deep (relevant for state preparation in the variational quantum eigensolver algorithm), shallow (inspired by IQP-type circuits that might be useful for near-term quantum machine learning), and square (inspired by the quantum volume benchmark). We quantify the performance of a quantum computing system in running circuits from these classes using several figures of merit, all of which require exponential classical computing resources and a polynomial number of classical samples (bitstrings) from the system. We study how performance varies with the compilation strategy used and the device on which the circuit is run. Using systems made available by IBM Quantum, we examine their performance, showing that noise-aware compilation strategies may be beneficial, and that device connectivity and noise levels play a crucial role in the performance of the system according to our benchmarks
Efficient Communication Protocols for Wireless Nanoscale Sensor Networks
Advances in nanotechnology are paving the way for wireless nanoscale sensor networks (WNSNs), promising radically new applications in medical, biological, and chemical fields. However, the small scale poses formidable challenges for communication. First, small nanomaterial-based antennas communicate in the terahertz band, which coincides with the natural resonance frequencies of many types of molecules causing severe molecular absorption and noise. The problem is particularly complicated if the molecular composition of the channel changes over time, causing time-varying absorption and noise. Second, as it is not practical to fit large batteries or replace batteries in a small device, these devices are expected to power themselves by harvesting ambient energy from the environment. However, the amount of energy that can be harvested is directly proportional to the size of the harvester. A nanodevice therefore can generate only a tiny fraction of its total power consumption, which requires us to rethink the design of communication protocols for self-powering WNSNs.
In order to address aforementioned challenges, this thesis makes three fundamental contributions. First, it proposes dynamic frequency and power selection as a means to overcome the first problem, i.e, changing molecular composition problem in a time-varying terahertz channel. The dynamic frequency/power selection problem is modelled as a Markov Decision Process to derive the optimal solutions, while several practical heuristics are proposed that achieve close to optimal solutions. Second, to address the severe power shortage problem in a self-powering nanodevice, this thesis proposes a mechanism to exploit the information contained in the energy harvesting data to detect the energy-dissipating events occurring in the environment. This form of event monitoring makes dual use of the energy-harvesting unit in the nanodevice, i.e., it is used to generate power as well as monitor the environment, thus saving significant energy, which otherwise would have been used to power the onboard sensors. Finally, novel WNSN applications are designed and analysed to monitor and control chemical reactors at the molecular level with the ultimate goal of increasing the selectivity of the reactor. It is shown that using the proposed communication protocols for a time-varying terahertz channel, the selectivity of the reactor can be significantly increased, beyond what can be achieved with conventional solutions
Terahertz Communications and Sensing for 6G and Beyond: A Comprehensive View
The next-generation wireless technologies, commonly referred to as the sixth
generation (6G), are envisioned to support extreme communications capacity and
in particular disruption in the network sensing capabilities. The terahertz
(THz) band is one potential enabler for those due to the enormous unused
frequency bands and the high spatial resolution enabled by both short
wavelengths and bandwidths. Different from earlier surveys, this paper presents
a comprehensive treatment and technology survey on THz communications and
sensing in terms of the advantages, applications, propagation characterization,
channel modeling, measurement campaigns, antennas, transceiver devices,
beamforming, networking, the integration of communications and sensing, and
experimental testbeds. Starting from the motivation and use cases, we survey
the development and historical perspective of THz communications and sensing
with the anticipated 6G requirements. We explore the radio propagation, channel
modeling, and measurements for THz band. The transceiver requirements,
architectures, technological challenges, and approaches together with means to
compensate for the high propagation losses by appropriate antenna and
beamforming solutions. We survey also several system technologies required by
or beneficial for THz systems. The synergistic design of sensing and
communications is explored with depth. Practical trials, demonstrations, and
experiments are also summarized. The paper gives a holistic view of the current
state of the art and highlights the issues and challenges that are open for
further research towards 6G.Comment: 55 pages, 10 figures, 8 tables, submitted to IEEE Communications
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