51 research outputs found
An Overview of Physical Layer Security with Finite-Alphabet Signaling
Providing secure communications over the physical layer with the objective of
achieving perfect secrecy without requiring a secret key has been receiving
growing attention within the past decade. The vast majority of the existing
studies in the area of physical layer security focus exclusively on the
scenarios where the channel inputs are Gaussian distributed. However, in
practice, the signals employed for transmission are drawn from discrete signal
constellations such as phase shift keying and quadrature amplitude modulation.
Hence, understanding the impact of the finite-alphabet input constraints and
designing secure transmission schemes under this assumption is a mandatory step
towards a practical implementation of physical layer security. With this
motivation, this article reviews recent developments on physical layer security
with finite-alphabet inputs. We explore transmit signal design algorithms for
single-antenna as well as multi-antenna wiretap channels under different
assumptions on the channel state information at the transmitter. Moreover, we
present a review of the recent results on secure transmission with discrete
signaling for various scenarios including multi-carrier transmission systems,
broadcast channels with confidential messages, cognitive multiple access and
relay networks. Throughout the article, we stress the important behavioral
differences of discrete versus Gaussian inputs in the context of the physical
layer security. We also present an overview of practical code construction over
Gaussian and fading wiretap channels, and we discuss some open problems and
directions for future research.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials (1st Revision
Secure Transmission for Relay Wiretap Channels in the Presence of Spatially Random Eavesdroppers
We propose a secure transmission scheme for a relay wiretap channel, where a
source communicates with a destination via a decode-and-forward relay in the
presence of spatially random-distributed eavesdroppers. We assume that the
source is equipped with multiple antennas, whereas the relay, the destination,
and the eavesdroppers are equipped with a single antenna each. In the proposed
scheme, in addition to information signals, the source transmits artificial
noise signals in order to confuse the eavesdroppers. With the target of
maximizing the secrecy throughput of the relay wiretap channel, we derive a
closed-form expression for the transmission outage probability and an
easy-to-compute expression for the secrecy outage probability. Using these
expressions, we determine the optimal power allocation factor and wiretap code
rates that guarantee the maximum secrecy throughput, while satisfying a secrecy
outage probability constraint. Furthermore, we examine the impact of source
antenna number on the secrecy throughput, showing that adding extra transmit
antennas at the source brings about a significant increase in the secrecy
throughput.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, accepted by IEEE Globecom 2015 Workshop on
Trusted Communications with Physical Layer Securit
A Survey of Physical Layer Security Techniques for 5G Wireless Networks and Challenges Ahead
Physical layer security which safeguards data confidentiality based on the
information-theoretic approaches has received significant research interest
recently. The key idea behind physical layer security is to utilize the
intrinsic randomness of the transmission channel to guarantee the security in
physical layer. The evolution towards 5G wireless communications poses new
challenges for physical layer security research. This paper provides a latest
survey of the physical layer security research on various promising 5G
technologies, including physical layer security coding, massive multiple-input
multiple-output, millimeter wave communications, heterogeneous networks,
non-orthogonal multiple access, full duplex technology, etc. Technical
challenges which remain unresolved at the time of writing are summarized and
the future trends of physical layer security in 5G and beyond are discussed.Comment: To appear in IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communication
Secure Multiuser Communications in Wireless Sensor Networks with TAS and Cooperative Jamming
In this paper, we investigate the secure transmission in wireless sensor networks (WSNs) consisting of one multiple-antenna base station (BS), multiple single-antenna legitimate users, one single-antenna eavesdropper and one multiple-antenna cooperative jammer. In an effort to reduce the scheduling complexity and extend the battery lifetime of the sensor nodes, the switch-and-stay combining (SSC) scheduling scheme is exploited over the sensor nodes. Meanwhile, transmit antenna selection (TAS) is employed at the BS and cooperative jamming (CJ) is adopted at the jammer node, aiming at achieving a satisfactory secrecy performance. Moreover, depending on whether the jammer node has the global channel state information (CSI) of both the legitimate channel and the eavesdropper's channel, it explores a zero-forcing beamforming (ZFB) scheme or a null-space artificial noise (NAN) scheme to confound the eavesdropper while avoiding the interference to the legitimate user. Building on this, we propose two novel hybrid secure transmission schemes, termed TAS-SSC-ZFB and TAS-SSC-NAN, for WSNs. We then derive the exact closed-form expressions for the secrecy outage probability and the effective secrecy throughput of both schemes to characterize the secrecy performance. Using these closed-form expressions, we further determine the optimal switching threshold and obtain the optimal power allocation factor between the BS and jammer node for both schemes to minimize the secrecy outage probability, while the optimal secrecy rate is decided to maximize the effective secrecy throughput for both schemes. Numerical results are provided to verify the theoretical analysis and illustrate the impact of key system parameters on the secrecy performance.This work was supported by the National Science Foundation of China (No. 61501507), and the Jiangsu Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China (No. BK20150719). The work of Nan Yang is supported by the Australian Research Council Discovery Project (DP150103905)
An Overview of Physical Layer Security with Finite Alphabet Signaling
Providing secure communications over the physical layer with the objective of achieving secrecy without requiring a secret key has been receiving growing attention within the past decade. The vast majority of the existing studies in the area of physical layer security focus exclusively on the scenarios where the channel inputs are Gaussian distributed. However, in practice, the signals employed for transmission are drawn from discrete signal constellations such as phase shift keying and quadrature amplitude modulation. Hence, understanding the impact of the finite-alphabet input constraints and designing secure transmission schemes under this assumption is a mandatory step towards a practical implementation of physical layer security. With this motivation, this article reviews recent developments on physical layer security with finite-alphabet inputs. We explore transmit signal design algorithms for single-antenna as well as multi-antenna wiretap channels under different assumptions on the channel state information at the transmitter. Moreover, we present a review of the recent results on secure transmission with discrete signaling for various scenarios including multi-carrier transmission systems, broadcast channels with confidential messages, cognitive multiple access and relay networks. Throughout the article, we stress the important behavioral differences of discrete versus Gaussian inputs in the context of the physical layer security. We also present an overview of practical code construction over Gaussian and fading wiretap channels, and discuss some open problems and directions for future research
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