286 research outputs found
Wireless-powered friendly jammer for physical layer security
Exploring a cooperative node as a friendly jammer
is an effective means of providing secure communication between
a source-destination pair in the presence of an eavesdropper. In
this work, we consider the use of a wireless-powered friendly
jammer. Without relying on external energy supply, the friendly
jammer is powered by the source node via wireless power
transfer. We apply a simple time-switching protocol where the
power transfer and jammer-assisted secure transmission occur in
different time blocks. By investigating the long-term behavior of
the communication protocol, we derive a closed-form expression
of the throughput. We further optimize the jamming power and
the rate parameters for maximizing the throughput subject to a
secrecy outage probability constraint.ARC Discovery Projects Grant DP15010390
Secure Communication with a Wireless-Powered Friendly Jammer
In this paper, we propose to use a wireless-powered friendly jammer to enable
secure communication between a source node and destination node, in the
presence of an eavesdropper. We consider a two-phase communication protocol
with fixed-rate transmission. In the first phase, wireless power transfer is
conducted from the source to the jammer. In the second phase, the source
transmits the information-bearing signal under the protection of a jamming
signal sent by the jammer using the harvested energy in the first phase. We
analytically characterize the long-time behavior of the proposed protocol and
derive a closed-form expression for the throughput. We further optimize the
rate parameters for maximizing the throughput subject to a secrecy outage
probability constraint. Our analytical results show that the throughput
performance differs significantly between the single-antenna jammer case and
the multi-antenna jammer case. For instance, as the source transmit power
increases, the throughput quickly reaches an upper bound with single-antenna
jammer, while the throughput grows unbounded with multi-antenna jammer. Our
numerical results also validate the derived analytical results.Comment: accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on Wireless
Communication
Secure Two-Way Transmission via Wireless-Powered Untrusted Relay and External Jammer
In this paper, we propose a two-way secure communication scheme where two
transceivers exchange confidential messages via a wireless powered untrusted
amplify-and-forward (AF) relay in the presence of an external jammer. We take
into account both friendly jamming (FJ) and Gaussian noise jamming (GNJ)
scenarios. Based on the time switching (TS) architecture at the relay, the data
transmission is done in three phases. In the first phase, both the
energy-starved nodes, the untrustworthy relay and the jammer, are charged by
non-information radio frequency (RF) signals from the sources. In the second
phase, the two sources send their information signals and concurrently, the
jammer transmits artificial noise to confuse the curious relay. Finally, the
third phase is dedicated to forward a scaled version of the received signal
from the relay to the sources. For the proposed secure transmission schemes, we
derive new closed-form lower-bound expressions for the ergodic secrecy sum rate
(ESSR) in the high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) regime. We further analyze the
asymptotic ESSR to determine the key parameters; the high SNR slope and the
high SNR power offset of the jamming based scenarios. To highlight the
performance advantage of the proposed FJ, we also examine the scenario of
without jamming (WoJ). Finally, numerical examples and discussions are provided
to acquire some engineering insights, and to demonstrate the impacts of
different system parameters on the secrecy performance of the considered
communication scenarios. The numerical results illustrate that the proposed FJ
significantly outperforms the traditional one-way communication and the
Constellation rotation approach, as well as our proposed benchmarks, the
two-way WoJ and GNJ scenarios.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Vehicular
Technolog
Joint Power Splitting and Secure Beamforming Design in the Wireless-powered Untrusted Relay Networks
In this work, we maximize the secrecy rate of the wireless-powered untrusted
relay network by jointly designing power splitting (PS) ratio and relay
beamforming with the proposed global optimal algorithm (GOA) and local optimal
algorithm (LOA). Different from the literature, artificial noise (AN) sent by
the destination not only degrades the channel condition of the eavesdropper to
improve the secrecy rate, but also becomes a new source of energy powering the
untrusted relay based on PS. Hence, it is of high economic benefits and
efficiency to take advantage of AN compared with the literature. Simulation
results show that LOA can achieve satisfactory secrecy rate performance
compared with that of GOA, but with less computation time.Comment: Submitted to GlobeCom201
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