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Improving Physical Layer Secrecy Using Full-Duplex Jamming Receivers

TLDR
The proposed self-protection scheme eliminates the need for external helpers and provides system robustness and the optimal jamming covariance matrix is rank-1, and can be found via an efficient 1-D search.
Abstract
This paper studies secrecy rate optimization in a wireless network with a single-antenna source, a multi-antenna destination and a multi-antenna eavesdropper. This is an unfavorable scenario for secrecy performance as the system is interference-limited. In the literature, assuming that the receiver operates in half duplex (HD) mode, the aforementioned problem has been addressed via use of cooperating nodes who act as jammers to confound the eavesdropper. This paper investigates an alternative solution, which assumes the availability of a full duplex (FD) receiver. In particular, while receiving data, the receiver transmits jamming noise to degrade the eavesdropper channel. The proposed self-protection scheme eliminates the need for external helpers and provides system robustness. For the case in which global channel state information is available, we aim to design the optimal jamming covariance matrix that maximizes the secrecy rate and mitigates loop interference associated with the FD operation. We consider both fixed and optimal linear receiver design at the destination, and show that the optimal jamming covariance matrix is rank-1, and can be found via an efficient 1-D search. For the case in which only statistical information on the eavesdropper channel is available, the optimal power allocation is studied in terms of ergodic and outage secrecy rates. Simulation results verify the analysis and demonstrate substantial performance gain over conventional HD operation at the destination.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A New Design Paradigm for Secure Full-Duplex Multiuser Systems

TL;DR: In this article, the authors considered a FD multiuser system where an FD base station was designed to simultaneously serve both DL and UL users in the presence of half-duplex eavesdroppers (Eves).
Journal ArticleDOI

Inband Full-Duplex Radio Transceivers: A Paradigm Shift in Tactical Communications and Electronic Warfare?

TL;DR: This article outlines and analyzes all the most promising defensive and offensive applications of the STAR capability and comprehensively introduces FD transceiver architectures and SIC requirements in military communications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relay Selection for Secure Successive AF Relaying Networks With Untrusted Nodes

TL;DR: This paper proposes a successive relaying scheme, where the multi-antenna source transmits to two selected nodes alternately, and the conventional detrimental inter-relay interference is used to jam the untrusted nodes without external helpers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improving Wireless Secrecy Rate via Full-Duplex Relay-Assisted Protocols

TL;DR: An efficient iterative algorithm based on the difference-of-two-concave-functions programming is developed to maximize the secrecy rate under the power constraints and shows the strong influence of SI level on the achieved secrecy rate of the FDT and the FDJ.
Journal ArticleDOI

Communication technologies and security challenges for internet of things: A comprehensive review

TL;DR: In this work, wireless technologies have been classified based on the mechanisms of physical layer, media access control layer, and network layer to mitigate problems of IoT while meeting throughput, latency, energy consumption, and security criteria.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The wire-tap channel

TL;DR: This paper finds the trade-off curve between R and d, assuming essentially perfect (“error-free”) transmission, and implies that there exists a Cs > 0, such that reliable transmission at rates up to Cs is possible in approximately perfect secrecy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Guaranteeing Secrecy using Artificial Noise

TL;DR: This paper considers the problem of secret communication between two nodes, over a fading wireless medium, in the presence of a passive eavesdropper, and assumes that the transmitter and its helpers (amplifying relays) have more antennas than the eavesdroppers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improving Wireless Physical Layer Security via Cooperating Relays

TL;DR: Novel system designs are proposed, consisting of the determination of relay weights and the allocation of transmit power, that maximize the achievable secrecy rate subject to a transmit power constraint, or minimize the transmit powersubject to a secrecy rate constraint.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mitigation of Loopback Self-Interference in Full-Duplex MIMO Relays

TL;DR: Targeting at minimal interference power, a broad range of multiple-input multiple-output mitigation schemes are analyzed and the results confirm that self-interference can be mitigated effectively also in the presence of imperfect side information.
Journal ArticleDOI

Secure Communication Over Fading Channels

TL;DR: In this article, the secrecy capacity region of the fading broadcast channel with confidential messages (BCC) was investigated, where a source node has common information for two receivers (receivers 1 and 2), and has confidential information intended only for receiver 1.
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