Visible to the public Hierarchical Trust-Based Black-Hole Detection in WSN-Based Smart Grid Monitoring

TitleHierarchical Trust-Based Black-Hole Detection in WSN-Based Smart Grid Monitoring
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsOtoum, S., Kantarci, B., Mouftah, H. T.
Conference Name2017 IEEE International Conference on Communications (ICC)
ISBN Number978-1-4673-8999-0
KeywordsAd hoc networks, black-hole attack, cluster head, compositionality, data aggregation, hierarchical trust evaluation, hierarchical trust-based black-hole detection, Human Behavior, human factors, packets dropped ratio, power grid, pubcrawl, resilience, Resiliency, smart grid monitoring, Smart Grid Sensors, smart power grids, telecommunication security, weighted clustering, Wireless sensor networks, WSN-based smart grid monitoring
Abstract

Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) have been widely adopted to monitor various ambient conditions including critical infrastructures. Since power grid is considered as a critical infrastructure, and the smart grid has appeared as a viable technology to introduce more reliability, efficiency, controllability, and safety to the traditional power grid, WSNs have been envisioned as potential tools to monitor the smart grid. The motivation behind smart grid monitoring is to improve its emergency preparedness and resilience. Despite their effectiveness in monitoring critical infrastructures, WSNs also introduce various security vulnerabilities due to their open nature and unreliable wireless links. In this paper, we focus on the, Black-Hole (B-H) attack. To cope with this, we propose a hierarchical trust-based WSN monitoring model for the smart grid equipment in order to detect the B-H attacks. Malicious nodes have been detected by testing the trade-off between trust and dropped packet ratios for each Cluster Head (CH). We select different thresholds for the Packets Dropped Ratio (PDR) in order to test the network behaviour with them. We set four different thresholds (20%, 30%, 40%, and 50%). Threshold of 50% has been shown to reach the system stability in early periods with the least number of re-clustering operations.

URLhttps://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7997099
DOI10.1109/ICC.2017.7997099
Citation Keyotoum_hierarchical_2017