Visible to the public "A MIMO Precoding Based Physical Layer Security Technique for Key Exchange Encryption"Conflict Detection Enabled

Title"A MIMO Precoding Based Physical Layer Security Technique for Key Exchange Encryption"
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2015
AuthorsH. Taha, E. Alsusa
Conference Name2015 IEEE 81st Vehicular Technology Conference (VTC Spring)
Date PublishedMay
PublisherIEEE
ISBN Number978-1-4799-8088-8
Accession Number15288241
Keywordschannel coding, Indexes, KER, key error rate, matrix algebra, MIMO, MIMO communication, MIMO-OFDM channel precoding based physical layer security technique, multiinput multioutput orthogonal frequency division multiplexing system, OFDM, OFDM modulation, precoding, precoding matrix index, private key cryptography, pubcrawl170102, Receivers, secret key exchange encryption, security, telecommunication security, Transmitters, wireless channels, Wireless communication
Abstract

Secret key establishment is considered to be one of the main challenging issues in cryptography. Many security algorithms are implemented in practice using complicated mathematical methods to exchange secret keys, but those methods are not desirable in power limited terminals such as cellular and sensor networks. In this paper, we propose a physical layer method for exchanging secret key bits in precoding based multi-input multi-output (MIMO) orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) systems. The proposed method uniquely relates the key bits to the indices of the precoding matrix used for MIMO channel precoding. The basic idea of the technique is to utilize a MIMO-OFDM precoding codebook. Comparative analysis with respect to the average number of mismatch bits, named key error rate (KER), shows an interesting lead for the new method relative to existing work. In addition, it will be shown that the proposed technique requires lower computation per byte per secret key.

URLhttps://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7145622
DOI10.1109/VTCSpring.2015.7145622
Citation Key7145622