125
222
v1v2 (latest)

On Secrecy Capacity Scaling in Wireless Networks

Abstract

This work studies the achievable secure rate per source-destination pair in wireless networks. First, a path loss model is considered, where the legitimate and eavesdropper nodes are assumed to be placed according to Poisson point processes with intensities λ\lambda and λe\lambda_e, respectively. It is shown that, as long as λe/λ=o((logn)2)\lambda_e/\lambda=o((\log n)^{-2}), almost all of the nodes achieve a perfectly secure rate of Ω(1n)\Omega(\frac{1}{\sqrt{n}}) for the extended and dense network models. Therefore, under these assumptions, securing the network does not entail a loss in the per-node throughput. The achievability argument is based on a novel multi-hop forwarding scheme where randomization is added in every hop to ensure maximal ambiguity at the eavesdropper(s). Secondly, an ergodic fading model with nn source-destination pairs and nen_e eavesdroppers is considered. Employing the ergodic interference alignment scheme with an appropriate secrecy pre-coding, each user is shown to achieve a constant positive secret rate for sufficiently large nn. Remarkably, the scheme does not require eavesdropper CSI (only the statistical knowledge is assumed) and the secure throughput per node increases as we add more legitimate users to the network in this setting. Finally, the effect of eavesdropper collusion on the performance of the proposed schemes is characterized.

View on arXiv
Comments on this paper