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Physical layer security analysis using radio frequency-fingerprinting in cellular-V2X for 6G communication

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Physical layer security analysis using radio frequency-fingerprinting in cellular-V2X for 6G communication. / Ayaz, Hina; Abbas, Ghulam; Waqas, Muhammad et al.
In: IET Signal Processing, Vol. 17, No. 5, e12225, 31.05.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Ayaz, H, Abbas, G, Waqas, M, Abbas, ZH, Bilal, M, Nauman, A & Jamshed, MA 2023, 'Physical layer security analysis using radio frequency-fingerprinting in cellular-V2X for 6G communication', IET Signal Processing, vol. 17, no. 5, e12225. https://doi.org/10.1049/sil2.12225

APA

Ayaz, H., Abbas, G., Waqas, M., Abbas, Z. H., Bilal, M., Nauman, A., & Jamshed, M. A. (2023). Physical layer security analysis using radio frequency-fingerprinting in cellular-V2X for 6G communication. IET Signal Processing, 17(5), Article e12225. https://doi.org/10.1049/sil2.12225

Vancouver

Ayaz H, Abbas G, Waqas M, Abbas ZH, Bilal M, Nauman A et al. Physical layer security analysis using radio frequency-fingerprinting in cellular-V2X for 6G communication. IET Signal Processing. 2023 May 31;17(5):e12225. Epub 2023 May 12. doi: 10.1049/sil2.12225

Author

Ayaz, Hina ; Abbas, Ghulam ; Waqas, Muhammad et al. / Physical layer security analysis using radio frequency-fingerprinting in cellular-V2X for 6G communication. In: IET Signal Processing. 2023 ; Vol. 17, No. 5.

Bibtex

@article{9e42005212074db7832c3a067d2187c9,
title = "Physical layer security analysis using radio frequency-fingerprinting in cellular-V2X for 6G communication",
abstract = "It is anticipated that sixth-generation (6G) systems would present new security challenges while offering improved features and new directions for security in vehicular communication, which may result in the emergence of a new breed of adaptive and context-aware security protocol. Physical layer security solutions can compete for low-complexity, low-delay, low-footprint, adaptable, extensible, and context-aware security schemes by leveraging the physical layer and introducing security controls. A novel physical layer security scheme that employs the concept of radio frequency fingerprinting (RF-FP) for location estimation is proposed, wherein the RF-FP values are collected at different points with in the cell. Then, based on the estimated location, the nearest possible road-side unit for sending the information signal is located. After this, the effects on secrecy capacity (SC) and secrecy outage probability (SOP) in the presence of multiple eavesdropper per unit time are analysed. It has been shown via simulations that the proposed RF-FP scheme increases SC by up to 25% for the same signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) values as those of the benchmarks, while the SOP tends to decrease by up to 30% as compared to the benchmark scheme for the same SNR value. Thus, the proposed RF-FP-based location estimation provides much better results as compared to the existing physical layer security schemes.",
keywords = "radio links, security of data",
author = "Hina Ayaz and Ghulam Abbas and Muhammad Waqas and Abbas, {Ziaul Haq} and Muhammad Bilal and Ali Nauman and Jamshed, {Muhammad Ali}",
year = "2023",
month = may,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1049/sil2.12225",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
journal = "IET Signal Processing",
issn = "1751-9675",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Physical layer security analysis using radio frequency-fingerprinting in cellular-V2X for 6G communication

AU - Ayaz, Hina

AU - Abbas, Ghulam

AU - Waqas, Muhammad

AU - Abbas, Ziaul Haq

AU - Bilal, Muhammad

AU - Nauman, Ali

AU - Jamshed, Muhammad Ali

PY - 2023/5/31

Y1 - 2023/5/31

N2 - It is anticipated that sixth-generation (6G) systems would present new security challenges while offering improved features and new directions for security in vehicular communication, which may result in the emergence of a new breed of adaptive and context-aware security protocol. Physical layer security solutions can compete for low-complexity, low-delay, low-footprint, adaptable, extensible, and context-aware security schemes by leveraging the physical layer and introducing security controls. A novel physical layer security scheme that employs the concept of radio frequency fingerprinting (RF-FP) for location estimation is proposed, wherein the RF-FP values are collected at different points with in the cell. Then, based on the estimated location, the nearest possible road-side unit for sending the information signal is located. After this, the effects on secrecy capacity (SC) and secrecy outage probability (SOP) in the presence of multiple eavesdropper per unit time are analysed. It has been shown via simulations that the proposed RF-FP scheme increases SC by up to 25% for the same signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) values as those of the benchmarks, while the SOP tends to decrease by up to 30% as compared to the benchmark scheme for the same SNR value. Thus, the proposed RF-FP-based location estimation provides much better results as compared to the existing physical layer security schemes.

AB - It is anticipated that sixth-generation (6G) systems would present new security challenges while offering improved features and new directions for security in vehicular communication, which may result in the emergence of a new breed of adaptive and context-aware security protocol. Physical layer security solutions can compete for low-complexity, low-delay, low-footprint, adaptable, extensible, and context-aware security schemes by leveraging the physical layer and introducing security controls. A novel physical layer security scheme that employs the concept of radio frequency fingerprinting (RF-FP) for location estimation is proposed, wherein the RF-FP values are collected at different points with in the cell. Then, based on the estimated location, the nearest possible road-side unit for sending the information signal is located. After this, the effects on secrecy capacity (SC) and secrecy outage probability (SOP) in the presence of multiple eavesdropper per unit time are analysed. It has been shown via simulations that the proposed RF-FP scheme increases SC by up to 25% for the same signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) values as those of the benchmarks, while the SOP tends to decrease by up to 30% as compared to the benchmark scheme for the same SNR value. Thus, the proposed RF-FP-based location estimation provides much better results as compared to the existing physical layer security schemes.

KW - radio links

KW - security of data

U2 - 10.1049/sil2.12225

DO - 10.1049/sil2.12225

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85160436223

VL - 17

JO - IET Signal Processing

JF - IET Signal Processing

SN - 1751-9675

IS - 5

M1 - e12225

ER -