On the physical layer security capabilities of reconfigurable intelligent surface empowered wireless systems

In this paper, we investigate the physical layer security capabilities of reconfigurable intelligent surface (RIS) empowered wireless systems. In more detail, we consider a general system model, in which the links between the transmitter (TX) and the RIS as well as the links between the RIS and the legitimate receiver are modeled as mixture Gamma (MG) random variables (RVs). Moreover, the link between the TX and eavesdropper is also modeled as a MG RV. Building upon this system model, we derive the probability of zero-secrecy capacity as well as the probability of information leakage. Finally, we extract the average secrecy rate for both cases of TX having full and partial channel state information knowledge.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
10/12/2020

On Optimizing the Secrecy Performance of RIS-Assisted Cooperative Networks

Employing reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RIS) is emerging as a gam...
research
03/01/2018

Securing OFDM-Based Wireless Links Using Temporal Artificial-Noise Injection

We investigate the physical layer security of wireless single-input sing...
research
12/14/2019

Path Loss in Reconfigurable Intelligent Surface-Enabled Channels

A reconfigurable intelligent surface (RIS) employs an array of individua...
research
06/14/2022

Network-Controlled Physical-Layer Security: Enhancing Secrecy Through Friendly Jamming

The broadcasting nature of the wireless medium makes exposure to eavesdr...
research
06/19/2023

Spatial Secrecy Spectral Efficiency Optimization Enabled by Reconfigurable Intelligent Surfaces

Reconfigurable Intelligent Surfaces (RISs) constitute a strong candidate...
research
05/04/2020

Effect of Correlation between Information and Energy Links in Secure Wireless Powered Communications

In this paper, we investigate the impact of correlation between the ener...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset