2021 journal article

Physical Layer Security for NOMA Transmission in mmWave Drone Networks

IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology, 70(4), 3568–3582.

By: Y. Yapici*, N. Rupasinghe, I. Guvenc n, H. Dai n & A. Bhuyan*

co-author countries: United States of America 🇺🇸
author keywords: NOMA; Unmanned aerial vehicles; Shape; Wireless networks; Receivers; Jamming; Decoding; Millimeter-wave (mmWave); non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA); physical layer security (PLS); protected zone; unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)
Source: ORCID
Added: May 6, 2021

The non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) and millimeter-wave (mmWave) transmission enable the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) assisted wireless networks to provide broadband connectivity over densely packed urban areas. The presence of malicious receivers, however, compromise the security of the UAV-to-ground communications links, thereby degrading secrecy rates. In this work, we consider a NOMA-based transmission strategy in a mmWave UAV-assisted wireless network, and investigate the respective secrecy-rate performance rigorously. In particular, we propose a protected-zone approach to enhance the secrecy-rate performance by preventing the most vulnerable subregion (outside the user region) from the presence of malicious receivers. The respective secrecy rates are then derived analytically as a function of the particular protected zone, which verifies great secrecy rate improvements through optimizing shape of the protected zone in use. Furthermore, we show that the optimal protected zone shape for mmWave links appears as a compromise between protecting the angle versus distance dimension, which would otherwise form to protect solely the distance dimension for sub-6 GHz links. We also numerically evaluate the impact of transmission power, protected-zone size, and UAV altitude on the secrecy-rate performance improvement for the sake of practical deployments.