English

Wireless Information-Theoretic Security - Part II: Practical Implementation

Information Theory 2007-07-13 v1 math.IT

Abstract

In Part I of this two-part paper on confidential communication over wireless channels, we studied the fundamental security limits of quasi-static fading channels from the point of view of outage secrecy capacity with perfect and imperfect channel state information. In Part II, we develop a practical secret key agreement protocol for Gaussian and quasi-static fading wiretap channels. The protocol uses a four-step procedure to secure communications: establish common randomness via an opportunistic transmission, perform message reconciliation, establish a common key via privacy amplification, and use of the key. We introduce a new reconciliation procedure that uses multilevel coding and optimized low density parity check codes which in some cases comes close to achieving the secrecy capacity limits established in Part I. Finally, we develop new metrics for assessing average secure key generation rates and show that our protocol is effective in secure key renewal.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.cs/0611121,
  title  = {Wireless Information-Theoretic Security - Part II: Practical Implementation},
  author = {Matthieu Bloch and Joao Barros and Miguel R. D. Rodrigues and Steven W. McLaughlin},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:cs/0611121},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

25 pages, 11 figures, submitted to Special Issue of IEEE Trans. on Info. Theory on Information Theoretic Security