Title :
Molecular Communication in Fluid Media: The Additive Inverse Gaussian Noise Channel
Author :
Srinivas, K.V. ; Eckford, Andrew W. ; Adve, Raviraj S.
Author_Institution :
Samsung India Electron. Pvt. Ltd., Noida, India
fDate :
7/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
In this paper, we consider molecular communication, with information conveyed in the time of release of molecules. These molecules propagate to the transmitter through a fluid medium, propelled by a positive drift velocity and Brownian motion. The main contribution of this paper is the development of a theoretical foundation for such a communication system; specifically, the additive inverse Gaussian noise (AIGN) channel model. In such a channel, the information is corrupted by noise that follows an IG distribution. We show that such a channel model is appropriate for molecular communication in fluid media. Taking advantage of the available literature on the IG distribution, upper and lower bounds on channel capacity are developed, and a maximum likelihood receiver is derived. Results are presented which suggest that this channel does not have a single quality measure analogous to signal-to-noise ratio in the additive white Gaussian noise channel. It is also shown that the use of multiple molecules leads to reduced error rate in a manner akin to diversity order in wireless communications. Finally, some open problems are discussed that arise from the IG channel model.
Keywords :
AWGN channels; Brownian motion; Gaussian distribution; channel capacity; radio networks; wireless channels; AIGN channel; Brownian motion; IG distribution; additive inverse Gaussian noise channel; additive white Gaussian noise channel; channel capacity; error rate reduction; fluid media; information corruption; inverse Gaussian distribution; maximum likelihood receiver; molecular communication; molecules transmitter propagation; positive drift velocity propelling; signal-to-noise ratio; single quality analogous measurement; wireless communication; Channel models; Educational institutions; Molecular communication; Receivers; Timing; Transmitters; Molecular communication; mutual information; nanobiotechnology;
Journal_Title :
Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIT.2012.2193554