DocumentCode
2025783
Title
An Achievable Secrecy Throughput of Hybrid-ARQ Protocols for Block Fading Channels
Author
Xiaojun Tang ; Ruoheng Liu ; Spasojevic, P.
Author_Institution
WINLAB, Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick, NJ
fYear
2007
fDate
24-29 June 2007
Firstpage
1311
Lastpage
1315
Abstract
In applications of wireless packet-oriented data networks, a special coding scheme, the hybrid automatic retransmission request (HARQ) exhibits high throughput efficiency by adapting its error correcting code redundancy to channel conditions. Motivated by the increasing importance of secure communication over wireless networks, we investigate secure packet communication based on HARQ over block-fading (BF) channels. More specifically, we consider two legitimate users communicating over a BF channel in the presence of a passive eavesdropper who intercepts the transmission through another independent BF channel. We assume that the transmitter can obtain a 1-bit ACK/NACK feedback from the receiver via a reliable public channel. Under this setting, we consider incremental redundancy (IR) and repetition time diversity (RTD) HARQ schemes based on rate-compatible Wyner secrecy codes from an information theoretic point of view. We study a good Wyner code sequence, with which the legitimate receiver can decode the message and the eavesdropper can be perfectly confused. For a given pair of reliability/secrecy outage probabilities, we derive an achievable secrecy throughput of HARQ protocols for block-fading channels. Finally, we illustrate numerically that HARQ can benefit both throughput and secrecy.
Keywords
automatic repeat request; codes; decoding; fading channels; packet radio networks; telecommunication security; HARQ protocols; Wyner code sequence; achievable secrecy throughput; block fading channels; block-fading channels; error correcting code redundancy; hybrid automatic retransmission request; hybrid-ARQ protocols; incremental redundancy; information theorety; message decoding; passive eavesdropper; rate-compatible Wyner secrecy codes; receiver; reliable public channel; repetition time diversity; secrecy outage probabilities; secure communication; secure packet communication; transmitter; wireless networks; wireless packet-oriented data networks; Communication system security; Decoding; Error correction codes; Fading; Feedback; Protocols; Redundancy; Throughput; Transmitters; Wireless networks;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information Theory, 2007. ISIT 2007. IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Nice
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1397-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISIT.2007.4557404
Filename
4557404
Link To Document