Title :
A Theoretical Modeling and Analysis of Communication via Heat Flow at Nanoscale
Author :
Kilinc, Deniz ; Akan, Ozgur B.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Koc Univ., Istanbul, Turkey
Abstract :
Nanonetworks constructed by interconnecting nanodevices using wireless communication allow the nanodevices to perform more complex functions by means of cooperation between them. For the first time in the literature, a novel and physically realizable nanoscale communication technique is introduced: Nanoscale Heat Communication (NHC) in which the heat transfer is used for communication at the nanoscale. The transmitted information is encoded in temperature signals using Magneto-Caloric Effect (MCE) which is the change in temperature of a magnetic material exposed to a varying magnetic field. Thermal energy emitted or absorbed by a transmitter nanodevice is subject to the laws of thermal diffusion which changes the temperature of the communication medium. The transmitted information is decoded by a receiver nanodevice that senses the temperature variations. Using information theoretical analysis, a closed-form expression for the channel capacity is obtained. According to the performance evaluation of the channel capacity, NHC provides a significantly higher capacity communication compared with the existing molecular communication techniques. Therefore, NHC stands as a promising solution to nanoscale communication between nanomachines based on its channel capacity performance, advantages, and possible applications for the emerging field of nanonetworks.
Keywords :
channel capacity; decoding; encoding; heat transfer; magnetic materials; magnetocaloric effects; molecular communication (telecommunication); thermal diffusion; wireless channels; MCE; NHC; channel capacity; closed-form expression; decoding; heat flow; heat transfer; information theoretical analysis; magnetic field; magnetic material; magnetocaloric effect; molecular communication technique; nanodevice interconnection; nanomachine; nanonetwork; nanoscale heat communication; performance evaluation; temperature signal encoding; theoretical modeling; thermal diffusion; thermal energy absorption; thermal energy emission; transmitter nanodevice; wireless communication; Entropy; Heat transfer; Heating; Nanoscale devices; Receivers; Temperature sensors; Transmitters; Nanoscale heat communication; magneto-caloric effect; nanoscale communication;
Journal_Title :
Communications, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TCOMM.2014.2353047