Securing the Physical Layer of IEEE 802.15.4 Through Cooperative Jamming
Physical layer security is a sought-after concept to complement the established upper layer security techniques in wireless communications. An appealing approach to achieve physical layer security is to use cooperative jamming with interference that is known to and suppressible by the legitimate rec...
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Physical layer security is a sought-after concept to complement the established upper layer security techniques in wireless communications. An appealing approach to achieve physical layer security is to use cooperative jamming with interference that is known to and suppressible by the legitimate receiver but unknown to, and hence not suppressible by, the eavesdropper. Suppressing known interference (KI), however, is challenging due to the numerous unknowns, including carrier and sampling frequency offsets, that impact its reception. This dataset presents a measurement campaign that captures this challenge in the context of Internet-of-Things applications. The dataset consists of baseband signals recorded with a software-defined radio that acts as an IEEE 802.15.4 receiver, receiving simultaneously the signal-of-interest and KI. This allows to study the performance of KI cancellation algorithms and the impact of KI cancellation on IEEE 802.15.4 signal processing. |
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DOI: | 10.21227/9mty-pf96 |