Symbol Synchronization for Diffusive Molecular Communication Systems
Vahid Jamali, Arman Ahmadzadeh, and Robert Schober

TL;DR
This paper develops practical symbol synchronization methods for molecular communication systems, addressing challenges like lack of internal clocks and variable symbol intervals, and evaluates their effectiveness through simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a synchronization framework using two molecule types, derives an optimal ML scheme, and proposes low-complexity alternatives suitable for nanotransmitters.
Findings
Synchronization accuracy greatly impacts system performance
Proposed schemes outperform naive methods in simulations
Low-complexity schemes are effective for resource-constrained devices
Abstract
Symbol synchronization refers to the estimation of the start of a symbol interval and is needed for reliable detection. In this paper, we develop a symbol synchronization framework for molecular communication (MC) systems where we consider some practical challenges which have not been addressed in the literature yet. In particular, we take into account that in MC systems, the transmitter may not be equipped with an internal clock and may not be able to emit molecules with a fixed release frequency. Such restrictions hold for practical nanotransmitters, e.g. modified cells, where the lengths of the symbol intervals may vary due to the inherent randomness in the availability of food and energy for molecule generation, the process for molecule production, and the release process. To address this issue, we propose to employ two types of molecules, one for synchronization and one for data…
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