ALZA: An Efficient Hybrid Decentralized Payment System
Nate Zou, Eric Li, Henry Zhang

TL;DR
ALZA is a novel hybrid decentralized payment system that significantly improves transaction speed, reduces costs, and enhances robustness by combining high-throughput blockchains with self-organizing payment fields.
Contribution
It introduces a new end-to-end solution linking dedicated high-throughput blockchains with self-organizing payment fields for low latency and scalable transactions.
Findings
Supports millions of transactions per second in theory
Reduces transaction costs by orders of magnitude
Enhances system robustness through innovative replication
Abstract
The efficiency of decentralized book systems like Bitcoin and Ethereum has always been a challenge. It is usually measured by three major factors: scalability, throughput, and latency. Scalability refers to how the system capacity is increased by adding more physical resources. Throughput measures the volume of transactions for a given period of time, where most current solutions attempt to improve such as NEO, EOS, etc. Latency measures the processing time of any single transaction. In current blockchain based systems, the block generation rate is the main latency bottleneck. Off-chain processes such as state channels are the most recent work that can integrate partial inbound transactions, reducing latency. Unfortunately, the state channel introduces more issues at the same time, such as cross-channel synchronization, which makes the state channel unavailable for full adoption of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlockchain Technology Applications and Security · Caching and Content Delivery · Transportation and Mobility Innovations
