Simulation Study and Analysis of Diffusive Molecular Communications with an Apertured Plane
Mustafa Can Gursoy, H. Birkan Yilmaz, Ali Emre Pusane, Tuna Tugcu

TL;DR
This study investigates how an apertured plane affects molecular communication via diffusion, revealing that optimal aperture size can improve performance despite reducing signal power, with implications for system design.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical and simulation-based analysis of apertured planes in MCvD, proposing SINAR as a metric for optimizing aperture size and placement.
Findings
Aperture size influences the trade-off between signal power and ISI mitigation.
An optimal aperture size minimizes the bit error rate (BER).
SINAR effectively predicts BER trends and aids in system optimization.
Abstract
Molecular communication via diffusion (MCvD) is a method of achieving nano- and micro-scale connectivity by utilizing the free diffusion mechanism of information molecules. The randomness in diffusive propagation is the main cause of inter-symbol interference (ISI) and the limiting factor of high data rate MCvD applications. In this paper, an apertured plane is considered between the transmitter and the receiver of an MCvD link. Either after being artificially placed or occurring naturally, surfaces or volumes that resemble an apertured plane only allow a fraction of the molecules to pass. Contrary to intuition, it is observed that such topology may improve communication performance, given the molecules that can pass through the aperture are the ones that take more directed paths towards the receiver. Furthermore, through both computer simulations and a theoretical signal evaluation…
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