Area Rate Efficiency in Molecular Communications
Lukas Brand, Sebastian Lotter, Vahid Jamali, Robert Schober

TL;DR
This paper analyzes multiuser molecular communication systems, deriving key performance metrics like BER and introducing area rate efficiency to optimize user density for improved system performance.
Contribution
It provides analytical expressions for channel responses, detection thresholds, and introduces a new metric, area rate efficiency, to optimize user density in molecular communication networks.
Findings
Optimal user density maximizes area rate efficiency.
Derived analytical expressions match simulation results.
Threshold-based detection simplifies receiver design.
Abstract
We consider a multiuser diffusion-based molecular communication (MC) system where multiple spatially distributed transmitter (TX)-receiver (RX) pairs establish point-to-point communication links employing the same type of signaling molecules. To realize the full potential of such a system, an in-depth understanding of the interplay between the spatial user density and inter-user interference (IUI) and its impact on system performance in an asymptotic regime with large numbers of users is needed. In this paper, we adopt a three-dimensional (3-D) system model with multiple independent and spatially distributed point-to-point transmission links, where both the TXs and RXs are positioned according to a regular hexagonal grid, respectively. Based on this model, we first derive an expression for the channel impulse responses (CIRs) of all TX-RX links in the system. Then, we provide the…
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