On the Design of Artificial Noise for Physical Layer Security in Visible Light Communication Channels with Clipping
Thanh V. Pham, Steve Hranilovic, Susumu Ishihara

TL;DR
This paper investigates artificial noise design to enhance physical layer security in visible light communication systems, accounting for clipping distortion effects and proposing novel schemes to improve secrecy performance.
Contribution
It introduces a sub-optimal AN design method considering clipping distortion and a new transmission scheme exploiting LED chip structure for better security.
Findings
Clipping distortion significantly reduces secrecy levels.
Artificial noise improves secrecy performance over no-AN schemes.
Proposed scheme achieves about 1 bit/s/Hz secrecy rate improvement.
Abstract
Though visible light communication (VLC) systems are contained to a given room, improving their security is an important criterion in any practical deployment. In this paper, the design of artificial noise (AN) to enhance physical layer security in VLC systems is studied in the context of input signals with no explicit amplitude constraint (e.g., multicarrier systems). In such systems, clipping is needed to constrain the input signals within the limited linear ranges of the LEDs. However, this clipping process gives rise to non-linear clipping distortion, which must be incorporated into the AN design. To facilitate the solution of this problem, a sub-optimal design approach is presented using the Charnes-Cooper transformation and the convex-concave procedure (CCP). Then, a novel AN transmission scheme is proposed to reduce the impact of clipping distortion, thus improving the secrecy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOptical Wireless Communication Technologies · Optical Network Technologies · PAPR reduction in OFDM
