Vessel Network Topology in Molecular Communication: Insights from Experiments and Theory
Timo Jakumeit, Lukas Brand, Jens Kirchner, Robert Schober, Sebastian Lotter

TL;DR
This paper develops and experimentally validates a comprehensive channel model for molecular communication in complex vessel networks, linking topology to signal quality and enabling improved medical sensor placement.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, validated channel model for molecular communication in vessel networks, incorporating complex transport mechanisms and topology effects, with experimental validation using SPIONs.
Findings
Validated the model across various vessel network topologies
Linked vessel network structure to signal-to-noise ratio
Provided metrics for molecule dispersion and delay
Abstract
The notion of synthetic molecular communication (MC) refers to the transmission of information via signaling molecules and is foreseen to enable innovative medical applications in the human cardiovascular system (CVS). Crucially, the design of such applications requires accurate and experimentally validated channel models that characterize the propagation of signaling molecules, not just in individual blood vessels, but in complex vessel networks (VNs), as prevalent in the CVS. However, experimentally validated models for MC in VNs remain scarce. To address this gap, we propose a novel channel model for MC in complex VN topologies, which captures molecular transport via advection, molecular and turbulent diffusion, as well as adsorption and desorption at the vessel walls. We specialize this model for superparamagnetic iron-oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) as signaling molecules by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMolecular Communication and Nanonetworks · Micro and Nano Robotics · Wireless Body Area Networks
