Multipath Channel Metrics and Detection in Vascular Molecular Communication: A Wireless-Inspired Perspective
Timo Jakumeit, Lukas Brand, Josep M. Jornet, Robert Schober, Maximilian Sch\"afer, Sebastian Lotter

TL;DR
This paper applies wireless communication metrics to molecular communication in vascular networks, using a new analytical model to enable systematic design and analysis of large-scale vascular MC systems.
Contribution
It introduces a novel application of multipath wireless metrics to vascular molecular communication using the MIGHT model, enabling rigorous system analysis.
Findings
Derived closed-form expressions for channel frequency response and power delay profile.
Established analogies between wireless multipath metrics and vascular MC channels.
Proposed a VN-adapted coherent decision-feedback detector and evaluated its performance.
Abstract
Motivated by classical communications engineering, early works in molecular communication (MC) largely adopted established modeling and signal processing concepts from wireless electromagnetic communication systems. In the context of the human cardiovascular system (CVS), MC channel models evolved from simple unbounded and single-duct environments mimicking individual blood vessels to complex vessel network (VN) topologies, generally at the expense of analytical tractability. Up until now, this has largely prohibited rigorous communication-theoretic analysis of large-scale VNs. In this work, we leverage a recently established closed-form analytical channel model for VNs, named mixture of inverse Gaussians for hemodynamic transport (MIGHT), to conduct the first systematic communication-theoretic study of MC in complex, large-scale VNs. Based on MIGHT, we derive a Poisson channel noise…
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