| Literature DB >> 27897988 |
Dawei Wang1,2, Pinyi Ren3,4, Qinghe Du5,6, Li Sun7,8, Yichen Wang9,10,11.
Abstract
The rapid proliferation of independently-designed and -deployed wireless sensor networks extremely crowds the wireless spectrum and promotes the emergence of cognitive radio sensor networks (CRSN). In CRSN, the sensor node (SN) can make full use of the unutilized licensed spectrum, and the spectrum efficiency is greatly improved. However, inevitable spectrum sensing errors will adversely interfere with the primary transmission, which may result in primary transmission outage. To compensate the adverse effect of spectrum sensing errors, we propose a reciprocally-benefited secure transmission strategy, in which SN's interference to the eavesdropper is employed to protect the primary confidential messages while the CRSN is also rewarded with a loose spectrum sensing error probability constraint. Specifically, according to the spectrum sensing results and primary users' activities, there are four system states in this strategy. For each state, we analyze the primary secrecy rate and the SN's transmission rate by taking into account the spectrum sensing errors. Then, the SN's transmit power is optimally allocated for each state so that the average transmission rate of CRSN is maximized under the constraint of the primary maximum permitted secrecy outage probability. In addition, the performance tradeoff between the transmission rate of CRSN and the primary secrecy outage probability is investigated. Moreover, we analyze the primary secrecy rate for the asymptotic scenarios and derive the closed-form expression of the SN's transmission outage probability. Simulation results show that: (1) the performance of the SN's average throughput in the proposed strategy outperforms the conventional overlay strategy; (2) both the primary network and CRSN benefit from the proposed strategy.Entities:
Keywords: cognitive radio sensor network; power allocation; secrecy outage probability; spectrum sensing error
Year: 2016 PMID: 27897988 PMCID: PMC5190979 DOI: 10.3390/s16121998
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1The system model of the proposed strategy.
Figure 2SN’s average throughput of the proposed strategy as a function of the spectrum idle probability. The transmit power of the primary transmit (PT) is set to dB, and the target secrecy outage probability is set to .
Figure 3SN’s average throughput of the proposed strategy as a function of the spectrum sensing time and target detection probability. The spectrum idle probability is set to , the transmit power of the PT is set to dB, and the target secure outage probability is set to .
Figure 4SN’s average throughput of the proposed strategy as a function of the spectrum sensing time and spectrum idle probability. The transmit power of the BS is set to dB, and the target secure outage probability is set to .
Figure 5SN’s average throughput of the proposed strategy as a function of the target secrecy outage probability and spectrum idle probability. The transmit power of the PT is set to dB, and the spectrum sensing time is set to ms.
Figure 6SN’s average throughput of the proposed strategy as a function of the PT’s transmit power and spectrum sensing time τ. The idle probability is set to , and the target secrecy outage probability is set to .