Indexed by:
期刊论文
First Author:
Zhan, Furui
Correspondence Author:
Yao, NM (reprint author), Dalian Univ Technol, Sch Comp Sci & Technol, Dalian, Peoples R China.
Co-author:
Yao, Nianmin
Date of Publication:
2017-09-01
Journal:
AD HOC NETWORKS
Included Journals:
Scopus、SCIE、EI
Document Type:
J
Volume:
64
Page Number:
22-31
ISSN No.:
1570-8705
Key Words:
Key generation; Wireless channel reciprocity; Discrete wavelet
transform; Gray code
Abstract:
For key generation between wireless transceivers, key generation leveraging channel reciprocity is a promising alternative to public key cryptography. Several existing schemes have validated its feasibility in real environments. However, in some scenarios, channel measurements collected by the involved transceivers are highly correlated but not identical, i.e., measurement sequences of these transceivers have too many discrepancies, which makes it difficult to extract the shared key from these measurements. In this paper, we propose a scheme to achieve secret key generation from wireless channels. During the proposed scheme, to reduce the amount of the referred discrepancies and further achieve efficient key generation, the involved transceivers separately apply a compressor based on the discrete wavelet transform (DWT) to pre-process their measurements. Then, multi-level quantization is implemented to quantify the output of DWT-based compressor. An encoding scheme based on gray code is employed to establish bit sequence and ensure that the resulting bit mismatch rate can be further reduced so that efficient information reconciliation can be implemented. Accordingly, the shared key between these transceivers can be derived after information reconciliation. Finally, 2-universal hash functions are used to guarantee the randomness of the shared secret key. Several experiments in real environments are conducted to validate the proposed scheme. The results demonstrate that the proposed scheme is available to generate shared secret keys between transceivers even though their measurement sequences have too many discrepancies. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Translation or Not:
no