Physical Layer Security for Internet of Things: Authentication and Key Generation

Jul19Fri

Physical Layer Security for Internet of Things: Authentication and Key Generation

Fri, 19/07/2019 - 14:00 to 15:00

Location:

Speaker: 
Dr. Junqing Zhang
Affiliation: 
University of Liverpool
Synopsis: 

Internet of Things (IoT) is a disruptive technology which has been fundamentally transforming our everyday life, including many exciting applications such as smart cities, smart home, connected healthcare, etc. However, this revolution will not be viable if we cannot provide a secure connection. The current communication networks are protected by conventional cryptography, which is based on complicated mathematical algorithms and/or protocols. However, the IoT consists of many low cost devices with limited computational capacity and battery powered, which cannot afford costly cryptography.

There is an emerging technology, namely physical layer security (PLS), which has demonstrated a great potential in protecting IoT, because it can achieve the security in a lightweight manner. PLS exploits the uncertainty and randomness from the physical world. In particular, radio frequency fingerprint identification extracts the hardware imperfection, originated from the manufacturing process, as the device fingerprint to authenticate the identity of the devices. In addition, the wireless channel between any two devices is unpredictable and dynamic, and its randomness can be exploited as the cryptographic keys to enable secure communications. This talk will introduce our recent work in these two areas.

Biography: 

Dr. Junqing Zhang is a Tenure Track Fellow (Assistant Professor) with University of Liverpool, UK. He received the B.Eng and M.Eng degrees in Electrical Engineering from Tianjin University, China in 2009 and 2012, respectively, and the Ph.D degree in Electronics and Electrical Engineering from Queen's University Belfast, UK in 2016. From Feb. 2016 to Jan. 2018, he was a Postdoctoral Research Fellow with Queen's University Belfast, UK. His research interests include Internet of Things, wireless security, physical layer security, key generation and radio frequency fingerprint identification.

Institute: