CRITSep 25, 2018

Physical Layer Key Generation for Secure Power Line Communications

arXiv:1809.09439v113 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses security threats in smart grids and in-home applications, but it is incremental as it adapts existing techniques to a non-symmetric channel.

The paper tackles the problem of information leakage in power line communication networks by proposing two novel methods for generating secret keys using channel reciprocity, and the results show that the information leaked to eavesdroppers has very low correlation to the secret keys.

Leakage of information in power line communication networks is a threat to privacy and security both in smart grids and in-home applications. A way to enhance security is to encode the transmitted information with a secret key. Relying on the channel properties, it is possible to generate a common key at the two communication ends without transmitting it through the broadcast channel. Since the key is generated locally, it is intrinsically secure from a possible eavesdropper. Most of the existing physical layer key generation techniques have been developed for symmetric channels. However, the power line channel is in general not symmetric, but just reciprocal. Therefore, in this paper, we propose two novel methods that exploit the reciprocity of the power line channel to generate common information at the two intended users. This information is processed through different quantization techniques to generate secret keys. To assess the security of the generated keys, we analyze the spatial correlation of the power line channels and verify the low correlation of the possible eavesdropping channels. The two proposed methods are tested on a measurement dataset. The results show that the information leaked to possible eavesdroppers has very low correlation to any secret key.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes