SPCRSYJun 12, 2020

Injecting Reliable Radio Frequency Fingerprints Using Metasurface for The Internet of Things

arXiv:2006.06895v353 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses security for resource-limited IoT devices, but it is incremental as it builds on existing radio frequency fingerprinting with a new injection method.

The paper tackles the security problem in IoT by proposing Metasurface RF-Fingerprinting Injection (MeRFFI) to inject reliable radio frequency fingerprints into the wireless physical layer, reducing overhead compared to digital signatures and validating feasibility through system evaluations.

In Internet of Things, where billions of devices with limited resources are communicating with each other, security has become a major stumbling block affecting the progress of this technology. Existing authentication schemes-based on digital signatures have overhead costs associated with them in terms of computation time, battery power, bandwidth, memory, and related hardware costs. Radio frequency fingerprint (RFF), utilizing the unique device-based information, can be a promising solution for IoT. However, traditional RFFs have become obsolete because of low reliability and reduced user capability. Our proposed solution, Metasurface RF-Fingerprinting Injection (MeRFFI), is to inject a carefully-designed radio frequency fingerprint into the wireless physical layer that can increase the security of a stationary IoT device with minimal overhead. The injection of fingerprint is implemented using a low cost metasurface developed and fabricated in our lab, which is designed to make small but detectable perturbations in the specific frequency band in which the IoT devices are communicating. We have conducted comprehensive system evaluations including distance, orientation, multiple channels where the feasibility, effectiveness, and reliability of these fingerprints are validated. The proposed MeRFFI system can be easily integrated into the existing authentication schemes. The security vulnerabilities are analyzed for some of the most threatening wireless physical layer-based attacks.

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