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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The Baseband Signal Processing and Circuit Design for IEEE 802.12.4a-2007 Impulse Radio Ultra-Wideband System

Wu, Jia-Hao 13 August 2012 (has links)
In recent years, the requirement of application such as wireless sensor networks and short-range wireless controllers caused the growing of ZigBee technology. ZigBee is a communication technology developed specifically for short-range, low rate, low-cost wireless transmission.There are some characteristic such as short-range, low rate, low cost, and low power. The ZigBee Aliance group developed the specifications of software, and IEEE 802.15.4 group developed the specifications of hardware. IEEE 802.15.4a impulse radio UWB physical layer is one of the ZigBee physical layers. In our study, we designed a baseband signal processing algorithm meeting the specifications of IEEE 802.15.4a. The data processing flow in transmitter followed the specifications. In receiver, we designed baseband algorithms based-on the non-coherent energy detection scheme. Our algorithm including packet detection, synchronization and demodulation, and considering the implementation of algorithm, reducing the complexity of hardware as possible and improving the efficiency. Finally, the system performance is 3.9dB better than the receiver sensitivity.
2

Sécurisation d'un lien radio UWB-IR / Security of an UWB-IR Link

Benfarah, Ahmed 10 July 2013 (has links)
Du fait de la nature ouverte et partagée du canal radio, les communications sans fil souffrent de vulnérabilités sérieuses en terme de sécurité. Dans ces travaux de thèse, je me suis intéressé particulièrement à deux classes d’attaques à savoir l’attaque par relais et l’attaque par déni de service (brouillage). La technologie de couche physique UWB-IR a connu un grand essor au cours de cette dernière décennie et elle est une candidate intéressante pour les réseaux sans fil à courte portée. Mon objectif principal était d’exploiter les caractéristiques de la couche physique UWB-IR afin de renforcer la sécurité des communications sans fil. L’attaque par relais peut mettre à défaut les protocoles cryptographiques d’authentification. Pour remédier à cette menace, les protocoles de distance bounding ont été proposés. Dans ce cadre, je propose deux nouveaux protocoles (STHCP : Secret Time-Hopping Code Protocol et SMCP : Secret Mapping Code Protocol) qui améliorent considérablement la sécurité des protocoles de distance bounding au moyen des paramètres de la radio UWB-IR. Le brouillage consiste en l’émission intentionnelle d’un signal sur le canal lors du déroulement d’une communication. Mes contributions concernant le problème de brouillage sont triples. D’abord, j’ai déterminé les paramètres d’un brouilleur gaussien pire cas contre un récepteur UWB-IR non-cohérent. En second lieu, je propose un nouveau modèle de brouillage par analogie avec les attaques contre le système de chiffrement. Troisièmement, je propose une modification rendant la radio UWB-IR plus robuste au brouillage. Enfin, dans une dernière partie de mes travaux, je me suis intéressé au problème d’intégrer la sécurité à un réseau UWB-IR en suivant l’approche d’embedding. Le principe de cette approche consiste à superposer et à transmettre les informations de sécurité simultanément avec les données et avec une contrainte de compatibilité. Ainsi, je propose deux nouvelles techniques d’embedding pour la couche physique UWB-IR afin d’intégrer un service d’authentification. / Due to the shared nature of wireless medium, wireless communications are more vulnerable to security threats. In my PhD work, I focused on two types of threats: relay attacks and jamming. UWB-IR physical layer technology has seen a great development during the last decade which makes it a promising candidate for short range wireless communications. My main goal was to exploit UWB-IR physical layer characteristics in order to reinforce security of wireless communications. By the simple way of signal relaying, the adversary can defeat wireless authentication protocols. The first countermeasure proposed to thwart these relay attacks was distance bounding protocol. The concept of distance bounding relies on the combination of two sides: an authentication cryptographic side and a distance checking side. In this context, I propose two new distance bounding protocols that significantly improve the security of existing distance bounding protocols by means of UWB-IR physical layer parameters. The first protocol called STHCP is based on using secret time-hopping codes. Whereas, the second called SMCP is based on secret mapping codes. Security analysis and comparison to the state of the art highlight various figures of merit of my proposition. Jamming consists in the emission of noise over the channel while communication is taking place and constitutes a major problem to the security of wireless communications. In a first contribution, I have determined worst case Gaussian noise parameters (central frequency and bandwidth) against UWB-IR communication employing PPM modulation and a non-coherent receiver. The metric considered for jammer optimization is the signal-to-jamming ratio at the output of the receiver. In a second contribution, I propose a new jamming model by analogy to attacks against ciphering algorithms. The new model leads to distinguish various jamming scenarios ranging from the best case to the worst case. Moreover, I propose a modification of the UWB-IR physical layer which allows to restrict any jamming problem to the most favorable scenario. The modification is based on using a cryptographic modulation depending on a stream cipher. The new radio has the advantage to combine the resistance to jamming and the protection from eavesdropping. Finally, I focused on the problem of security embedding on an existing UWB-IR network. Security embedding consists in adding security features directly at the physical layer and sending them concurrently with data. The embedding mechanism should satisfy a compatibility concern to existing receivers in the network. I propose two new embedding techniques which rely on the superposition of a pulse orthogonal to the original pulse by the form or by the position. Performances analysis reveal that both embedding techniques satisfy all system design constraints.

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