Abstract

Diffusion-based molecular communication (DMC) is one of the most promising approaches for realizing nano-scale communications for healthcare applications. The DMC systems in in-vivo environments may encounter biological entities that release molecules identical to the molecules used for signaling as part of their functionality. Such entities in the environment act as external noise sources from the DMC system’s perspective. In this paper, the release of molecules by external bio-inspired noise sources is particularly modeled as a compound Poisson process. The impact of compound Poisson noise sources (CPNSs) on the performance of a point-to-point DMC system is investigated. To this end, the noise from the CPNS observed at the receiver is characterized. Considering a simple on-off keying modulation and formulating symbol-by-symbol maximum likelihood (ML) detector, the performance of the DMC system in the presence of the CPNS is analyzed. For the special case of CPNS in a high-rate regime, the noise received from the CPNS is approximated as a Poisson process whose rate is normally distributed. In this case, it is proved that a simple single-threshold detector is an optimal ML detector. Our results reveal that in general, adopting the conventional simple homogeneous Poisson noise model may lead to overly optimistic performance predictions, if a CPNS is present.

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