Abstract

ABSTRACTBlockchain is an innovative technology for storing data in decentralized, distributed, and secure chain blocks. Consortium blockchains are commonly used in transactions where transactions between organizations are also achieved by the blockchain. In the classic consortium blockchain system, entire nodes are added to each other in the process of transaction consensus. This leads to lower confidentiality in protecting transaction data within the organizations in the consortium. The throughput of the existing consortium blockchain system is still low. To solve the above problems, the paper proposes a two‐tier consortium blockchain with transaction privacy based on sharding technology. First, a trust value assessment is carried out to select the nodes of the blockchain. The duo‐head observation strategy uses these trust values to identify the nonmalicious node. Finally, the consensus separation approach based on the guarantee mechanism strategy with the shard nodes is presented. This approach is used to select reliable nodes for the blocks to be stored. The proposed consortium blockchain approach evaluation is done in terms of latency, throughput, and transactions per second metrics. As a result of the evaluations, the proposed model with 32 shards possesses 143,891 of throughput and 1.11 s of latency. Moreover, by the proposed two‐tier consortium model, time consumption is also decreased when uploading data. For a data set of 50,000, the suggested model has a time consumption of 96 s. The proposed research results in higher throughput and less latency in transactions. Also, the research enhances the scalability and reliability by overcoming the poor node issues.

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