Abstract

An optical transmitter identification scheme based on optical chaotic phase space reconfiguration for secure communication is proposed to target injection attacks in the physical layer of optical networks. First, a feature fingerprint construction method based on reconfigured phase space of optical chaos is proposed. Then the fingerprint is controlled by the feedback intensity and filtering bandwidth of chaos. The in-phase and quadrature-phase encryption (IQE)/decryption (IQD) ensures the loading of fingerprints and realizes the confidential communication. In the experiment, the recognition rate of three transmitters is up to 99.3%. In the simulation, the recognition rate of five optical transmitters reaches 100% after 600 km transmission. The bit error rate of 25 GBaud QPSK signal after 300 km transmission at 25 dB OSNR is 1.6 × 10-3. Compared with the traditional optical transmitter identification methods, the fingerprint of this scheme is controllable. The IQE and IQD not only realize the chaotic fingerprint loading but also ensure the secure transmission of the signal avoiding the synchronization and time delay exposure problems in traditional chaotic communication systems. It is robust to device parameters, with low implementation difficulty and low cost. Therefore, this scheme has research and application value for secure communication in the physical layer of optical networks.

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