Abstract

In this paper, we consider a multiuser downlink wiretap network consisting of one base station (BS) equipped with ${A_{\mathrm{A}}}$ antennas, ${N_{\mathrm{B}}}$ single-antenna legitimate users, and ${N_{\mathrm{E}}}$ single-antenna eavesdroppers over Nakagami- $m$ fading channels. In particular, we introduce a joint secure transmission scheme that adopts transmit antenna selection at the BS and explores threshold-based selection diversity scheduling over legitimate users to achieve a good secrecy performance while maintaining low implementation complexity. More specifically, in an effort to quantify the secrecy performance of the considered system, two practical scenarios are investigated, i.e.: in Scenario I, the eavesdropper’s channel state information (CSI) is unavailable at the BS, and in Scenario II, the eavesdropper’s CSI is available at the BS. For Scenario I, novel exact closed-form expressions for the secrecy outage probability are derived, which are valid for general networks with an arbitrary number of legitimate users, antenna configurations, number of eavesdroppers, and the switched threshold. For Scenario II, we take into account the ergodic secrecy rate as the principle performance metric, and derive novel exact closed-form expressions for the ergodic secrecy rate. In addition, we also provide simple and asymptotic expressions for secrecy outage probability and ergodic secrecy rate under two distinct cases, i.e.: in Case I, the legitimate user is located close to the BS, and in Case II, both the legitimate user and eavesdropper are located close to the BS. Our important findings reveal that the secrecy diversity order is ${A_{\mathrm{A}}}{m_{\mathrm{A}}}$ and the slope of secrecy rate is one under Case I, while the secrecy diversity order and the slope of secrecy rate collapse to zero under Case II, where the secrecy performance floor occurs. Finally, when the switched threshold is carefully selected, the considered scheduling scheme outperforms other well-known existing schemes in terms of the secrecy performance and complexity tradeoff.

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