Abstract

Secure ultra-reliable low-latency communication (URLLC) has been recently investigated with the fundamental limits of finite block length (FBL) regime in mind. Analysis has revealed that when eavesdroppers outnumber BS antennas or enjoy a more favorable channel condition compared to the legitimate users, base station (BS) transmit power should increase exorbitantly to meet quality of service (QoS) constraints. Channel-induced impairments such as shadowing and/or blockage pose a similar challenge. These practical considerations can drastically limit secure URLLC performance in FBL regime. Deployment of an intelligent reflecting surface (IRS) can endow such systems with much-needed resiliency and robustness to satisfy stringent latency, availability, and reliability requirements. We address this problem and propose to minimize the total BS transmit power by simultaneously designing the beamformers and artificial noise at the BS and phase-shifts at the IRS, while guaranteeing the required number of securely transmitted bits with the desired packet error probability, information leakage, and maximum affordable delay. The proposed optimization problem is non-convex and we apply block coordinate descent and successive convex approximation to iteratively solve a series of convex sub-problems instead. The proposed algorithm converges to a sub-optimal solution in a few iterations and attains substantial power saving and robustness compared to baseline schemes.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call