Abstract

SummaryAs a foundational technology for managing decentralized systems like smart grids and healthcare systems, blockchain is attracting a lot of interest. However, owing to excessive resource requirements and low scalability with frequent‐intensive transactions, its use in resource‐constrained mobile devices is restricted. To let mobile devices offload processing tasks to cloud resources, edge computing can be used. For scalability and secure transactions, the integration with edge computing guarantees consistent access, distributed computing, and non‐compromised storage. To accomplish effective integration, critical challenges such as reliability, adaptability, and resource planning must be resolved. Despite these efforts, further study is still needed to address issues with confidentiality, flexibility, and reliability to develop a workable, secure decentralized data storage system. This study utilizes edge computing to build an Internet of Things (IoT) architecture that satisfies the safety and scalability necessary criteria for integration along with the integration of peer‐to‐peer and blockchain technologies. Already‐existing blockchain and related technologies have also been investigated to suggest solutions that address issues like secrecy, reliability, and scalability in order to successfully incorporate blockchain in IoT systems. Our experimental findings indicate that achieving low rates of stale blocks and promoting decentralization requires a meticulous selection of block sizes and generation intervals. It is essential to maintain block creation intervals as short as practically possible, and utilizing blocks with a size below 1 MB is advisable.

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