학술논문

Pain Without Gain: Destructive Beamforming From a Malicious RIS Perspective in IoT Networks
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Internet of Things Journal IEEE Internet Things J. Internet of Things Journal, IEEE. 11(5):7619-7629 Mar, 2024
Subject
Computing and Processing
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Internet of Things
Array signal processing
Transmission line matrix methods
Signal to noise ratio
Jamming
Autonomous aerial vehicles
Security
Active reconfigurable intelligent surface (RIS)
alternating optimization (AO)
destructive beamforming
Internet of Things (IoT) networks
malicious RIS
Language
ISSN
2327-4662
2372-2541
Abstract
The reconfigurable intelligent surface (RIS) has attracted significant research interests recently due to its abilities of dynamic channel reconstruction, flexible deployment and reduced power consumption. However, a malicious RIS can introduce serious signal degradation and even interception risk. This article investigates destructive beamforming design from the perspective of a malicious RIS, where the RIS is active and able to amplify the reflected signals from the base station (BS) to an Internet of Things Device (IoTD). We consider two scenarios where the BS is known and unknown to the identity of malicious RIS, and the objective is to minimize the received signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) at the IoTD with the constraints of total power budget and RIS signal amplification. To solve the above nonconvex optimization problem, we first propose a low-complexity scheme by integrating several classical beamforming methods with the Taylor expansion approach to solve the original problem for the case of known malicious RIS at BS. While for the unknown malicious RIS case, we propose an alternating optimization scheme by using the successive convex approximation method to obtain the beamforming vector and reflection coefficient matrix iteratively. Finally, numerical results verify that, through the proposed destructive beamforming design, the RIS only brings pain without gain for the signal reception.