4.7 Article

Optimal Constant-Envelope Jamming Waveform Design Against M-QAM Modulation

Journal

IEEE WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS LETTERS
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages 1206-1210

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/LWC.2022.3161137

Keywords

Jamming; Binary phase shift keying; Signal to noise ratio; Wireless communication; Quadrature amplitude modulation; Error probability; Receivers; Jamming waveform design; QAM; constant envelope; BPSK; error probability

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [61871092]
  2. NSFC [U20B2070]

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Unmanned aerial vehicles and Internet-of-Things devices have brought convenience to daily life, but malicious use can pose serious threats to public security. Transmitting interference signals to disrupt wireless communication links is an effective way to counteract these threats. However, complex jamming waveforms are difficult to realize and the efficiency of jamming power is critical. Constant-envelope jamming waveforms appear to be a promising solution to these problems.
Recently, unmanned aerial vehicles and Internet-of-Things devices have significantly facilitated daily life, but they can also pose serious threats to public security if maliciously used. An effective way to counteract these threats is to transmit interference signals to disrupt their wireless communication links. However, excessively complex jamming waveforms are difficult to be realized. In addition, due to the limited jamming power budget and the long distance between jammer and receiver, the jamming-to-noise-ratio (JNR) at the receiver may be low. Thus, the efficiency of jamming power is vital. The constant-envelope jamming waveform appears to be a promising solution to both problems. Therefore, we consider the commonly-used quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) wireless system, and optimize the constant-envelope jamming waveform to maximize the error probability when JNR < signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR). This is a complicated non-convex problem that is difficult to solve directly. As a compromise, we seek a closed-form solution for a simplified version of it, which demonstrates that the simple binary phase shift keying (BPSK) is optimal. Numerical results confirm its superiority.

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