DocumentCode :
55669
Title :
Transmission Rate Control for Molecular Communication among Biological Nanomachines
Author :
Nakano, T. ; Okaie, Yutaka ; Vasilakos, Athanasios V.
Author_Institution :
Grad. Sch. of Eng., Osaka Univ., Suita, Japan
Volume :
31
Issue :
12
fYear :
2013
fDate :
Dec-13
Firstpage :
835
Lastpage :
846
Abstract :
In this paper, we discuss issues concerned with transmission rate control in molecular communication, an emerging communication paradigm for bio-nanomachines in an aqueous environment. In molecular communication, a group of bio-nanomachines acting as senders transmit molecules, the molecules propagate in the environment, and another group of bio-nanomachines acting as receivers chemically react to the molecules propagating in the environment. In the model of molecular communication considered in this paper, senders may transmit molecules at a high rate to accelerate the receiver reactions or to increase the throughput. However, if the senders transmit molecules faster than the receivers react, the excess molecules remain in the environment and eventually degrade or diffuse away, which results in loss of molecules or degradation in efficiency. Such a potential issue associated with throughput and efficiency is in this paper discussed as an optimization problem. A mathematical expression for an upper-bound on the throughput and efficiency is first derived to provide an insight into the impact of model parameters. The optimal transmission rates that maximize the throughput and efficiency are then numerically calculated and presented, and throughput and efficiency are shown to be in trade-off relationships in a wide range of transmission rates. Further, two classes of feedback-based transmission rate control schemes are designed for autonomous bio-nanomachines to dynamically control their transmission rates, respectively based on negative and positive feedback from the receivers. The numerical evaluation of the two transmission rate control schemes is then shown to provide useful guidelines for application developers to satisfy their design goals.
Keywords :
biomedical materials; drug delivery systems; molecular biophysics; molecular communication (telecommunication); nanobiotechnology; aqueous environment; autonomous bionanomachine; biological nanomachine; mathematical expression; molecular communication; negative feedback; optimal transmission rate; optimization problem; positive feedback; transmission rate control; Drug delivery; Drugs; Molecular communication; Numerical models; Optimization; Receivers; Throughput; Molecular communication; biological nanomachines; feedback-based control; flow control; transmission rate control;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0733-8716
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JSAC.2013.SUP2.12130016
Filename :
6708564
Link To Document :
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