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Near-Field Physical Layer Security: Robust Beamforming Under Location Uncertainty

  • Chao Zhou
  • , Changsheng You*
  • , Cong Zhou
  • , Chengwen Xing
  • , Jianhua Zhang
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Southern University of Science and Technology
  • School of Electronics and Information Engineering, Harbin Institute of Technology
  • Beijing Institute of Technology
  • Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In this paper, we study robust beamforming design for near-field physical-layer-security (PLS) systems, where a base station (BS) equipped with an extremely large-scale array (XL-array) serves multiple near-field legitimate users (Bobs) in the presence of multiple near-field eavesdroppers (Eves). Unlike existing works that mostly assume perfect channel state information (CSI) or location information of Eves, we consider a more practical and challenging scenario in this paper, where the locations of Bobs are perfectly known, while only imperfect location information of Eves is available at the BS. We first formulate a robust optimization problem to maximize the sum-rate of Bobs while guaranteeing a worst-case limit on the eavesdropping rate under location uncertainty. By transforming Cartesian position errors into the polar domain, we reveal an important near-field angular-error amplification effect, i.e., under the same location error, the closer the Eve, the larger the angle error, which severely degrades the performance of conventional robust beamforming methods based on imperfect channel state information. To address this issue, we first establish the conditions for which the first-order Taylor approximation of the near-field channel steering vector under location uncertainty is largely accurate. Then, we propose a two-stage robust beamforming method, which first partitions the uncertainty region into multiple fan-shaped sub-regions, followed by the second stage to formulate and solve a refined linear-matrix-inequality (LMI)-based robust beamforming optimization problem. In addition, the proposed method is further extended to scenarios with multiple Bobs and multiple Eves. Finally, numerical results validate that the proposed method achieves a superior trade-off between rate performance and secrecy robustness, hence significantly outperforming existing benchmarks under Eve location uncertainty.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)17384-17398
Number of pages15
JournalIEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications
Volume25
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2026
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Robust beamforming design
  • near-field communications
  • physical layer security

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