Smart home Internet of Things (IoT) has a vibrant market with a wide range of appliances and sensors, spanning across smart home, smart city, and smart factory. However, the security… Click to show full abstract
Smart home Internet of Things (IoT) has a vibrant market with a wide range of appliances and sensors, spanning across smart home, smart city, and smart factory. However, the security and privacy of these IoT systems have raised serious concerns. Currently, most IoT devices rely on electromagnetic wave-based radio frequency (RF) for communication. Yet, RF has several inherent limitations, such as shortage of spectrum, susceptible to interference, and vulnerable to eavesdropping or jamming attacks. This article presents URadio, a wideband ultrasonic communication system. By leveraging recent advances in reduced Graphene Oxide (rGO), we design a new type of electrostatic ultrasonic transducer, which can achieve more than $6\times $ bandwidth than commercial ultrasonic transducers. With this new transducer, we design an OFDM communication system to maximize its data rate for smart home applications. We build a prototype of URadio on a wireless testbed and evaluate its performance in several real-world environments. Our experiments show that URadio can reach up to 360 kb/s data rate at a distance of 81 cm or 20 Kb/s data rate at a distance of 20 m, which supports a variety of smart home applications. We further showcase URadio’s resilience against eavesdropping and jamming attacks, as well as demonstrate its capability of securely localizing objects in an indoor environment.
               
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