Molecular communication in nanomedicine

In wireless radio communication, information messages are transmitted by transmitter to receiver via electromagnetic signal. Similarly, in molecular communication, the transmission and reception of information are realized through molecules. For example, to transmit bit 1, a single molecule or a num...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wong, Chan Mun.
Other Authors: Erry Gunawan
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/55222
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
Description
Summary:In wireless radio communication, information messages are transmitted by transmitter to receiver via electromagnetic signal. Similarly, in molecular communication, the transmission and reception of information are realized through molecules. For example, to transmit bit 1, a single molecule or a number of them are transmitted by a transmitter at the beginning of the fixed-duration time slots. If the transmitter transmits no molecule within a fixed-duration time slot, then bit 0 is assumed to be transmitted. Molecular communication is a promising communication paradigm for nanonetworks, and important for nanomedicine applications which include therapeutic nanomachines, such as engineered bacteria and nanorobots. For example, a group of bacteria can be genetically engineered to recognize and destroy tumors in the human body. In this project, we would study the concept of molecular communications, the channel model, the suitable medium access and routing techniques that can be used to achieve communication performance closer to the information theoretical bounds, and build the simulation software to study the performance. This project is a new inter-disciplinary research areas.