Engineering Molecular Communication: Implementation Insights and Testbed Activities
Abstract: Future communication networks shall be sustainable, trustworthy, reliable, and sovereign. However, as conventional wireless communication networks reach their boundaries in addressing these requirements, the research seeks alternative communication paradigms, such as quantum or molecular communication. This talk sheds light on molecular communication as one of the alternative paradigms, using molecules or nanoparticles as information carriers. Use cases of molecular communication lay mainly in the biomedical micro- and nanoscale domains.
As a relatively young research field, experimental work gains relevant experience as mathematical models may lack accuracy and behave less predictably than the model performance in wireless channels. Thus, this talk motivates molecular communication, surveys implementational aspects, and testbed activities. Furthermore, this talk introduces the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) research activities in the field of molecular communication and the Internet of Bio-Nano Things.
Date and Time
Location
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Registration
- Date: 21 Jan 2025
- Time: 02:30 PM to 03:30 PM
- All times are (UTC+11:00) Canberra
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- 31 North Road
- Acton, Australian Capital Territory
- Australia 2601
- Building: Ian Ross Building
- Room Number: Graduate Teaching Room R2.21
- Click here for Map
Speakers
Pit of Technische Universität Dresden
Molecular communications, Internet of Nano-Things
Biography:
Pit Hofmann received a Diploma degree (Dipl.-lng.) from Technische Universitat Dresden, Germany in 2021. Pit continues his studies in communication networks, where he is pursuing a PhD at the Deutsche Telekom Chair of Communication Networks, Technische Universität Dresden, Germany. He works on the 6G-life project and supports the excellence cluster "Centre for Tactile Internet with Human-in-the-Loop". Since January 2024, he is also part of the "Internet of Bio-Nano Things" project funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). His research focuses on molecular communications, diffusion-based molecular nanonetworks, and the Internet of Bio-Nano Things. He has published several works in the area of molecular communication.
Email:
Address:Dresden, Germany