In this paper, we address physical-layer key generation between two unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in flight, which are hindered by a dominant line-of-sight component (LOS) in their wireless channel. Although strong LOS component yields better error-performance in data transmission, it is well known that limited randomness in the channel variation will render the underlying physical-layer key generation algorithms ineffective. Pointing at this disadvantage, we explore a relay-based secret-key generation technique between the two UAVs, wherein a ground- stationed relay assists the two UAVs to witness a common source of randomness with higher entropy than their direct channel. We propose the Relay- Assisted Selective Inversion (RASI) protocol, which selectively offers common randomness from either of the channels from the relay to the two UAVs. To showcase the benefits of the RASI protocol, we first obtain theoretical lower bounds on the differential entropy of the common source of randomness, and subsequently employ a practical key-generation algorithm to synthesize the digital keys. We show that RASI can help the two UAVs to generate keys with higher key-rate than using the direct channel only. Finally, we also show that RASI outperforms an existing state-of-the-art relay-based method in terms of key-rate and computational complexity at the UAVs, while marginally losing to the latter in communication- overhead.
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