Q-FE: A Quantum-Native 6G Far-Edge Architecture Securing Industrial IoT Digital Twins via CSIDH-PQC and Asynchronous Federated Learning
Abstract
Sixth-generation (6G) wireless networks will underpin ultra-dense Industrial IoT (IIoT) ecosystems in which resource-constrained Far-Edge devices -- autonomous mobile robots, industrial actuators, connected vehicles -- must simultaneously satisfy sub-millisecond latency, 10-7-class reliability, and decades-long cryptographic security. Current architectures delegate Digital Twin (DT) computation to centralised cloud or Mobile Edge Computing (MEC) servers, incurring prohibitive round-trip latency, and rely on classical public-key cryptography vulnerable to quantum attacks under the harvest-now, decrypt-later (HNDL) threat model. We propose Q-FE, a Quantum-Native 6G Far-Edge architecture integrating three co-designed components: (i) Micro-Digital Twins (μDTs) co-located with 6G base stations and high-capability endpoints; (ii) a Cross-Layer Post-Quantum Key Exchange module embedding CSIDH-512 isogeny key material directly within MAC-layer control frames, exploiting the scheme's uniquely compact keys ( 64 bytes) to avoid packet fragmentation; and (iii) an Asynchronous Federated Learning (AFL) protocol governed by lightweight DAG smart contracts at MEC nodes, eliminating straggler bottlenecks and preventing model-poisoning and Sybil attacks without exposing raw data. End-to-end simulations (NS-3 + PySyft) demonstrate that Q-FE reduces MAC-layer overhead by 62% versus ML-KEM/Kyber-1024, maintains P99.9 URLLC latency at 0.78 ms, and accelerates global-model convergence by 31% over synchronous Federated Learning. Protocol complexity analysis confirms O(N R) per aggregation round, and μDT handover migration completes in 1.9 0.3 ms across 104 simulated events. A formal threat model confirms resilience against quantum eavesdropping, model-poisoning, and Sybil attacks.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.