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Blockchain and edge computing–based architecture for participatory smart city applications

Khan, Zaheer; Abbasi, Abdul Ghafoor; Pervez, Zeeshan

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Authors

Zaheer Khan Zaheer2.Khan@uwe.ac.uk
Professor in Computer Science

Abdul Ghafoor Abbasi

Zeeshan Pervez



Abstract

© 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Smart cities aim to provide smart governance with the emphasis on gaining high transparency and trust in public services and enabling citizen participation in decision making processes. This means on the one hand data generated from urban transactions need to be open and trustworthy. On the other hand, security and privacy of public data needs to be handled at different administrative and geographical levels. In this paper, we investigate the pivotal role of blockchain in providing privacy, self-verification, authentication, and authorization of participatory transactions in open governance. We also investigate up to what extent edge computing can contribute toward management of permissioned sharing at specific administrative levels and enhance privacy and provide an economic approach for resource utilization in a distributed environment. We introduce a novel architecture that is based on distributed hybrid ledger and edge computing model. The architecture provides refined and secure management of data generated and processed in different geographical and administrative units of a city. We implemented a proof of concept of the architecture and applied it on a carefully designed use case, ie, citizen participation in administrative decisions through consensus. This use case highlights the need to keep and process citizen participation data at local level by deploying district chaincodes and only share consensus results through permissioned chaincodes. The results reveal that proposed architecture is scalable and provide secure and privacy protected environment for citizen participatory applications. Our performance test results are promising and show that under control conditions, the average registration time for a citizen transaction is about 42ms, whilst the validation and result compilation of 100 concurrent citizens' transactions took about 2.4seconds.

Citation

Khan, Z., Abbasi, A. G., & Pervez, Z. (2020). Blockchain and edge computing–based architecture for participatory smart city applications. Concurrency and Computation: Practice and Experience, 32(12), Article e5566. https://doi.org/10.1002/cpe.5566

Journal Article Type Conference Paper
Acceptance Date Aug 28, 2019
Online Publication Date Nov 11, 2019
Publication Date Jun 25, 2020
Deposit Date Aug 29, 2019
Publicly Available Date Nov 12, 2020
Print ISSN 1532-0626
Electronic ISSN 1532-0634
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 32
Issue 12
Article Number e5566
DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/cpe.5566
Keywords Open governance; Edge Computing; Blockchain; Distributed Ledger; Smart Cities; Citizen Participation; Security; Privacy; Trust
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/2601166
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1002/cpe.5566

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