Cross-interface architectures are increasingly central to large-scale ocean observation systems, where underwater sensor nodes transmit data to spatially distributed buoys that relay information to terrestrial networks. In these deployments, the inherent broadcast nature of underwater acoustic (UWA) propagation enables a single node’s signals to be captured by multiple buoys. However, substantial and dynamic propagation delays lead to inherent reception asynchrony and severe multi-user interference. Conventional detection relies on large hydrophone arrays on single platforms and assumes strict synchronization, hindering scalability and elevating costs. This study proposes a distributed asynchronous reception framework for buoy-assisted UWA networks. Under a cloud software-defined acoustic (C-SDA) architecture, spatially separated buoys are treated as a virtual distributed multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) receiver. We introduce a minimum-delay-based equivalent reconstruction to regularize the asynchronous structure, followed by blind channel identification and pilot-assisted synchronization for robust multi-user detection. By leveraging long-delay broadcast propagation as a source of spatial diversity, the framework facilitates scalable and cost-effective multi-user access. The results demonstrate that the architecture provides a practical paradigm for the underwater Internet of Things and long-term ocean observation.
Yao et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
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