Paper detail

TFZ-Tree: An Ultra-Lightweight Waveform Classification Framework for Resource-Constrained Devices

Under the trend of multi-waveform coexistence in 6G IoT, intelligent receivers must first identify physical-layer waveform types before performing correct demodulation and resource scheduling. However, existing signal identification research largely focuses on symbol-level modulation classification. Research directly targeting physical-layer waveform types (e.g., OFDM, OTFS, LoRa) is not only extremely scarce but also heavily reliant on deep neural networks and complex time-frequency transforms, making deployment on resource-constrained terminals difficult. Symbol modulation classification methods themselves cannot circumvent the prerequisite of ``waveform identification first.'' To address this dual gap, we propose an ultra-lightweight waveform classification framework based on time-frequency multidimensional features with a cooperative Z-test tree (ZTree). The framework employs low-complexity time-domain feature extraction, and the classification backend adopts a ZTree optimized by Z-statistical testing, which uses hypothesis testing confidence to automatically control decision tree splitting and size, ensuring efficient execution on resource-limited processors. Tested on ten 6G candidate waveforms including OFDM, OTFS, DSSS, LoRa, and NB-IoT, the method achieves 99.5\% average accuracy under AWGN and 87.4\% under TDL-C multipath channels, with main confusion between OTFS and LoRa. Implemented in C on an x86 platform, single inference latency is under 4~ms. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work achieving real-time recognition of ten IoT waveform types. Future work will target deployment acceleration on embedded MCUs. Code and dataset are open-sourced at: https://github.com/Einstein-sworder/IoT-wave.

preprint2026arXivOpen access
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