Artificial noise (AN) transmission is a physical layer security technique in multi-antenna wireless communication systems. Synthetic noise is broadcast to all receivers except designated legitimate users via beamforming in the legitimate users' null space. We consider AN transmission employing a single RF chain and analog beamforming, where beamforming vectors maintain constant magnitude while allowing arbitrary phases. Our primary objective is to design a constant-magnitude vector capable of nullifying multiple users' channel vectors simultaneously. To tackle this zero-forcing problem, we propose a novel successive partition zero-forcing (SPZF) scheme, which transforms the multi-user zero-forcing task into optimizing channel partitioning to minimize outage probability. The SPZF scheme can be generalized to any number of users, but our analysis focuses on the two-user case. Theoretical analysis reveals that our proposed SPZF scheme can attain arbitrarily low outage probability in the limit of large number of transmit antenna. We present three partition algorithms (random, iterative, and genetic) to minimize the outage probability. The outage probabilities and secrecy rates of the three partition algorithms are compared via numerical simulations. We find that the more advanced partition algorithms (iterative and genetic) achieve higher secrecy rates than the random algorithm, particularly under conditions of high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), large number of eavesdroppers, or small number of transmit antennas.
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