Transcript VLC
Optical Wireless
Communications
Prof. Brandt-Pearce
Lecture 4
Visible Light Communications
1
Visible Light Communications (VLC)
Introduction
Applications
White LED
Illuminance Distribution
Channel Model
Challenges and Solutions
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Visible Light Communications (VLC)
Visible light is only a small portion of the electromagnetic spectrum.
(Ref: Wikipedia)
Dates back to 1880, when Alexander Graham Bell
invented the photophone
VLC is used for
Vehicle to vehicle communication
Networking in indoor environments
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Indoor VLC
Can provide network access at
Home
Office
Shopping Center
Plane
Hospital
Convention Centers
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Indoor VLC
Advantages
Safe for health
Secure
No interference on RF signals
High speed
Confined to small geographical area
Challenging Problems
Connectivity while moving
Multiuser support
Dimming
Shadowing
Confined to small geographical area
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Indoor VLC
Light-emitting-diodes (LED) are preferred sources for dual
purpose of lighting and data communications
Eye-safety regulations (compared to Laser)
Longevity
Lower cost
Are mercury free
Less consumption
High speed
Have smaller and compact size
Minimum heat generation
higher tolerance to humidity
A much higher energy conversion efficiency (white LEDs with
luminous efficacy greater that 200 lm/W are now available)
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Rival Technologies
WiFi
Has limited capacity, and cannot increase it easily, because
it covers a wide area, services potentially many users, and
limited bandwidth. Higher order modulation of limited
use since SNR limited.
E.g., office buildings, conference centers, stadiums
Bluetooth
Single user system for personal area communications.
Very small range and low data rate. Less shadowing so
good around moving people.
E.g., wireless microphones
Millimeter Wave? UWB?
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VLC vs. Infrared (IR) and Radio-frequency(RF)
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White LEDs
Two technologies in white LEDs
Phosphor-based LEDs
This technique involves the use of blue LED coated with a
phosphor layer that emits yellow light
The phosphor layer absorbs a portion of a short wavelength
light emitted by the blue LED and then the emitted light
from the absorber experiences wavelength shift to a longer
wavelength of yellow light
Are cheap and are less complex
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White LEDs
Trichromatic
Generates white light by combining red (~625 nm), green
(525 nm), and blue (470 nm) (RGB) in a correct proportion
Are high-speed
Enables color control
Typically, these triplet devices consist of a single package
with three emitters and combining optics
Are attractive for VLC as they offer the possibility of
wavelength division multiplexing (WDM)
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White LEDs
The most important factor in VLC is the switching properties
of the visible LEDs
They have the ability to be switched on and off very rapidly
thereby making it possible to impress data on their radiated
optical power/intensity
Modulation speed of white LEDs
is limited due to the relaxation time of the LEDs
BW of trichromatic LEDs < 20 MHz
BW of phosphor-based LEDs < 5 MHz
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An illustration of the VLC concept
This is for the
downlink only, and a
parallel similar
system is needed for
the uplink.
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Signal Distribution
Three main options:
Electrical network – extension of Internet
Passive optical network (PON)
Wireless-over-fiber
Power-line communication system
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A block diagram of a VLC system
Precise dimming appears to be challenging for incandescent
and gas-discharge lamps
With LEDs it is quite convenient to accurately control the
dimming level
The illumination requirement is that the illuminance must be
200–1000 lx for a typical office environment
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Indoor VLC Configurations
Generally there are 4 configurations for indoor optical links 1
(a) Directed – line-of-sight (LOS) link
(b) Non-directed LOS link
(c) Diffuse link
(d) Quasi diffuse link
H. Elgala, R. Mesleh, and H. Haas, “Indoor
optical wireless communication: Potential
and state-of-the-art,” IEEE Commun. Mag.,
vol. 49, no. 9, pp. 56 – 62, Sep 2011.
1
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Illuminance Distribution in VLC
Since LEDs are used for the dual propose of illumination and
communication, it is necessary to define the luminous intensity and
transmitted optical power
Transmitted optical power indicates the total energy radiated from an LED
Luminous intensity is used for expressing the brightness of an LED
Luminous intensity is the luminous flux per solid angle and is given as
where Φ is the luminous flux and Ω is the spatial angle
Φ can be calculated from the energy flux Φe as
where V(λ) is the standard luminosity curve, and Km is the maximum visibility,
which is ~683 lm/W at 555 nm wavelength
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Illuminance Distribution in VLC
In fulfilling the lighting requirements, a single high luminous efficiency
LED can only provide limited luminous flux and over a limited area
To illuminate a much larger environment, spatially distributed LED clusters
would be needed
LED array, and illuminance distribution for
(b) one transmitter and
(c) four transmitters
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An example of a VLC system
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Illuminance Distribution in VLC
Optical power distribution in received optical plane for using four
sources and a FWHM of
(a) 70°
(b) 12.5°
(c) with reflection from walls for 70°
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Channel Model
The output PSD of a white phosphor-based LED (solid line, which corresponds to
the left axis) is compared to the measured spectral reflectance (which corresponds
to the right axis) of plaster and plastic wall (dash-dot line), floor (dash line) and
ceiling (dot line) 1
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1
L Kwonhyung, P Hyuncheol and J R Barry, IEEE Communications Letters, 15, 217–219, 2011.
Channel Model
Multipath effect limits the channel bandwidth
The impulse response of the channel is modeled as a short
impulse (caused by LOS path) followed by a broad pulse
(multipath effect/NLOS path)
The delay between the two parts is determined by room
geometry and size
The NLOS part is usually modeled as a Gaussian pulse
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Performance Limits
System is typically either
bandwidth limited
background-light limited (if daylight falls on PD)
If channel-bandwidth limited, use higher-order modulation or
equalizer
If background-noise limited:
Shot noise due to receive intensity – nothing can be done
Decrease symbol rate
Channel state information (CSI) is needed at the transmitter
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Signal Processing
Optical and electrical filtering:
Block out-of-band background light
Remove electrical harmonics
Equalization required:
Bandwidth limited by LED response and by multipath
Types of equalizers:
FIR filters, adapted using an LMS algorithm
Decision-feedback equalizer
MLSE – very complex
Remove multiuser interference
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Challenges and Solutions
As discussed before, main challenges for indoor VLC systems are
Connectivity while moving: users need to be connected
when they move inside the indoor environment
Multiuser support: in large areas is vital, many users need
to have access to the network at the same time
Dimming: is an important feature in VLC when
communications is integrated with lighting
Shadowing: happens when the direct paths from user to all
sources are blocked
Some solution has been proposed for each one
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Challenges and Solutions
Solution for connectivity
This problem is similar to the connectivity problem in cellular
network when you move from one area of the city to another area
while speaking with cell-phone
The solution is called “handover”, using which the user is
transferred from one BS to another
Handover is done in the area that two BS’s have common coverage
Similar solution can be used in signal processing domain for VLC
The user can be transferred from one light source to another in the
area that is under the coverage of both
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Challenges and Solutions
Solution for multiuser support
One solution is time division
multiplexing (TDM)
Each frame is divided into equal
time slots
Each user transmit data in one time
slot in a predefined order
The other solution is code division multiple access (CDMA)
Codes are assigned to users
Each user transmit its data using the assigned signature pattern
It is used in 3G and 4G cellular networks
CDMA has been adopted and developed for optical systems
Optical orthogonal codes (OOC) are used as signature pattern for
users
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Challenges and Solutions
Solution for multiuser support
Last solution is spatial multiplexing
Can use to increase data rate or to add users
Rely on LED arrays and multiple receivers
Or can use an imaging receiver (camera)
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Challenges and Solutions
Solution for dimming
Two main solutions are proposed for solving dimming
problem in VLC systems
Pulse width modulation (PWM) is combined with other
modulation schemes in order to control the duty cycle of the
transmitter signal
By controlling the width of the PWM signaling, the dimming
level can be controlled
The other solution is using modified forms of PPM
In these schemes multiple pulses are transmitted instead of
one pulse
By controlling and changing the ratio between the number of
pulses and the length, the dimming level can be altered
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Challenges and Solutions
Solution for shadowing
As shown before, the impulse
response in VLC systems has
two parts
When the line-of-sight (LOS)
part (which is received via
direct path) is blocked, the
impulse response is only the
second part
Then the data can be
recovered using the second
part which is indeed the
received data from the
indirect paths (multipath
signal)
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