98 research outputs found
Robust and Low-Complexity Timing Synchronization for DCO-OFDM LiFi Systems
Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.Light fidelity (LiFi), using light emitting devices such as light emitting diodes (LEDs) which are operating in the visible light spectrum between 400 and 800 THz, provides a new layer of wireless connectivity within existing heterogeneous radio frequency wireless networks. Link data rates of 10 Gbps from a single transmitter have been demonstrated under ideal laboratory conditions. Synchronization is one of these issues usually assumed to be ideal. However, in a practical deployment, this is no longer a valid assumption. Therefore, we propose for the first time a low-complexity maximum likelihood-based timing synchronization process that includes frame detection and sampling clock synchronization for direct current-biased optical orthogonal frequency division multiplexing LiFi systems. The proposed timing synchronization structure can reduce the high-complexity two-dimensional search to two low-complexity one-dimensional searches for frame detection and sampling clock synchronization. By employing a single training block, frame detection can be realized, and then sampling clock offset (SCO) and channels can be estimated jointly. We propose three frame detection approaches, which are robust against the combined effects of both SCO and the low-pass characteristic of LEDs. Furthermore, we derive the CrameÌr-Rao lower bounds (CRBs) of SCO and channel estimations, respectively. In order to minimize the CRBs and improve synchronization performance, a single training block is designed based on the optimization of training sequences, the selection of training length, and the selection of direct current (DC) bias. Therefore, the designed training block allows us to analyze the trade-offs between estimation accuracy, spectral efficiency, energy efficiency, and complexity. The proposed timing synchronization mechanism demonstrates low complexity and robustness benefits and provides performance significantly better than achieved with existing methods.Peer reviewe
Visible Light Communication (VLC)
Visible light communication (VLC) using light-emitting diodes (LEDs) or laser diodes (LDs) has been envisioned as one of the key enabling technologies for 6G and Internet of Things (IoT) systems, owing to its appealing advantages, including abundant and unregulated spectrum resources, no electromagnetic interference (EMI) radiation and high security. However, despite its many advantages, VLC faces several technical challenges, such as the limited bandwidth and severe nonlinearity of opto-electronic devices, link blockage and user mobility. Therefore, significant efforts are needed from the global VLC community to develop VLC technology further. This Special Issue, âVisible Light Communication (VLC)â, provides an opportunity for global researchers to share their new ideas and cutting-edge techniques to address the above-mentioned challenges. The 16 papers published in this Special Issue represent the fascinating progress of VLC in various contexts, including general indoor and underwater scenarios, and the emerging application of machine learning/artificial intelligence (ML/AI) techniques in VLC
A Novel PAPR Reduction in Filter Bank Multi-Carrier (FBMC) with Offset Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (OQAM) Based VLC Systems
The peak to average power ratio (PAPR) is one of the major problem with multicarrier-based systems. Due to its improved spectral efficiency and decreased PAPR, Filter Bank Multicarrier (FBMC) has recently become an effective alternative to the orthogonal multiplexing division (OFDM). For filter bank multicarrier communication/offset quadrature amplitude modulation-Visible light communication (FBMC/OQAM-VLC) systems is proposed a PAPR reduction technique. The suggested approach overlaps the proposed FBMC/OQAM-based VLC data signal with the existing signals. Non-redundant signals and data signals do not overlap in the frequency domain because data signals are scattered on odd subcarriers whereas built signals use even subcarriers. To reduce the effects of large-amplitude signal reduction, the suggested technique converts negative signals into positive signals rather than clipping them off as in conventional FBMC-based VLC systems. The PAPR reduction and bit error rate (BER) are realized using a scaling factor in the transformed signals. Complementary cumulative distribution function(CCDF) and BER are used to calculate the performance of the proposed approach. The presented study found that FBMC/OQAM-VLC systems to achieve a good trade-off between PAPR reduction and BER
Low complexity DCO-FBMC visible light communication system
Filter Bank Multicarrier (FBMC) is a new waveform candidate in the visible light communication system (VLC). FBMC is a distinctive kind of multi-carrier modulation that can be regarded as an alternative to orthogonal frequency Division Multicarrier (OFDM) with CP (cyclic prefix). DCO-FBMC (DC-bias optical FBMC) has recently been used in VLC, because it overcomes all defects in the optical-OFDM system and has high spectral efficiency. but at the same time the traditional DCO-FBMC suffers from high complexity due to the use of Hermitian Symmetry for real signal, by using 2N-point subcarrier IFFT (Inverse Fast Fourier Transformer) in the modulator, and the output is N-point subcarrier FFT (Fast Fourier Transform) in the demodulator. In this paper, for the first time, the possibility of minimizing complexity and generating a real signal without the use of Hermitian Symmetry or any other technique has been verified. The proposed technology provides 50% of the size of the IFFT / FFT and this results in a significant reduction in power consumption and occupied chip area
A two phase framework for visible light-based positioning in an indoor environment: performance, latency, and illumination
Recently with the advancement of solid state lighting and the application thereof
to Visible Light Communications (VLC), the concept of Visible Light Positioning
(VLP) has been targeted as a very attractive indoor positioning system (IPS) due to
its ubiquity, directionality, spatial reuse, and relatively high modulation bandwidth.
IPSs, in general, have 4 major components (1) a modulation, (2) a multiple access
scheme, (3) a channel measurement, and (4) a positioning algorithm. A number of
VLP approaches have been proposed in the literature and primarily focus on a fixed
combination of these elements and moreover evaluate the quality of the contribution
often by accuracy or precision alone.
In this dissertation, we provide a novel two-phase indoor positioning algorithmic
framework that is able to increase robustness when subject to insufficient anchor luminaries
and also incorporate any combination of the four major IPS components.
The first phase provides robust and timely albeit less accurate positioning proximity
estimates without requiring more than a single luminary anchor using time division
access to On Off Keying (OOK) modulated signals while the second phase provides a
more accurate, conventional, positioning estimate approach using a novel geometric
constrained triangulation algorithm based on angle of arrival (AoA) measurements.
However, this approach is still an application of a specific combination of IPS components.
To achieve a broader impact, the framework is employed on a collection
of IPS component combinations ranging from (1) pulsed modulations to multicarrier
modulations, (2) time, frequency, and code division multiple access, (3) received signal
strength (RSS), time of flight (ToF), and AoA, as well as (4) trilateration and
triangulation positioning algorithms.
Results illustrate full room positioning coverage ranging with median accuracies
ranging from 3.09 cm to 12.07 cm at 50% duty cycle illumination levels. The framework
further allows for duty cycle variation to include dimming modulations and results
range from 3.62 cm to 13.15 cm at 20% duty cycle while 2.06 cm to 8.44 cm at a
78% duty cycle. Testbed results reinforce this frameworks applicability. Lastly, a
novel latency constrained optimization algorithm can be overlaid on the two phase
framework to decide when to simply use the coarse estimate or when to expend more
computational resources on a potentially more accurate fine estimate.
The creation of the two phase framework enables robust, illumination, latency
sensitive positioning with the ability to be applied within a vast array of system
deployment constraints
OFDM-PWM scheme for visible light communications
In this paper, we propose an improved hybrid optical orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (O-OFDM) and pulse-width modulation (PWM) scheme for visible light communications. In this scheme, a bipolar O-OFDM signal is converted into a PWM format where the leading and trailing edges convey the frame synchronization and modulated information, respectively. The proposed scheme is insensitive to the non-linearity of the light emitting diode (LED) as LEDs are switched âonâ and âoffâ between two points. Therefore, the tight requirement on the high peak-to-average-power-ratio (PAPR) in O-OFDM is no longer a major issue. The simulation and experimental results demonstrate that the proposed scheme offers an improved bit error rate performance compared to the traditional asymmetrically clipped O-OFDM (ACO-OFDM)
Visible light communication using new Flip-FBMC modulation system technique
Filter bank multi-carrier (FBMC) modulation in the visible light communication (VLC) system is one of the most promising modulation systems in optical wireless communications (OWC), especially in 5G and 6G future applications. FBMC has a wide bandwidth compared to other modulation systems. One of the highest degree essential conditions for utilising the signal in VLC is that the signal is real positive, the signal is agreeable with intensity modulation/direct detection (IM/DD), where Hermitian symmetry (H.S) is utilised to get a real signal (RE) and to be unipolar direct current (DC)-bias is used. Here the challenge arises as this method increases complicating, due to the modulation of the N number of frequency symbols, these symbols need 2N inverse fast fourier transform (IFFT) and fast fourier transform (FFT), in addition to energy consumption. This research focused on the time domain and not the frequency domain by using the traditional complex FBMC generation signal, and to obtain the RE signal by placing the RE signal side by side with the imaginary signal (IMs) in a row, and then using new Flip-FBMC technology, which saves more energy. The proposed technologies provide approximately 57% of the number of IFFT/FFT. The use of Flip-FBMC technology consumes less energy than traditional technologies with better bit error rate (BER) performance
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