• 沒有找到結果。

Using a Single VCSEL Source Employing OFDM Downstream Signal and Remodulated OOK Upstream Signal for Bi-directional Visible Light Communications

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Share "Using a Single VCSEL Source Employing OFDM Downstream Signal and Remodulated OOK Upstream Signal for Bi-directional Visible Light Communications"

Copied!
6
0
0

加載中.... (立即查看全文)

全文

(1)

Employing OFDM Downstream

Signal and Remodulated OOK

Upstream Signal for Bi-directional

Visible Light Communications

Chien-Hung Yeh

1

, Liang-Yu Wei

2

& Chi-Wai Chow

2,3

In this work, we propose and demonstrate for the first time up to our knowledge, using a 682 nm visible vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser (VCSEL) applied in a bi-directional wavelength remodulated VLC system with a free space transmission distance of 3 m. To achieve a high VLC downstream traffic, spectral efficient orthogonal-frequency-division-multiplexing quadrature-amplitude-modulation (OFDM-QAM) with bit and power loading algorithms are applied on the VCSEL in the central office (CO). The OFDM downstream wavelength is remodulated by an acousto-optic modulator (AOM) with OOK modulation to produce the upstream traffic in the client side. Hence, only a single VCSEL laser is needed for the proposed bi-directional VLC system, achieving 10.6 Gbit/s OFDM downstream and 2 Mbit/s remodulated OOK upstream simultaneously. For the proposed system, as a single laser source with wavelength remodulation is used, the laser wavelength and temperature managements at the client side are not needed; and the whole system could be cost effective and energy efficient.

Recently, the bandwidth demands of broadband wireless services are increasing exponentially. However, the avail-able radio frequency (RF) bands are limited and it is unlikely that significant new spectrum can be made availavail-able for the wireless communications in the near future1,2. One promising option is to utilize the free and unlicensed infrared (IR) and visible light spectra leading to optical wireless communication (OWC). As IR is invisible to human beings, the transmitted power used in IR communication should be limited to prevent damages to human eyes. Hence, IR wireless communication is mainly used in very low data rate wireless communication due to the very limited signal-to-noise (SNR) of the transmitted signal. OWC using the visible light spectrum, known as the visible light communication (VLC) has received considerable attenuations recently due to high transmission data rate3–7, high secure and directional transmissions8–10. VLC can also deliver other unique wireless applications, such as utilizing in underwater11,12, high precision indoor-positioning and navigation13,14, and in electromagnetic interference (EMI) prohibited areas, such as in aircrafts and hospital operation rooms. VLC is also regarded as a promising solution for the next generation 5 G mobile communications15.

White light-emitting diode (LED) based VLC would restrict the modulation bandwidth to a few MHz due to the long relaxation time of phosphor layer16,17. Hence, using high spectral-efficiency modulation schemes18,19, multi-input-multi-output (MIMO) technique20,21, special LED devices22 and R/G/B LED23 could enhance sig-nificantly the VLC data rate to a few Gbit/s. In order to achieve a higher VLC traffic data rate, the visible LD could be utilized to provide high modulation speed and high electrical-to-optical (EO) conversion efficiency. In recent years, many studies of LD-based VLC have been demonstrated. In 2008, Hanson et al. used a 532 nm LD to reach 1 Gbit/s underwater VLC through 2 m transmission length24. In 2013, Watson et al. demonstrated a 2.5 Gbit/s on-off-keying (OOK) VLC scheme by employing a GaN blue LD in a free space transmission25. In 2016, Yeh et al. first proposed using 682 nm vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser (VCSEL) to achieve 0.52

1Department of Photonics, Feng Chia University, Taichung, 40724, Taiwan. 2Department of Photonics and Institute

of Electro-Optical Engineering, National Chiao Tung University, Hsinchu, 30010, Taiwan. 3Department of Electronic

Engineering, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China. Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to C.-W.C. (email: cwchow@faculty.nctu.edu.tw)

Received: 3 May 2017 Accepted: 3 November 2017 Published: xx xx xxxx

(2)

to11.86 Gbit/s power-sharing VLC transmission by employing orthogonal-frequency-division-multiplexing quadrature-amplitude-modulation (OFDM-QAM) with bit-power-loading26. A 8.148 Gbit/s bi-directional VLC using VCSEL was also reported27. Besides, Wu et al. also investigated tricolor R/G/B LD for white-lighting VLC with > 8 Gbit/s traffic rate in 201728. However, these reported LD-based VLC systems only demonstrated a single directional transmission without the mentioning of how to provide upstream traffic in a bi-directional transmis-sion. A fiber-based optical wireless communication using downstream on-off-keying (OOK) signal generated by a distributed feedback laser diode (DFB-LD) and Mach-Zehnder modulator (MZM) in the central office and upstream remodulated OOK signal generated by semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOAs) in the mobile device was demonstrated29; however, this scheme is operated in the 1.5 µm infra-red (IR) wavelength region; and exter-nal modulation is used at the central office. Free-space optical data transmissions using multiple quantum well modulating retro-reflector demonstrated by Naval Research Laboratory (NRL)30,31 can produce modulation rates of Mbit/s. However, the remodulation schemes discussed29–31 are operated in the IR region. In the future optical wireless network, the bandwidth demand of each user will beyond Gbit/s. However, the LED-based VLC system cannot provide the high enough data rate for end-user32; hence laser-based VLC system can suit the purpose. It can provide high data rate and long distance transmission. One application of the laser-based VLC system is the ground-to-train data transmission providing a high speed traffic with transmission distance of 200 m33.

In this work, we propose and demonstrate using a 682 nm visible VCSEL laser with 1 GHz modulation band-width applied in a bi-directional wavelength remodulated VLC system with a free space transmission distance of 3 m. To achieve a high VLC downstream traffic, spectral efficient OFDM-QAM with bit and power loading algo-rithms are applied on the VCSEL via a bias-tee (BT) for direct modulation in the central office (CO). In the pro-posed bi-directional VLC system, the OFDM downstream wavelength can also be remodulated by employing an acousto-optic modulator (AOM) with OOK modulation to produce the upstream traffic in the client side. Hence, only a single VCSEL laser is needed for the proposed bi-directional VLC system, achieving 10.6 Gbit/s OFDM downstream and 2 Mbit/s remodulated OOK upstream simultaneously. As a single laser source with wavelength remodulation is used, the laser wavelength and temperature managements at the client side are not needed; and the whole system could be cost effective and energy efficient.

Results

OFDM Downstream Traffic.

As mentioned before, in the proposed bi-directional VLC system, the down-stream traffic is based on OFDM-QAM modulation, and the updown-stream traffic is based on a wavelength remod-ulated OOK modulation. For the downstream VLC signal, the OFDM-QAM modulation with bit-loading and power-loading algorisms are used to enhance the bandwidth efficiency for VLC transmission. Here, the 682 nm visible VCSEL laser is operated at 3.5 mA. In this measurement, the electrical OFDM signal is generated by using home-made MATLAB

®

program. The generation of OFDM modulation contains the serial-to-parallel (S/P), QAM symbol mapping, parallel-to-serial (P/S), inverse fast Fourier transform (IFFT), cyclic prefix (CP) insertion, and digital-to-analog (DA) conversion. The DA conversion is implemented by an arbitrary waveform generator (AWG, Tektronix

®

AWG7122) with 6 GSample/s sampling rate. The fast-Fourier transform (FFT) size, CP length and OFDM subcarrier number are 256, 3.03% and 80 respectively.

According to the available modulation bandwidth of the VCSEL laser, 80 OFDM subcarriers are applied to occupy within the frequency of 1.895 GHz. Due to the 1 GHz available modulation bandwidth of the VCSEL, the electrical OFDM signal can dynamically adjust and allocate the signal bandwidth according to the channel response. After a free-space transmission of 3 m, the VLC downstream signal can be received and converted to electrical signal using a 1.25 GHz PIN-based photodiode (PD) in the client side. Then, the OFDM signal is con-nected to real-time oscilloscope (RTO, Tektronix

®

CSA 7404) with the sampling rate and analog-to-digital (A/D) conversion resolution of 10 GSample/s and 8 bits respectively.

Figure 1(a) shows measured SNR of each OFDM subcarrier within the modulation frequency of 1.898 GHz in a free space transmission length of 3 m. The channel spacing of each OFDM symbol is ~0.024 GHz. As shown in Fig. 1(a), the retrieved SNR decreases at the higher frequency parts. It is due to the power fading

Figure 1. Observed SNR and bit number of each OFDM subcarrier within the modulation frequency of

1.898 GHz in a free space transmission length of 3 m. (b) Measured corresponding constellation diagrams of OFDM modulation with bit-power-loading algorithm.

(3)

and bandwidth limitation of the PIN PD. To achieve the SNR of >16 dB, the corresponding frequency must be within 1.172 GHz. Besides, the entire measured SNRs are between 8.2 and 28.3 dB. To enlarge and optimize the spectral-efficiency of OFDM modulation, the bit and power loading algorithms are designed to use in OFDM channel. Then, the QAM-order can be adapted properly based on the measured SNR of each OFDM subcarrier. Hence, Fig. 1(a) also displays the corresponding number of bit per OFDM symbol in the frequency range of 0.047 to 1.898 GHz after 3 m transmission length. In the measurement, the 4-QAM to 256-QAM OFDM channels can be utilized in the proposed VCSEL VLC system. As seen in Fig. 1(a), the available bit per symbol are from 2−8 bit/sec/Hz. Moreover, Fig. 1(b) shows the corresponding constellation diagrams of OFDM modulation with bit-power-loading algorithm using the 4-, 8-, 16-, 32-, 64-, 128- and 256-QAM formats, respectively, in a free space transmission length of 3 m, respectively. These measured constellations are clear and condensed.

According to measured SNR of each OFDM subcarrier, the corresponding bit error rate (BER) can be calcu-lated from the error vector magnitude (EVM). Hence, Fig. 2 shows the VLC data rates and BERs in the free space transmission lengths of 1 and 3 m, respectively. The achieved VLC downstream data rates can reach 11.1 and 10.6 Gbit/s, respectively, in the transmission lengths of 1 and 3 m. Moreover, the corresponding BERs are 2.5 × 10−3

and 2.6 × 10−3 when the transmission lengths are 1 and 3 m, respectively. The whole measured BERs are below the

forward error correction (FEC) threshold (BER = 3.8 × 10−3). In the measurement, to achieve > 10 Gbit/s

down-stream data rate in the proposed VLC system in a free space transmission length of 3 m, the operated current of 3.5 mA is the optimal control for power-efficiency operation.

Figure 3 presents the measured plot of optical output (L) as a function of bias current (Ibias) of 682 nm VCSEL

laser at the back to back (B2B) status. The observed threshold current is around 1.0 mA with output intensity of 0.21 mW. As illustrated in Fig. 3, the measured L-I curve is very close to the linear distribution for direct signal modulation. Moreover, the rising and falling times of VCSEL laser are nearly 100 ps. To operate in linear region, the Ibias is selected at around 3.5 mA. When the Ibias is 3.5 mA, the relative output intensity is 2.78 mW.

Remodulated OOK Upstream Traffic.

The upstream signal is generated by using wavelength remodula-tion or the downstream signal. In order to produce the upstream signal, the downstream signal is launched into the AOM for OOK upstream remodulation. Here, an electrical pattern generator (PPG) is used to generate the electrical OOK signal, which is applied to the AOM at the client side. The light beam diameter and optical rise time of the AOM are 1.5 mm and 265 ns, respectively. Due to the different data rates and different modulation formats are used, the OOK signal can be modulated directly onto the OFDM downstream signal without the need

Figure 2. Related VLC data rates and BERs in the free space transmission lengths of 1 and 3 m, respectively.

(4)

of downstream signal erasure. Due the limitation of 1.8 MHz bandwidth AOM, 2 Mbit/s OOK format is applied in this proof-of-concept demonstration. Higher upstream OOK data rate could be achieved if higher bandwidth AOM is available in the laboratory. Then, the OOK upstream can be detected by a 50 MHz PIN-PD connected to an electrical error detector (ED) after 1 and 3 m transmission lengths. A 20 MHz Bessel low pass filter (LPF) is used to remove the high frequency OFDM signal and capture the OOK signal. Moreover, to analyze the remod-ulated OOK upstream performance, the bias currents of VCSEL laser are set at 3, 3.5 and 4 mA with the OFDM downstream signal is present for OOK signal detection.

Figure 4 presents the measured Q factor of the 2 Mbit/s remodulated OOK format under the bias currents of 3, 3.5 and 4 mA in the free space transmission lengths of 1 and 3 m, respectively, when the 20 MHz LPF is used. As illustrated in Fig. 4, when the bias current is increased gradually, the observed Q values are also increased. When the bias current is at 3.5 mA, the Q values of 8.5 and 6.1 are obtained in the free space transmission lengths of 1 and 3 m, respectively. The corresponding BERs are below 10−9 at this bias current. Moreover, due to the larger

optical SNR in the client side, the measured Q factor after 1 m transmission length is better than that of 3 m long, as seen in Fig. 4. The insets of Fig. 4 present the corresponding eye diagrams at the 1 and 3 m transmission lengths, respectively. The eye diagrams are clear and open. The results show clearly that 10.6 Gbit/s OFDM downstream and 2 Mbit/s remodulated OOK upstream bidirectional VLC after 3 m free space transmission can be achieved. It is also worth to mention that the 3 m free space transmission distance is limited by our optical table; much longer transmission distance can be supported in this scheme.

In this work, 10.6 Gbit/s OFDM downstream signal can be achieved by using only a single VCSEL laser with 3-dB direct-modulation bandwidth of 1 GHz in the central office and a 1.25 GHz bandwidth PIN PD in the client side after a 3 m free-space transmission. The proposed spectral-efficient OFDM-QAM with optimal bit-loading and power-loading algorisms can increase the bandwidth efficiency by 10 times. Besides, a 1.8 MHz AOM is used to re-modulate the OFDM downstream signal to generate a 2 Mbit/s OOK upstream signal in the same transmission length without the need of downstream data signal removal by using a SOA as reported in ref.29. The upstream traffic can be increased if a higher bandwidth AOM is available in the laboratory. This is a first demon-stration for the remodulated upstream signal in the visible laser-based VLC system.

Method

Architecture of Proposed Bi-directional Wavelength Remodulated VLC System.

Figure 5 shows the architecture of the proposed VCSEL-based bidirectional VLC system. In the proof-of-concept experiment, at the CO, a 682 nm VCSEL laser with ~1 GHz modulation bandwidth is used to act as a VLC transmitter (Tx)

Figure 4. Measured Q factor performance with 2 Mbit/s remodulated OOK format at the bias currents of 3,

3.5 and 4 mA in the free space transmission lengths of 1 and 3 m, respectively. The insets are corresponding eye diagrams.

(5)

on Communications Information and Internet Policy, 23–25 (2011).

2. Nguyen, H. C. et al. “An empirical study of urban macro propagation at 10, 18 and 28 GHz” IEEE VTC Spring, 1–5 (2016). 3. Chow, C. W., Yeh, C. H., Liu, Y. & Liu, Y. F. “Digital signal processing for light emitting diode based visible light communication”.

IEEE Photon. Soc. Newslett. 26, 9–13 (2012).

4. Chi, Y. C. et al. “450-nm GaN laser diode enables high-speed visible light communication with 9-Gbps QAM-OFDM”. Opt. Exp. 23, 13051–13059 (2015).

5. Sung, J. Y., Chow, C. W. & Yeh, C. H. “Is blue optical filter necessary in high speed phosphor-based white light LED visible light communications?”. Opt. Exp. 22, 20646–20651 (2014).

6. Le-Minh, H. et al. “High-speed visible light communications using multiple-resonant equalization”. IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 20, 1243–1245 (2008).

7. Vucic, J., Kottke, C., Nerreter, S., Langer, K. D. & Walewski, J. W. “513 Mbit/s visible light communications link based on DMT-modulation of a white LED”. J. Lightw. Technol. 28, 3512–3518 (2010).

8. Chang, C. H. et al. “A 100-Gb/s multiple-input multiple-output visible laser light communication system”. J. Lightw. Technol. 32, 4723–4729 (2014).

9. Mostafa, A. & Lampe, L. “Physical-layer security for MISO visible light communication channels”. IEEE J. on Sel. Areas in Comm. 33, 1806–1818 (2015).

10. Liu, Y. et al. “Light encryption scheme using light‐emitting diode and camera image sensor”. IEEE Photon. J. 8, 7801107 (2016). 11. Wang, C., Yu, H. Y. & Zhu, Y. J. “A long distance underwater visible light communication system with single photon avalanche

diode”. IEEE Photon. J. 8, 7906311 (2016).

12. Lu, H.-H. et al. “An 8 m/9.6 Gbps underwater wireless optical communication system”. IEEE Photon. J. 8, 7906107 (2016). 13. Yasir, M., Ho, S. W. & Vellambi, B. N. “Indoor positioning system using visible light and accelerometer”. J. Lightw. Technol. 32,

3306–3316 (2014).

14. Hsu, C. W. et al. “Visible light positioning and lighting based on identity positioning and RF carrier allocation technique using a solar cell receiver”. IEEE Photon. J. 8, 7905507 (2016).

15. Wu, S., Wang, H. & Youn, C. H. “Visible light communications for 5G wireless networking systems: from fixed to mobile communications”. IEEE Network 28, 41–45 (2014).

16. Yeh, C.-H., Chow, C.-W., Chen, H.-Y., Liu, Y.-L. & Hsu, D.-Z. “Investigation of phosphor-LED lamp for real-time half-duplex wireless VLC system”. J. Opt. 18, 065701 (2016).

17. Chi, N., Zhou, Y., Shi, J., Wang, Y., Huang, X. “Enabling technologies for high speed visible light communication”. Optical Fiber

Communication Conference and Exposition, Th1E. 3 (2017).

18. Yeh, C.-H., Chen, H.-Y., Chow, C.-W. & Liu, Y.-L. “Utilization of multi-band OFDM modulation to increase traffic rate of phosphor-LED wireless VLC”. Opt. Express 23, 1133–1138 (2015).

19. Zhang, M. et al. “4.05-Gb/s RGB LED-based VLC system utilizing PS-Manchester coded Nyquist PAM-8 modulation and hybrid time-frequency domain equalization”. Optical Fiber Communication Conference and Exposition W2A, 42 (2017).

20. Hsu, C. W. et al. “High speed imaging 3 × 3 MIMO phosphor white‐light LED based visible light communication system”. IEEE

Photon. J 8, 7907406 (2016).

21. Yeh, C.-H., Chen, H.-Y., Liu, Y.-L. & Chow, C.-W. “Polarization-multiplexed 2 × 2 phosphor-LED wireless light communication without using analog equalization and optical blue filter”. Opt. Commun. 334, 8–11 (2015).

22. Chun, H. et al. “LED based wavelength division multiplexed 10 Gb/s visible light communications”. J. Lightwave Technol. 34, 3047–3052 (2016).

23. Lu, I.-C., Lai, C.-H., Yeh, C.-H. & Chen, J. “6.36 Gbit/s RGB LED-based WDM MIMO visible light communication system employing OFDM modulation”. Optical Fiber Communication Conference and Exposition W2A, 39 (2017).

24. Hanson, F. & Radic, S. “High bandwidth underwater optical communication”. Appl. Opt. 47, 277–283 (2008).

25. Watson, S. et al. “Visible light communications using a directly modulated 422 nm GaN laser diode”. Opt. Lett. 38, 3792–3794 (2013).

26. Yeh, C. H. & Lu, I. C. “0.52−11.86 Gbit/s OFDM modulation for power-sharing VLC transmission by using VCSEL laser”. Opt. Exp.

24, 21113–21118 (2016).

27. Wei, L. Y., Hsu, C. W., Hsu, Y., Yeh, C. H. & Chow, C. W. “Bi-directional Visible Light Communication Using a Single 682-nm Visible Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting Laser (VCSEL) and Signal Remodulation” Proc. ECOC, Paper P2.SC8.55 (2017).

28. Wu, T. C. et al. “Tricolor R/G/B laser diode based eye-safe white lighting communication beyond 8 Gbit/s”. Sci. Rep. 7, 1–10 (2017). 29. Oh, C. W., Cao, Z., Tangdiongga, E. & Koonen, T. “10 Gbps all-optical full-duplex indoor optical wireless communication with

wavelength reuse” Proc. OFC, Paper Th4A.6 (2016).

30. Gilbreath, G. C. et al. “Large-aperture multiple quantum well modulating retroreflector for free-space optical data transfer on unmanned aerial vehicles”. Opt. Eng. 40(7), 1348–1356 (2001).

31. Rabinovich, W. S. et al. and K. Ikossi- Ansatasiou, “Infrared data link using a multiple quantum well modulating retro-reflector on a small rotary-wing unmanned airborne vehicle”. Proc. IEEE Aerospace Conference 2000 3, 93–100 (2000).

32. Wang, Y., Wang, Y., Chi, N., Yu, J. & Shang, H. “Demonstration of 575-Mb/s downlink and 225-Mb/s uplink bi-directional SCM-WDM visible light communication using RGB LED and phosphor-based LED”. Opt. Express 21, 1203–1208 (2013).

33. Urabe, H. et al. “High data rate ground-to-train free-space optical communication system”. Opt. Eng. 51, 031204 (2012).

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan, ROC, MOST-106-2221-E-009-105 -MY3, MOST-106-2221-E-035-060, MOST-104-2628-E-009-011-MY3, MOST-103-2218-E-035-011-MY3, Aim for the Top University Plan, Taiwan, and Ministry of Education, Taiwan.

(6)

Author Contributions

Chien-Hung Yeh contributed to the experiment design and manuscript writing. Liang-Yu Wei contributed to the experimental setup construction and measurement. Chi-Wai Chow contributed to the experiment design.

Additional Information

Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Publisher's note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and

institutional affiliations.

Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International

License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Cre-ative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not per-mitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the perper-mitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

數據

Figure 3.  Measured L-I curve of VCSEL laser.
Figure 5.  Architecture of the proposed bi-directional VCSEL-based VLC system.

參考文獻

相關文件

Reinforcement learning is based on reward hypothesis A reward r t is a scalar feedback signal. ◦ Indicates how well agent is doing at

mNewLine ; invoke the macro This is how you define and invoke a simple macro. The assembler will substitute "call

The peak detector and loop filter form a feedback circuit that monitors the peak amplitude, A out, of the output signal V out and adjusts the VGA gain until the measured

Research on Analog and Mixed-Signal Processing Integrated Circuit Design for ISFET-Based Linear Sensor Array

Kyunghwi Kim and Wonjun Lee, “MBAL: A Mobile Beacon-Assisted Localization Scheme for Wireless Sensor Networks,” The 16th IEEE International Conference on Computer Communications

Ahmad, A Variable Block Size Motion Estimation Algorithm for Real-time H.264 Video Encoding,  Signal Processing: Image Communication,

[7]Jerome M .Shapiro “Embedded Image Using Zerotree of Wavelet Coefficients”IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SIGNAL PROCESSING, VOL,41,NO.12,DECEMBER 1993. [8 ]Amir Said Willam

The effect of gender on motivation and student achievement in digital game-based learning: A case study of a contented-based classroom. Using game-based learning to