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International Journal of Electrical and Computing Engineering
Vol. 1, Issue. 1, July – 2014 ISSN (Online): 2349-8218
Mitigating Effect of Flickering & Dimming in Visible
Light Communication Using MIMO
A. Suban
[1]
, P. Prabu
[2]
, R. Manikandan
[3]
, M. Pradeep
[4]
Assistant professor, Dept of ECE, Velammal College of Engineering and Technology, Madurai
[2]
PG student, Dept of CSE, Indian Institute of Information Technology, Trichy
[3]
Project Engineer, WIPRO Lmited, Chennai,
[4]
Lecturer, Nagasiva Polytechnique College
Abstract— Visible Light Communication (VLC) refers
to short-range optical wireless communication using
visible light spectrum from 380 to 780nm and it has
many advantages such as it can provide a maximum
speed of 10GB/S. The other advancement is that the
bandwidth available for visible light communication is
300THz whereas it is below 6GHz on RF
communication. The transmission of data in VLC is
done with the intensity modulating optical source,
such as light emitting diodes (LEDs) because of its
energy efficiency and recent advancement in LED
technology with fast nanoseconds switching time. This
paper applies OPPM (Overlapping Pulse Position
Modulation) to provide higher data rate during its
transmission of digital data when we compared to
other modulation techniques. The result shows that
the best performance can be obtained using OPPM,
making it an ideal modulation technique for future
visible light communication. MATLAB and Lab View
are the two methodologies we used for simulation
purpose. Moreover Multiple Input Multiple Output
(MIMO) techniques is potentially adopted for
achieving high data rates. MATLAB Simulations are
carried out and depicted.
Index Terms— Visible light, White LED, On Off
Keying, Variable Pulse Modulation, Overlapping
Pulse Position Modulation.
I. INTRODUCTION
In the development of wireless communication
system when the third generation mobile communication
system is employed, manufacturers and the scientific
group are increasingly turning their research interest
towards future wireless communication system because
traditional radio frequency (RF) communication below 6
GHz is rapidly running out of spectrum bandwidth for
high data-rate communication. Visible Light
Communication has recently been developed by scientists
seeking to create an ultra-high speed, high security,
biologically friendly communication networks
Suban. A, Electronics & Communication Engineering, Velammal
College of Engineering and Technology, Madurai
Prabu.P, Computer Sceince & Engineering, Indian Institute of
Information Technology
Manikandan.R, Project Enineer, WIPRO Limited, Chennai.
Pradeep.M, Electrical & Electronics Engineering, Nagasiva
Polytechnique College, Madurai
that allow the creation and expansion of continuous
computing applications using very large bandwidth high-
frequency pulsed light instead of radio waves and
microwaves. Visible Light Communication (VLC) is the
short-range optical wireless communication using the
visible light spectrum from 380 to 780nm. With ~300 THz
of bandwidth available for VLC, multi-gigabit-per second
data rates could be provided over short distances.
This wide spread of bandwidth removes one of
the major difficulties faced by new communication
schemes. Some of the noted advantages of visible light
communication over RF (Radio Frequency) and IR (Infra-
Red) based systems are:
  Higher security than RF communication system.  
 No restriction on transmission power unlike in 
 IR communication system.  
 No regulations in the use of the visible
 electromagnetic spectrum. 
 The key advantage of VLC is the duality in the
use of the visible light. The same light that is
used for the communication can also be used for
illumination applications such as domestic light
bulbs, LED TVs, and traffic lights. 
In an optical communication system, there is a
possibility of modulating the transmitted optical signal in
a variety of ways. The phase, frequency and the intensity
of the optical signal can be modulated. VLC transmits
data by the intensity modulating optical sources, such as
light emitting diodes (LEDs) and laser diodes, because it
is easy to implement and the optical output power is
simply changed in accordance with the modulating signal.
There has been renewed interest in visible light optical
communication due to widespread deployment of LEDs
for energy efficiency and recent advancements in LED
technology with fast nanosecond switching times.
Figure 1. An Alternate Technology-VLC
8
International Journal of Electrical and Computing Engineering
Vol. 1, Issue. 1, July – 2014 ISSN (Online): XXXX-XXXX
LED VISIBLE LIGHT COMMUNICATION
In this 21st century, LEDs are extensively used
in various electronic devices, consumer products and due
to their small size they are preferred for illuminating
technologies. Recently experiments have shown that
advance in semiconductor material and manufacturing
techniques of LED is to be suitable for general indoor and
outdoor applications. In addition to that LED produces
less heat than other fluorescent and incandescent light
bulbs. In the industry side, LEDs are referred as “cool
lights” and most sustainable in light technology. Low cost
LED instead of lasers can be used as communication
transmitters connected to the electric grid, receiving high-
bit rate signals. So LED (Light Emitting Diode) Visible
Light Communication systems are recognized as creating
a possible valuable addition to future generation of
technology, which have the potential of using light for the
purpose of advanced technological communication at
ultra-high speed surpassing that of current wireless
systems. If it is developed correctly, the possibility exists
than many of the problems associated with present day
infrared, Bluetooth and radio wave could be at least
partially resolved, and industries and the general public
can gain a more biologically friendly system. The main
reasons for using LED are followed:
• High usage of bandwidth.
• Existing local power line infrastructure can
potentially be utilized.
• Very simple transmitter and receiver circuit
and it is not expensive.
• Eco-friendly.
• Long life expectancy.
A further advantage is that VLC systems can
transmit data more securely over short distances than
other communication devices whose signals can be easily
detected outside the rooms and buildings they originate in.
In the following section, the paper describes the system
design for the visible light communication, modulation
method and their benefits for flickering.
III. SYSTEM DESIGN
A typical Visible Light Communication system
contains two parts namely transmitter module and
receiver module. VLC system appears in the form of point
to multi-points which permits data transmission in one
direction only. The following figure shows the overall
VLC system block diagram. The receiver occupant may
realize information uplink with extra optical devices, and
more sophisticated the duplex system is the duplex
system.
A. TRANSMITTER MODULE
In the transmitter module, the Light Emitting Diode is
used to transmit the data and it has to be designed in such
way that power and the colour temperature both safe and
comfortable for human eyes.
when the same LED is used for illumination because it
won't make people feel uncomfortable and dizzy. It’s
important to note that the receiver occupant may block the
light beam and put the receiver in shadows, so more than
two LED lamps should be modulated simultaneously from
various directions to cover a larger recipient area. In some
case where the receiver loses connection with the
transmitter, it will be able to receive data from another
transmitter instantaneously.
Figure 2. Visible Light Communication Transmitter and Receiver Block
Diagram
B. RECEIVER MODULE
A receiver module is mostly composed of PIN
detectors and signal conditioning devices. The output
signal from the detector is weak with a lot of background
light noise and a long free space communication distance
only makes the situation worse. Therefore, the critical part
of our VLC system is the signal conditioning circuit .
The receiver’s PIN photo detector is connected to a trans-
impedance amplifier to convert the current signal into a
voltage signal. A high pass filter is applied next to bypass
the light noises and power line noises. Finally, the signal
is amplified by a main amplifier and it is reshaped by
comparator.
IV. MODULATION TECHNIQUE IN VLC
In the modulation process, the baseband signals
constitute the modulating signal and the high-frequency
carrier signal is a sinusoidal waveform or cosine
waveform. The sine wave carrier can be normally
modulated by three basic ways. For the modulation of
binary digital data, the three modulation techniques used
are binary amplitude-shift keying (BASK), binary
frequency-shift keying (BFSK) and binary phase shift
keying (BPSK).
A. AMPLITUDE SHIFT KEYING
Amplitude-shift keying (ASK) is a form of modulation
technique that represents digital data as variations in the
amplitude of a carrier wave. To transmit digital data over
optical fibre ASK technique is normally used. For
transmission using LED, binary 1 is represented by a short
pulse of light whereas absence of light represents binary 0.
This process is said to On Off Keying (OOK).
9
International Journal of Electrical and Computing Engineering
Vol. 1, Issue. 1, July – 2014 ISSN (Online): XXXX-XXXX
Figure 3. MATLAB simulation of Bit Error Rate for various
modulation methods
C. OVERLAPPING PULSE POSITION
MODULATION
Although VPM can provide data rates in terms of
few hundred megabits/s but even higher data rate than the
existing one is not possible due to its inherent throughput
limitations. Reducing the pulse width is the one and only
way to increase the throughput of the VPM. So there is a
need for some other modulation methods to provide
higher data rate but that should not have the limitations as
with that of VPM. OPPM is one of the promising
modulation scheme that allows more than one pulse per
pulse width and it has some of the useful properties such
as equal energy signals and low duty cycle.
Figure 4. Lab View simulation of Bit Error Rate for various
modulation methods
From the simulated results, the following conclusions
are made. The error rate for all the modulation techniques
decreases monotonically with increasing value of SNR.
For any given value of SNR, coherent PSK & OOK
produces same and smaller error rate than any of the other
modulation technique. So, coherent PSK and OOK are the
optimum system for transmitting binary data because it
achieves the minimum probability of symbol error for the
given value of SNR. But considering OOK and coherent
PSK, OOK is the best and most efficient modulation
technique in terms of bandwidth and power consumption.
DPSK require an SNR that is 3 dB less than that of
coherent FSK and noncoherent FSK to achieve same error
rate. For higher values of SNR, DPSK and noncoherent
FSK performs almost as well as coherent PSK and
coherent FSK. For higher values of SNR, coherent PSK
and QPSK have same error rate performance. Also it has
been inferred that MSK has exactly the same error
performance as that of QPSK.
B. Variable Pulse Position Modulation
Pulse position modulation (PPM) encodes the
data using the position of the pulse within a set time
period. The duration of the period containing the pulse
must be long enough to allow different positions to be
identified.
Figure 5. MATLAB simulation of Data rate Vs Duty cycle for OOK &
OPPM
Figure 6. Lab View simulation of Data rate Vs Duty cycle for
OOK & OPPM
From the simulated results, the following conclusions are
made. We can see that the OPPM signal has the best
flicker performance, followed by VPM and OOK.
10
International Journal of Electrical and Computing Engineering
Vol. 1, Issue. 1, July – 2014 ISSN (Online): XXXX-XXXX
The flicker severity value is 0.525 for any dimming
levels, which is far less than the limited value. We can
also notice that the 90% duty cycle VPM signal has
the same flicker performance as OPPM. But the flicker
severity of OPPM signal is invariant with changing
different dimming levels.
D. MULTI-ANTENNA CONFIGURATION
Solid-state lighting is a rapidly growing area of
research and applications, due to the reliability and
predicted high efficiency of these devices. The white LED
sources that are typically used for general illumination
can also be used for data transmission, and Visible Light
Communications (VLC) is a rapidly growing area of
research. One of the key challenges is the limited
modulation bandwidth of sources, typically several MHz
However, as a room or coverage space would typically be
illuminated by an array of LEDs there is the potential for
parallel data transmission, and using optical MIMO
techniques is potentially attractive for achieving high data
rates. In this paper we investigate non-imaging and
imaging MIMO approaches: a non-imaging optical
MIMO system does not perform properly at all receiver
positions due to symmetry, but an imaging based system
can operate under all foreseeable circumstances.
Simulations show such systems can operate at several
hundred Mbit/s and up to Gbit/s in many circumstances.
Figure 6. MATLAB simulation of Bit Error Rate (BER) Vs
Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR) for various systems such as SISO,
MISO and MIMO using OPPM Technique
From the simulated results,it can be inferred that
using SISO system model i.e. using single LED in the
transmitter side and a single photodiode or LED in the
receiver side we have very large bit error rate for increase
in SNR for given input. In the next case of MISO,i.e.
using two LED transmitter side at the transmitter side and
a single LED or photodiode at the receiver side we
achieve the bit error rate smaller than SISO system but
not smaller than MIMO system. In the next case of
MIMO system,i.e.using arrays of LED at the transmitter
side and arrays of LED or photodiode at the receiver side
we get a very smaller BER when we compared to SISO
and MISO system and it proved that VLC is adaptable for
MIMO configuration and it give best results when we
compared to all other system configurations.
Following assumptions are made for the
simulated results
Channel: AWGN
Modulation technique used: OPPM
ANTENNA SIZE: 2*2 for MIMO
1*1 for SISO
2*1 for MISO
V. DISCUSSIONS
We analysed the Performances of OOK and OPPM
signals by investigating the cutoff data rate and Bit Error
Rate analysis of various modulation techniques. We
proved that OPPM signal has the smallest and constant
flicker severity under all dimming levels spanning a
reasonably large brightness dimming range. This
modulation scheme also provided the largest and steady
cutoff data rate. OPPM appears as the desirable
modulation solution to emerging LED-based high
capacity visible light communication.
VI. REFERENCES
[1] Bluetooth SIG, Inc. (2009), Bluetooth Basics [Online],
Available:
http://www.bluetooth.com/Bluetooth/Technology/Basics.htm
[2] IrDA, (2009). IrDA Background. IrDA [Online].
Available: http://www.irda.org/
[3] T.Komine and M.Nakagawa, ”Fundamental analysis for
visible light communication systems using LED Lights,” IEEE
Trans. Consumer Electronics, vol. 59, no. 1, Feb, 2004, pp.
1000-07.
[4] M. Kavehrad, “Sustainable Energy Efficient Wireless
Applications Using Light,” IEEE Commun. Mag., vol. 48, no.
12, Dec. 2010, pp. 66-73.
[5] P. Amirshahi, M. Kavehrad, “Broadband Access over
Medium and Low Voltage Powerlines and use of White Light
Emitting Diodes for Indoor Communications,” IEEE Consumer
Communications & Networking Conference, Las Vegas,
Nevada, January 2006.
[6]L.Zeal et al. ,”High Data Rate Multiple Input Multiple
Output (MIMO) Optical Wireless Communications Using White
LED Lighting,” IEEE ISAC , vol. 27,no.9,Dec.2009,pp. 1654-62.
[7]M.Kahn and J.R.Barry,”Wireless Infrared
Communications,”Proc. IEEE, vol.85, no.2, 1997, pp.265-98.
[8]G.Pang, T.Kwan, H.Liu, C. -H.Chan,”LED Wireless: A
Novel use of LEDs to transmit audio and digital signals”, IEEE
Industry Applications Magazine, Vol.8, January 2002.
[9]J.K.Kwon,”Inverse Source Coding for Dimming in Visible
Light Communications Using NRZ-OOK on Reliable
Links”,IEEE Trans.photon.technol.Lett.,vol.22,no.19,pg.1455-
1457,Oct 2010.
11
International Journal of Electrical and Computing Engineering
Vol. 1, Issue. 1, July – 2014 ISSN (Online): XXXX-XXXX
[10] H.Sugiyama, S.Haruyama, and M.Nakagawa,
“Experimental investigation of modulation method for visible-
light communications,”IEICE Trans. Commun., vol.E89-B,
no.12, pp.3393-3400, Dec.200
[11] O ‟ Brien and Marcos Katz, “Short-Range Optical Wireless
Communications”, Wireless World Research Forum(WWRF11),
Oslo, (July 2004)
[12] T.D.C. Little, P. Dib, K. Shah, N. Barraford, and B.
Gallagher, “Using LED Lighting for Ubiquitous Indoor Wireless
Networking”, IEEE International Conference on Wireless &
Mobile Computing, Networking & Communication, DOI
10.1109/WiMob.2008.57, 373-378(2008)
[13] D. C. O‟Brien, “Indoor optical wireless communications:
recent developments and future challenges,” in Free-Space
Laser Communications IX, San Diego, CA, USA, 2009, pp.
74640B-12
[14] G. Pang, C.H. Chan, H. Liu, and T. Kwan. (1998). „Dual
use of LEDs: Signalling and communications in ITS,” in 5th
World Congr. Intelligent Transport Syst. [CD-ROM]. Paper
3035.
[15] M.G. Craford, “LEDs challenge the incandescents,” IEEE
Circuits Devices Mag., vol. 8, pp. 24-29, Sept. 1992.
[16] J. Grubor et al., “Bandwidth Efficient Indoor Optical
Wireless Communications with White Light Emitting Diodes,”
Proc. 6th Int ‟l. Symp. Commun. Sys., Networks and Digital
Signal Proc., vol. 1, Graz, Austria, 23–25 July 2008, pp. 165–
69.
[17] Y. Tanaka et al., “Indoor Visible Light Data Transmission
System Utilizing White LED Lights,” IEICE Trans. Commun.,
vol. E86-B, no. 8, Aug. 2003, pp. 2440–54.
[18] T. Komine, M. Nakagawa, “A Study of Shadowing on
Indoor Visible-Light Wireless Communication Utilizing Plural
White LED Lightings,” Int. Sympo. On Wireless Commun., pp.
36-40, 2004.
[19] M.Z. Afgani, H. Haas, H. Elgala, D. Knipp, “Visible light
communication using OFDM,” Proc. IEEE Symp. on Wireless
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Wireless Optical Communication using Visible Light”, 2011
12

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Iisrt 2-mitigating effect of flickering and dimming in visible light communication using mimo

  • 1. International Journal of Electrical and Computing Engineering Vol. 1, Issue. 1, July – 2014 ISSN (Online): 2349-8218 Mitigating Effect of Flickering & Dimming in Visible Light Communication Using MIMO A. Suban [1] , P. Prabu [2] , R. Manikandan [3] , M. Pradeep [4] Assistant professor, Dept of ECE, Velammal College of Engineering and Technology, Madurai [2] PG student, Dept of CSE, Indian Institute of Information Technology, Trichy [3] Project Engineer, WIPRO Lmited, Chennai, [4] Lecturer, Nagasiva Polytechnique College Abstract— Visible Light Communication (VLC) refers to short-range optical wireless communication using visible light spectrum from 380 to 780nm and it has many advantages such as it can provide a maximum speed of 10GB/S. The other advancement is that the bandwidth available for visible light communication is 300THz whereas it is below 6GHz on RF communication. The transmission of data in VLC is done with the intensity modulating optical source, such as light emitting diodes (LEDs) because of its energy efficiency and recent advancement in LED technology with fast nanoseconds switching time. This paper applies OPPM (Overlapping Pulse Position Modulation) to provide higher data rate during its transmission of digital data when we compared to other modulation techniques. The result shows that the best performance can be obtained using OPPM, making it an ideal modulation technique for future visible light communication. MATLAB and Lab View are the two methodologies we used for simulation purpose. Moreover Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) techniques is potentially adopted for achieving high data rates. MATLAB Simulations are carried out and depicted. Index Terms— Visible light, White LED, On Off Keying, Variable Pulse Modulation, Overlapping Pulse Position Modulation. I. INTRODUCTION In the development of wireless communication system when the third generation mobile communication system is employed, manufacturers and the scientific group are increasingly turning their research interest towards future wireless communication system because traditional radio frequency (RF) communication below 6 GHz is rapidly running out of spectrum bandwidth for high data-rate communication. Visible Light Communication has recently been developed by scientists seeking to create an ultra-high speed, high security, biologically friendly communication networks Suban. A, Electronics & Communication Engineering, Velammal College of Engineering and Technology, Madurai Prabu.P, Computer Sceince & Engineering, Indian Institute of Information Technology Manikandan.R, Project Enineer, WIPRO Limited, Chennai. Pradeep.M, Electrical & Electronics Engineering, Nagasiva Polytechnique College, Madurai that allow the creation and expansion of continuous computing applications using very large bandwidth high- frequency pulsed light instead of radio waves and microwaves. Visible Light Communication (VLC) is the short-range optical wireless communication using the visible light spectrum from 380 to 780nm. With ~300 THz of bandwidth available for VLC, multi-gigabit-per second data rates could be provided over short distances. This wide spread of bandwidth removes one of the major difficulties faced by new communication schemes. Some of the noted advantages of visible light communication over RF (Radio Frequency) and IR (Infra- Red) based systems are:   Higher security than RF communication system.    No restriction on transmission power unlike in   IR communication system.    No regulations in the use of the visible  electromagnetic spectrum.   The key advantage of VLC is the duality in the use of the visible light. The same light that is used for the communication can also be used for illumination applications such as domestic light bulbs, LED TVs, and traffic lights.  In an optical communication system, there is a possibility of modulating the transmitted optical signal in a variety of ways. The phase, frequency and the intensity of the optical signal can be modulated. VLC transmits data by the intensity modulating optical sources, such as light emitting diodes (LEDs) and laser diodes, because it is easy to implement and the optical output power is simply changed in accordance with the modulating signal. There has been renewed interest in visible light optical communication due to widespread deployment of LEDs for energy efficiency and recent advancements in LED technology with fast nanosecond switching times. Figure 1. An Alternate Technology-VLC 8
  • 2. International Journal of Electrical and Computing Engineering Vol. 1, Issue. 1, July – 2014 ISSN (Online): XXXX-XXXX LED VISIBLE LIGHT COMMUNICATION In this 21st century, LEDs are extensively used in various electronic devices, consumer products and due to their small size they are preferred for illuminating technologies. Recently experiments have shown that advance in semiconductor material and manufacturing techniques of LED is to be suitable for general indoor and outdoor applications. In addition to that LED produces less heat than other fluorescent and incandescent light bulbs. In the industry side, LEDs are referred as “cool lights” and most sustainable in light technology. Low cost LED instead of lasers can be used as communication transmitters connected to the electric grid, receiving high- bit rate signals. So LED (Light Emitting Diode) Visible Light Communication systems are recognized as creating a possible valuable addition to future generation of technology, which have the potential of using light for the purpose of advanced technological communication at ultra-high speed surpassing that of current wireless systems. If it is developed correctly, the possibility exists than many of the problems associated with present day infrared, Bluetooth and radio wave could be at least partially resolved, and industries and the general public can gain a more biologically friendly system. The main reasons for using LED are followed: • High usage of bandwidth. • Existing local power line infrastructure can potentially be utilized. • Very simple transmitter and receiver circuit and it is not expensive. • Eco-friendly. • Long life expectancy. A further advantage is that VLC systems can transmit data more securely over short distances than other communication devices whose signals can be easily detected outside the rooms and buildings they originate in. In the following section, the paper describes the system design for the visible light communication, modulation method and their benefits for flickering. III. SYSTEM DESIGN A typical Visible Light Communication system contains two parts namely transmitter module and receiver module. VLC system appears in the form of point to multi-points which permits data transmission in one direction only. The following figure shows the overall VLC system block diagram. The receiver occupant may realize information uplink with extra optical devices, and more sophisticated the duplex system is the duplex system. A. TRANSMITTER MODULE In the transmitter module, the Light Emitting Diode is used to transmit the data and it has to be designed in such way that power and the colour temperature both safe and comfortable for human eyes. when the same LED is used for illumination because it won't make people feel uncomfortable and dizzy. It’s important to note that the receiver occupant may block the light beam and put the receiver in shadows, so more than two LED lamps should be modulated simultaneously from various directions to cover a larger recipient area. In some case where the receiver loses connection with the transmitter, it will be able to receive data from another transmitter instantaneously. Figure 2. Visible Light Communication Transmitter and Receiver Block Diagram B. RECEIVER MODULE A receiver module is mostly composed of PIN detectors and signal conditioning devices. The output signal from the detector is weak with a lot of background light noise and a long free space communication distance only makes the situation worse. Therefore, the critical part of our VLC system is the signal conditioning circuit . The receiver’s PIN photo detector is connected to a trans- impedance amplifier to convert the current signal into a voltage signal. A high pass filter is applied next to bypass the light noises and power line noises. Finally, the signal is amplified by a main amplifier and it is reshaped by comparator. IV. MODULATION TECHNIQUE IN VLC In the modulation process, the baseband signals constitute the modulating signal and the high-frequency carrier signal is a sinusoidal waveform or cosine waveform. The sine wave carrier can be normally modulated by three basic ways. For the modulation of binary digital data, the three modulation techniques used are binary amplitude-shift keying (BASK), binary frequency-shift keying (BFSK) and binary phase shift keying (BPSK). A. AMPLITUDE SHIFT KEYING Amplitude-shift keying (ASK) is a form of modulation technique that represents digital data as variations in the amplitude of a carrier wave. To transmit digital data over optical fibre ASK technique is normally used. For transmission using LED, binary 1 is represented by a short pulse of light whereas absence of light represents binary 0. This process is said to On Off Keying (OOK). 9
  • 3. International Journal of Electrical and Computing Engineering Vol. 1, Issue. 1, July – 2014 ISSN (Online): XXXX-XXXX Figure 3. MATLAB simulation of Bit Error Rate for various modulation methods C. OVERLAPPING PULSE POSITION MODULATION Although VPM can provide data rates in terms of few hundred megabits/s but even higher data rate than the existing one is not possible due to its inherent throughput limitations. Reducing the pulse width is the one and only way to increase the throughput of the VPM. So there is a need for some other modulation methods to provide higher data rate but that should not have the limitations as with that of VPM. OPPM is one of the promising modulation scheme that allows more than one pulse per pulse width and it has some of the useful properties such as equal energy signals and low duty cycle. Figure 4. Lab View simulation of Bit Error Rate for various modulation methods From the simulated results, the following conclusions are made. The error rate for all the modulation techniques decreases monotonically with increasing value of SNR. For any given value of SNR, coherent PSK & OOK produces same and smaller error rate than any of the other modulation technique. So, coherent PSK and OOK are the optimum system for transmitting binary data because it achieves the minimum probability of symbol error for the given value of SNR. But considering OOK and coherent PSK, OOK is the best and most efficient modulation technique in terms of bandwidth and power consumption. DPSK require an SNR that is 3 dB less than that of coherent FSK and noncoherent FSK to achieve same error rate. For higher values of SNR, DPSK and noncoherent FSK performs almost as well as coherent PSK and coherent FSK. For higher values of SNR, coherent PSK and QPSK have same error rate performance. Also it has been inferred that MSK has exactly the same error performance as that of QPSK. B. Variable Pulse Position Modulation Pulse position modulation (PPM) encodes the data using the position of the pulse within a set time period. The duration of the period containing the pulse must be long enough to allow different positions to be identified. Figure 5. MATLAB simulation of Data rate Vs Duty cycle for OOK & OPPM Figure 6. Lab View simulation of Data rate Vs Duty cycle for OOK & OPPM From the simulated results, the following conclusions are made. We can see that the OPPM signal has the best flicker performance, followed by VPM and OOK. 10
  • 4. International Journal of Electrical and Computing Engineering Vol. 1, Issue. 1, July – 2014 ISSN (Online): XXXX-XXXX The flicker severity value is 0.525 for any dimming levels, which is far less than the limited value. We can also notice that the 90% duty cycle VPM signal has the same flicker performance as OPPM. But the flicker severity of OPPM signal is invariant with changing different dimming levels. D. MULTI-ANTENNA CONFIGURATION Solid-state lighting is a rapidly growing area of research and applications, due to the reliability and predicted high efficiency of these devices. The white LED sources that are typically used for general illumination can also be used for data transmission, and Visible Light Communications (VLC) is a rapidly growing area of research. One of the key challenges is the limited modulation bandwidth of sources, typically several MHz However, as a room or coverage space would typically be illuminated by an array of LEDs there is the potential for parallel data transmission, and using optical MIMO techniques is potentially attractive for achieving high data rates. In this paper we investigate non-imaging and imaging MIMO approaches: a non-imaging optical MIMO system does not perform properly at all receiver positions due to symmetry, but an imaging based system can operate under all foreseeable circumstances. Simulations show such systems can operate at several hundred Mbit/s and up to Gbit/s in many circumstances. Figure 6. MATLAB simulation of Bit Error Rate (BER) Vs Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR) for various systems such as SISO, MISO and MIMO using OPPM Technique From the simulated results,it can be inferred that using SISO system model i.e. using single LED in the transmitter side and a single photodiode or LED in the receiver side we have very large bit error rate for increase in SNR for given input. In the next case of MISO,i.e. using two LED transmitter side at the transmitter side and a single LED or photodiode at the receiver side we achieve the bit error rate smaller than SISO system but not smaller than MIMO system. In the next case of MIMO system,i.e.using arrays of LED at the transmitter side and arrays of LED or photodiode at the receiver side we get a very smaller BER when we compared to SISO and MISO system and it proved that VLC is adaptable for MIMO configuration and it give best results when we compared to all other system configurations. Following assumptions are made for the simulated results Channel: AWGN Modulation technique used: OPPM ANTENNA SIZE: 2*2 for MIMO 1*1 for SISO 2*1 for MISO V. DISCUSSIONS We analysed the Performances of OOK and OPPM signals by investigating the cutoff data rate and Bit Error Rate analysis of various modulation techniques. We proved that OPPM signal has the smallest and constant flicker severity under all dimming levels spanning a reasonably large brightness dimming range. This modulation scheme also provided the largest and steady cutoff data rate. OPPM appears as the desirable modulation solution to emerging LED-based high capacity visible light communication. VI. REFERENCES [1] Bluetooth SIG, Inc. (2009), Bluetooth Basics [Online], Available: http://www.bluetooth.com/Bluetooth/Technology/Basics.htm [2] IrDA, (2009). IrDA Background. IrDA [Online]. Available: http://www.irda.org/ [3] T.Komine and M.Nakagawa, ”Fundamental analysis for visible light communication systems using LED Lights,” IEEE Trans. Consumer Electronics, vol. 59, no. 1, Feb, 2004, pp. 1000-07. [4] M. Kavehrad, “Sustainable Energy Efficient Wireless Applications Using Light,” IEEE Commun. Mag., vol. 48, no. 12, Dec. 2010, pp. 66-73. [5] P. Amirshahi, M. Kavehrad, “Broadband Access over Medium and Low Voltage Powerlines and use of White Light Emitting Diodes for Indoor Communications,” IEEE Consumer Communications & Networking Conference, Las Vegas, Nevada, January 2006. [6]L.Zeal et al. ,”High Data Rate Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) Optical Wireless Communications Using White LED Lighting,” IEEE ISAC , vol. 27,no.9,Dec.2009,pp. 1654-62. [7]M.Kahn and J.R.Barry,”Wireless Infrared Communications,”Proc. IEEE, vol.85, no.2, 1997, pp.265-98. [8]G.Pang, T.Kwan, H.Liu, C. -H.Chan,”LED Wireless: A Novel use of LEDs to transmit audio and digital signals”, IEEE Industry Applications Magazine, Vol.8, January 2002. [9]J.K.Kwon,”Inverse Source Coding for Dimming in Visible Light Communications Using NRZ-OOK on Reliable Links”,IEEE Trans.photon.technol.Lett.,vol.22,no.19,pg.1455- 1457,Oct 2010. 11
  • 5. International Journal of Electrical and Computing Engineering Vol. 1, Issue. 1, July – 2014 ISSN (Online): XXXX-XXXX [10] H.Sugiyama, S.Haruyama, and M.Nakagawa, “Experimental investigation of modulation method for visible- light communications,”IEICE Trans. Commun., vol.E89-B, no.12, pp.3393-3400, Dec.200 [11] O ‟ Brien and Marcos Katz, “Short-Range Optical Wireless Communications”, Wireless World Research Forum(WWRF11), Oslo, (July 2004) [12] T.D.C. Little, P. Dib, K. Shah, N. Barraford, and B. Gallagher, “Using LED Lighting for Ubiquitous Indoor Wireless Networking”, IEEE International Conference on Wireless & Mobile Computing, Networking & Communication, DOI 10.1109/WiMob.2008.57, 373-378(2008) [13] D. C. O‟Brien, “Indoor optical wireless communications: recent developments and future challenges,” in Free-Space Laser Communications IX, San Diego, CA, USA, 2009, pp. 74640B-12 [14] G. Pang, C.H. Chan, H. Liu, and T. Kwan. (1998). „Dual use of LEDs: Signalling and communications in ITS,” in 5th World Congr. Intelligent Transport Syst. [CD-ROM]. Paper 3035. [15] M.G. Craford, “LEDs challenge the incandescents,” IEEE Circuits Devices Mag., vol. 8, pp. 24-29, Sept. 1992. [16] J. Grubor et al., “Bandwidth Efficient Indoor Optical Wireless Communications with White Light Emitting Diodes,” Proc. 6th Int ‟l. Symp. Commun. Sys., Networks and Digital Signal Proc., vol. 1, Graz, Austria, 23–25 July 2008, pp. 165– 69. [17] Y. Tanaka et al., “Indoor Visible Light Data Transmission System Utilizing White LED Lights,” IEICE Trans. Commun., vol. E86-B, no. 8, Aug. 2003, pp. 2440–54. [18] T. Komine, M. Nakagawa, “A Study of Shadowing on Indoor Visible-Light Wireless Communication Utilizing Plural White LED Lightings,” Int. Sympo. On Wireless Commun., pp. 36-40, 2004. [19] M.Z. Afgani, H. Haas, H. Elgala, D. Knipp, “Visible light communication using OFDM,” Proc. IEEE Symp. on Wireless Pervasive Computing, TRIDENTCOM 2006. [20] IEEE 802.15.7 Draft D8, “Standard for Short-Range Wireless Optical Communication using Visible Light”, 2011 12