Hybrid Super-Nyquist CAP Modulation based VLC with Low Bandwidth Polymer LEDs
Paper i proceeding, 2019

Visible light communication systems often suffer from high frequency attenuation when transmitting out-of-band. This effect has been ameliorated by multi-band modulations such as multi-band carrier-less amplitude and phase (m-CAP), which minimises the effect of decreased high frequency magnitude and maximises signal-to-noise ratio-per-sub-band. On the other hand, in the pass-band region, super-Nyquist CAP (SCAP) can offer throughput improvements with no additional complexity at the receiver, at the cost of bit error rate. We propose, for the first time, a new hybrid SCAP modulation format that takes advantageous of both SCAP (i.e. overlapped sub-bands within the modulation bandwidth) and conventional m-CAP (orthogonally spaced bands outside the modulation bandwidth) while maintaining isolation between noise sources. We show higher baud rates within the passband region whilst supporting out-of-band transmission at lower error vector magnitudes.

visible light communications

digital signal processing

Carrier-less amplitude and phase modulation

modulation

Författare

Paul Anthony Haigh

Newcastle University

Petr Chvojka

Ceske Vysoke Uceni Technicke v Praze

A. Minotto

University College London (UCL)

Andrew Burton

Northumbria University

Petri Henrik Murto

Chalmers, Kemi och kemiteknik, Tillämpad kemi

Ergang Wang

Chalmers, Kemi och kemiteknik, Tillämpad kemi

Zabih Ghassemlooy

Northumbria University

Stanislav Zvanovec

Ceske Vysoke Uceni Technicke v Praze

F. Cacialli

University College London (UCL)

I.Z. Darwazeh

Ceske Vysoke Uceni Technicke v Praze

IEEE International Symposium on Personal, Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications, PIMRC

Vol. 2019-September 8904212

30th IEEE Annual International Symposium on Personal, Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications, PIMRC 2019
Istanbul, Turkey,

Ämneskategorier

Telekommunikation

Kommunikationssystem

Signalbehandling

DOI

10.1109/PIMRC.2019.8904212

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2020-12-09