DocumentCode :
1189680
Title :
Experimental characterization of rate-adaptive transmission and angle diversity reception techniques
Author :
Avares, Antoniot ; Valadas, Rui ; Aguiar, Rui L. ; Duarte, A. Ollvelra
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Telecommun., Aveiro Univ., Portugal
Volume :
10
Issue :
2
fYear :
2003
fDate :
4/1/2003 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
36
Lastpage :
44
Abstract :
Ambient light is the main impairment in indoor wireless optical communication systems for data rates up to several megabits per second. Its wide dynamic range, associated with the strong directivity of wireless optical signals, produce large variations on the received signal-to-noise ratio. This article discusses experimental results obtained from a testbed developed to compare different techniques for SNR improvement. The two techniques analyzed are rate-adaptive transmission, which introduces adaptive levels of redundancy in the transmitted signal to improve connectivity, and angle diversity reception, which exploits the inherent directionality of both signal and noise to improve the SNR at the receiver. Furthermore, systems employing both techniques simultaneously were also considered. The testbed replicated a typical indoor environment with both natural and artificial light, containing incandescent and fluorescent light sources. Both the SNR and the associated coverage areas were determined for all considered techniques. Our results show that the combined use of angle diversity based on maximal ratio combining and rate adaptation through the use of repetition coding achieves very good performance with only moderate complexity, allowing connectivity at all locations with data rates close to the maximum possible. In particular, with incandescent illumination and without angle diversity, the data rate had to be decreased down to 2 and 1 Mb/s in 25.9 and 7.7 percent of the room, area, respectively, whereas with maximal ratio combining a decrease to 2 Mb/s was only needed in 0.7 percent of the room area.
Keywords :
adaptive systems; diversity reception; encoding; lighting; optical links; shot noise; telecommunication channels; 1 Mbit/s; 2 Mbit/s; SNR improvement; adaptive redundancy levels; ambient light; angle diversity reception; artificial light; coverage areas; data rates; dynamic range; fluorescent light sources; incandescent illumination; incandescent light sources; indoor environment; indoor wireless optical communication systems; maximal ratio combining; natural light; rate-adaptive transmission; received signal-to-noise ratio; receiver; repetition coding; shot-noise-limited transmission channels; testbed; wireless optical signals directivity; Diversity reception; Dynamic range; Noise level; Optical fiber communication; Optical receivers; Signal analysis; Signal to noise ratio; Testing; Wireless communication; Working environment noise;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Wireless Communications, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1536-1284
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MWC.2003.1196401
Filename :
1196401
Link To Document :
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