Title :
Adaptive mobile line strip multibeam MC-CDMA optical wireless system employing imaging detection in a real indoor environment
Author :
Alsaadi, Fuad E. ; Elmirghani, Jaafar M H
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electron. & Electr. Eng., Univ. of Leeds, Leeds, UK
fDate :
12/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Three methods (transmit power adaptation, imaging reception, and multicarrier code division multiple access (MCCDMA)) are introduced to the optical wireless (OW) system and a significant improvement is achieved in the presence of very directive noise, multipath propagation, mobility, and shadowing typical in a real indoor environment. In the absence of shadowing, replacing a single non-imaging receiver by an imaging receiver with maximal ratio combining (MRC) improves the signal-tonoise ratio (SNR) by 20 dB in a conventional diffuse system (CDS) operating at 30 Mbit/s at a transmitter-receiver separation of 6 m in agreement with previous results in the field. Further SNR improvement of 24 dB is achieved when a line strip multi-beam system (LSMS) replaces the CDS when both systems employ an imaging MRC receiver. Furthermore, our new adaptive LSMS (ALSMS) system coupled with the imaging MRC receiver offers an SNR improvement of 23 dB over the imaging MRC LSMS illustrating the gain achieved through adaptation. The results also show that combining transmit power adaptation with spotdiffusing (i.e. ALSMS) coupled with an imaging receiver based on select best (SB) increases the bandwidth from 46.5 MHz (nonimaging CDS) to 7.53 GHz thus enabling the OW system to achieve higher data rates and provide multi-user capabilities in our case by employing a MC-CDMA scheme. In a 10 user MC-CDMA OW system, a bit error rate (BER) improvement from 4.9 times 10-1 to 2.1 times 10-5 is achieved when the imaging MRC ALSMS system replaces the imaging CDS in a shadowed environment.
Keywords :
code division multiple access; diversity reception; indoor communication; mobile communication; optical links; optical receivers; adaptive mobile line strip multibeam MC-CDMA optical wireless system; bit rate 30 Mbit/s; directive noise; distance 6 m; imaging detection; imaging receiver; imaging reception; indoor environment; line strip multi beam system; maximal ratio combining receiver; multicarrier code division multiple access; multipath propagation; transmit power adaptation; Adaptive optics; Indoor environments; Laser radar; Multicarrier code division multiple access; Optical imaging; Optical noise; Optical receivers; Optical transmitters; Shadow mapping; Strips; Optical wireless communication, MC-CDMA, transmit power adaptation, imaging receiver, bit error rate (BER), real indoor environment;
Journal_Title :
Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on
DOI :
10.1109/JSAC.2009.091216