Regular LEDs can be turned into optical WLAN with only a few additional
components thanks to visible light communication (in short, VLC). The
lights are then not just lighting up, they also transfer data. They
send films in HD quality to your iPhone or laptop, with no loss in
quality, quickly and safely.
Just imagine the following scenario: four people are comfortably
ensconced in a room. Each one of them can watch a film from the
Internet on his or her laptop, in HD quality. This is made possible
thanks to optical WLAN. Light from the LEDs in the overhead lights
serves as the transfer medium. For a long time, this was just a vision
for the future. However, since scientists from the Fraunhofer Institute
for Telecommunications, Heinrich Hertz Institute HHI in Berlin,
Germany, have developed a new transfer technology for video data within
the scope of the OMEGA project of the EU, its implementation in real
life is getting markedly closer. At the end of May, the scientists were
able to present the results of the project in Rennes, France. They were
able to transfer data at a rate of 100 megabits per second (Mbit/s)
without any losses, using LEDs in the ceiling that light up more than
ten square meters (90 square feet). The receiver can be placed anywhere
within this radius, which is currently the maximum range. “This
means that we transferred four videos in HD quality to four different
laptops at the same time,“ says Dr. Anagnostis Paraskevopoulos
from the HHI.
“The fundamentals of visible light communication (VLC) were
developed together with the industry partners Siemens and France
Telecom Orange Labs,“ said the expert. At HHI, the team of
project manager Klaus-Dieter Langer is now further developing the new
technology. “For VLC the sources of light – in this case,
white-light LEDs – provide lighting for the room at the same time
they transfer information. With the aid of a special component, the
modulator, we turn the LEDs off and on in very rapid succession and
transfer the information as ones and zeros. The modulation of the light
is imperceptible to the human eye. A simple photo diode on the laptop
acts as a receiver. As Klaus-Dieter Langer explains, “The diode
catches the light, electronics decode the information and translate it
into electrical impulses, meaning the language of the computer.“
One advantage is that it takes only a few components to prepare the
LEDs so that they function as transfer media. One disadvantage is that
as soon as something gets between the light and the photo diode (for
example, when someone holds his hand over the diode) the transfer is
impaired. Laptops, Palm devices or mobile telephones are all potential
end devices.
The scientists emphasize that VLC is not intended to replace regular
WLAN, PowerLAN or UMTS. It is best suited as an additional option for
data transfer where radio transmission networks are not desired or not
possible – without needing new cables or equipment in the house.
Combinations are also possible, such as optical WLAN in one direction
and PowerLAN for the return channel. Films can be transferred to the PC
like this and also played there, or they can be sent on to another
computer.
The new transmission technology is suitable for hospitals, for example,
because radio transmissions are not allowed there. Despite this fact,
high data rates must be transmitted without losses and unzipped,
according to the experts. If part of the communication occurs via the
light in the surgical room, this would make it possible to control
wireless surgical robots or transmit x-ray images. In airplanes, each
passenger could view his own entertainment program on a display, saving
aircraft manufacturers miles of cables. Another possible venue for the
application of this technology are production facilities, where radio
transmissions very often interfere with the processes.
Currently the scientists are developing their systems toward higher bit
rates. “Using red-blue-green-white light LEDs, we were able to
transmit 800 Mbit/s in the lab,“ said Klaus-Dieter Langer.
“That is a world record for the VLC method.“
More information at
www.hhi.fraunhofer.de/