Schweber Prom Onew

Lab-Based “Li-Fi” Link Exceeds 7 Gb/s Using Blue Micro LED

Sept. 22, 2020
Taking advantage of a blue GaN micro LED, researchers succeeded in operating a free-space optical link at over 7 Gb/s, possibly functioning as a precursor of a super-speed LiFi type link.

As an optically based complement to RF-based Wi-Fi, Li-Fi (light fidelity) offers distinct attributes including potentially extremely high throughout over limited distances and immunity from (and non-sourcing of) EMI/RFI. One other characteristic of an optical link can be considered either a benefit or a drawback: Its line-of-sight path provides outstanding immunity to eavesdropping and hacking, but also limits user mobility.

Adoption of Li-Fi in the marketplace has been very limited thus far. However, there’s an industry association that provides standards and support, and there’s the potential for using a single LED bulb/photoreceptor unit as both light source and Li-Fi node (see Resources below).

Researchers, of course, see pushing the envelope of optical-based data links as an area of great interest. A team at Leti (a research institute of CEA Tech, Grenoble, France) has achieved a visible light communication (VLC) test-bed transmission at 7.7 Gb/s (significantly exceeding the previous 5.1-Gb/s record) using a single, 10-µm diameter, gallium-nitride (GaN) blue micro LED (Fig. 1). (In general, a smaller emissive area of the LED yields a higher bandwidth—here, 1.8 GHz in the institute’s single-blue micro LED project.)

In addition to the micro LED, the team also developed an advanced multi-carrier modulation scheme combined with digital signal processing to achieve their results. This high spectrum-efficiency waveform was transmitted by the single LED, received on a high-speed photodetector, and demodulated using a direct sampling oscilloscope (Fig. 2).

This class of experimental test bed requires many electro-optical components as well as test-and-measurement equipment for support, including these:

While the Light Communications Alliance (created in 2019) is intended to encourage the industry to implement standardization and promote interoperability between LiFi systems from different manufacturers, CEA-Leti is planning to continue its research in two areas:

  • Developing a better understanding of the electrical behavior of single LEDs in high-frequency regimes and the link between bandwidth and electromigration patterns.
  • Investigating techniques to improve the range and/or increase the data rate using a matrix of multi-LED emissive devices. This requires adapting the waveform generation as well as a CMOS interposer to drive the matrix on a pixel basis.

LiFi Resources

Sponsored Recommendations

What are the Important Considerations when Assessing Cobot Safety?

April 16, 2024
A review of the requirements of ISO/TS 15066 and how they fit in with ISO 10218-1 and 10218-2 a consideration the complexities of collaboration.

Wire & Cable Cutting Digi-Spool® Service

April 16, 2024
Explore DigiKey’s Digi-Spool® professional cutting service for efficient and precise wire and cable management. Custom-cut to your exact specifications for a variety of cable ...

DigiKey Factory Tomorrow Season 3: Sustainable Manufacturing

April 16, 2024
Industry 4.0 is helping manufacturers develop and integrate technologies such as AI, edge computing and connectivity for the factories of tomorrow. Learn more at DigiKey today...

Connectivity – The Backbone of Sustainable Automation

April 16, 2024
Advanced interfaces for signals, data, and electrical power are essential. They help save resources and costs when networking production equipment.

Comments

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Electronic Design, create an account today!