Mehmet Turhal , Cenk Albayrak , Yigit Mahmutoglu , Kadir Turk
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Laser sources have been used at the transmitter unit of underwater wireless optical communication (UWOC) systems since their invention. In recent years, light-emitting diodes (LEDs) have begun to be used as UWOC transmitters due to their low cost, long lifespan, and high energy efficiency. However, data transmission distances in UWOC systems using bare LEDs and LED arrays with collimating lens are limited due to LED’s large divergence angles and insufficient gains provided by the low cost lens designs. In this paper, we propose to use a compound parabolic concentrator (CPC), whose transmission efficiency curve is very close to the ideal concentrator, as a collimator that narrows the divergence angle of LEDs to design low-cost UWOC transmitter with long communication distance. Using the Bouguer–Beer–Lambert channel model, we derived the received optical power expression at the receiver side for the LED-based UWOC system with CPC at the transmitter. Furthermore, unlike existing studies in the literature, the full spectrum of the LED has been taken into account when deriving the power expression. The results show that using the CPC collimator instead of a typical collimation lens in an LED-based UWOC system can narrow the divergence angle by approximately 10 times, resulting in a 70 dB increase in signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) at the receiver and up to a 20 times increase in the communication distance.
期刊介绍:
PHYCOM: Physical Communication is an international and archival journal providing complete coverage of all topics of interest to those involved in all aspects of physical layer communications. Theoretical research contributions presenting new techniques, concepts or analyses, applied contributions reporting on experiences and experiments, and tutorials are published.
Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
Physical layer issues of Wireless Local Area Networks, WiMAX, Wireless Mesh Networks, Sensor and Ad Hoc Networks, PCS Systems; Radio access protocols and algorithms for the physical layer; Spread Spectrum Communications; Channel Modeling; Detection and Estimation; Modulation and Coding; Multiplexing and Carrier Techniques; Broadband Wireless Communications; Wireless Personal Communications; Multi-user Detection; Signal Separation and Interference rejection: Multimedia Communications over Wireless; DSP Applications to Wireless Systems; Experimental and Prototype Results; Multiple Access Techniques; Space-time Processing; Synchronization Techniques; Error Control Techniques; Cryptography; Software Radios; Tracking; Resource Allocation and Inference Management; Multi-rate and Multi-carrier Communications; Cross layer Design and Optimization; Propagation and Channel Characterization; OFDM Systems; MIMO Systems; Ultra-Wideband Communications; Cognitive Radio System Architectures; Platforms and Hardware Implementations for the Support of Cognitive, Radio Systems; Cognitive Radio Resource Management and Dynamic Spectrum Sharing.