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Journal ArticleDOI

IEEE 802.15.7 visible light communication: modulation schemes and dimming support

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TLDR
IEEE 802.15.7 supports high- data-rate visible light communication up to 96 Mb/s by fast modulation of optical light sources which may be dimmed during their operation by dimming adaptable mechanisms for flicker-free high-data-ratevisible light communication.
Abstract
Visible light communication refers to shortrange optical wireless communication using visible light spectrum from 380 to 780 nm. Enabled by recent advances in LED technology, IEEE 802.15.7 supports high-data-rate visible light communication up to 96 Mb/s by fast modulation of optical light sources which may be dimmed during their operation. IEEE 802.15.7 provides dimming adaptable mechanisms for flicker-free high-data-rate visible light communication.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Visible Light Communication, Networking, and Sensing: A Survey, Potential and Challenges

TL;DR: This survey provides a technology overview and review of existing literature of visible light communication and sensing and outlines important challenges that need to be addressed in order to design high-speed mobile networks using visible light Communication-VLC.
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Connected Vehicles: Solutions and Challenges

TL;DR: The challenges and potential challenges to provide vehicle-to-x connectivity are discussed and the state-of-the-art wireless solutions for vehicle-To-sensor, vehicle- to-vehicle, motorway infrastructure connectivities are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

What is LiFi

TL;DR: This paper will show how LiFi takes VLC further by using light emitting diodes (LEDs) to realise fully networked wireless systems to illustrate that LiFi attocells are not a theoretical concept any more, but at the point of real-world deployment.
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LED Based Indoor Visible Light Communications: State of the Art

TL;DR: This paper provides a comprehensive survey on VLC with an emphasis on challenges faced in indoor applications over the period 1979-2014.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Demo: Luxapose: indoor positioning with mobile phones and visible light

TL;DR: The feasibility of the design through an analytical model, the viability of the designs through a prototype system, the challenges to a practical deployment including usability and scalability, and decimeter-level accuracy in both carefully controlled and more realistic human mobility scenarios are explored.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fundamental analysis for visible-light communication system using LED lights

TL;DR: Based on numerical analyses, it is shown that the proposed indoor visible-light communication system utilizing white LED lights is expected to be the indoor communication of the next generation.
Journal ArticleDOI

High data rate multiple input multiple output (MIMO) optical wireless communications using white led lighting

TL;DR: In this paper, a non-imaging optical MIMO system does not perform properly at all receiver positions due to symmetry, but an imaging based system can operate under all foreseeable circumstances, and simulations show such systems can operate at several hundred Mbit/s, and up to G Bit/s in many circumstances.
Journal ArticleDOI

100-Mb/s NRZ Visible Light Communications Using a Postequalized White LED

TL;DR: In this paper, a high-speed visible light communications link that uses a white-light light-emitting diode (LED) was described, and a data rate of 100 Mb/s was achieved using on-off keying non-return-to-zero modulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

513 Mbit/s Visible Light Communications Link Based on DMT-Modulation of a White LED

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reported a visible-light wireless point-to-point communication link operating at 513 Mbit/s gross transmission rate (net M bit/s), where the bit error ratio of the uncoded data was smaller than for an illumination level of lx.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sustainable energy-efficient wireless applications using light

TL;DR: This tutorial highlights some of the potentials of WLEDs, which have the potential to revolutionize how the authors use light, including not only for illumination, but also for communications, sensing, navigation, imaging, and many more applications.
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