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Multiuser Diffuse Indoor Wireless Infrared Communication Using Equalized

TLDR
In this paper, the authors proposed an indoor wireless infrared downlink scheme for high-data-rate multiuser connectivity with diffuse channels, which is based on synchronous code-division multiple access with unipolar Hadamard codes.
Abstract
We propose an indoor wireless infrared downlink scheme for high-data-rate multiuser connectivity with diffuse channels. The scheme is based on synchronous code-division multiple access with unipolar Hadamard codes. The orthogonality of unipolar Hadamard codes enables multiuser operation with relatively short codes. Thus, practical downlink rates of tens of Mb/s for each user can be obtained. However, multipath reflec- tions in diffuse channels cause strong multipath dispersion and, consequently, severe distortion. This distortion becomes even more severe in a multiuser environment, as the dispersed incoherent infrared radiation of all users aggregates together. To mitigate this distortion, we use a novel adaptive multilevel serial composite decision feedback and feedforward equalizer. We investigate the system's performance with the proposed equalizer, and compare it with the performance of the same system, both composite decision-feedback and feedforward equalizers, and with a conven- tional decision-feedback equalizer (DFE). Our results show that the proposed scheme enables a high-data-rate multiaccess link and eliminates most of the multiuser distortion. Furthermore, it improves system performance in a multiaccess environment, as compared with the other composite equalizers and DFE for the same complexity. We also compare other coding schemes, and show that Hadamard codes are on top of the other codes. Index Terms—Decision-feedback equalizer (DFE), decision feed- forward equalizer, indoor wireless communication, infrared (IR) communication, multiaccess communication, optical code-division multiple access (OCDMA).

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Citations
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On the Capacity of the Intensity-Modulation Direct-Detection Optical Broadcast Channel

TL;DR: The capacity of the intensity-modulation direct-detection optical broadcast channel is investigated, under both average and peak intensity constraints, and it is shown that on-off keying with time-division multiple-access (TDMA) is optimal.
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Wireless optical CDMA LAN: digital implementation analysis

TL;DR: Results on the design and implementation of such systems in this paper indicate the viability and the importance of OOC based wireless OCDMA technology to satisfy certain applications need in a wider communication system worldwide.
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Code Division-Based Sensing of Illumination Contributions in Solid-State Lighting Systems

TL;DR: A new family of modulation and multiple access schemes are proposed in this paper, named code-time division multiple access-pulse position modulation (CTDMA-PPM) and CTDMA -pulse width modulation (HTM-PWM), which satisfy illumination constraints, are compatible with the commonly used PWM dimming of LEDs, and meet the multi-signal separation requirements for simultaneous measurement of illumination strengths.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A comparison between DCO-OFDMA and synchronous one-dimensional OCDMA for optical wireless communications

TL;DR: In this paper, a comparison between direct-current-biased optical orthogonal frequency-division multiple-access (DCO-OFDMA) and synchronous one-dimensional (1-D) optical code-division Multiple Access (OCdMA) is performed for optical wireless communication (OWC).
References
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Book

Digital Communications

Book

Wireless Infrared Communications

TL;DR: The use of infrared radiation as a medium for high-speed short-range wireless digital communication, and several modification formats, including on-off keying (OOK), pulse-position modulation (PPM), and subcarrier modulation, are discussed.
Book

Principles of mobile communication

TL;DR: The Principles of Mobile Communication, Third Edition stresses the "fundamentals" of physical-layer wireless and mobile communications engineering that are important for the design of "any" wireless system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Code division multiple-access techniques in optical fiber networks. I. Fundamental principles

TL;DR: An examination is made of fiber-optic code-division multiple-access (FO-CDMA), a technique in which low information data rates are mapped into very-high-rate address codes (signature sequences) for the purpose of achieving random, asynchronous communications free of network control, among many users.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wireless in-house data communication via diffuse infrared radiation

F.R. Gfeller, +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a novel wireless broadcast/multi-access channel for flexibly interconnecting a cluster of data terminals located within the same room is described, where the transmission medium is diffusively scattered infrared radiation at 950-nm wavelength.