Mitigation of Side-Effect Modulation in Optical OFDM VLC Systems

Side-effect modulation (SEM) has the potential to be a significant source of interference in future visible light communication (VLC) systems. SEM is a variation in the intensity of the light emitted by a luminaire and is usually a side effect caused by the power supply used to drive the luminaires....

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Main Authors: Mohammed M. A. Mohammed, Cuiwei He, Jean Armstrong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2018-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
VLC
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8485363/
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spelling doaj-3452961e61bb4d35b9bd1e91f391279c2021-03-29T21:31:16ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362018-01-016581615817010.1109/ACCESS.2018.28742698485363Mitigation of Side-Effect Modulation in Optical OFDM VLC SystemsMohammed M. A. Mohammed0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0265-2945Cuiwei He1Jean Armstrong2https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8002-0225Department of Electrical and Computer Systems Engineering, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, AustraliaDepartment of Electrical and Computer Systems Engineering, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, AustraliaDepartment of Electrical and Computer Systems Engineering, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, AustraliaSide-effect modulation (SEM) has the potential to be a significant source of interference in future visible light communication (VLC) systems. SEM is a variation in the intensity of the light emitted by a luminaire and is usually a side effect caused by the power supply used to drive the luminaires. For LED luminaires powered by a switched mode power supply, the SEM can be at much higher frequencies than that emitted by conventional incandescent or fluorescent lighting. It has been shown that the SEM caused by commercially available LED luminaires is often periodic and of low power. In this paper, we investigate the impact of typical forms of SEM on the performance of optical OFDM VLC systems; both ACO-OFDM and DCO-OFDM are considered. Our results show that even low levels of SEM power can significantly degrade the bit-error-rate performance. To solve this problem, an SEM mitigation scheme is described. The mitigation scheme is decision-directed and is based on estimating and subtracting the fundamental component of the SEM from the received signal. We describe two forms of the algorithm; one uses blind estimation, while the other uses pilot-assisted estimation based on a training sequence. Decision errors, resulting in decision noise, limit the performance of the blind estimator even when estimation is based on very long signals. However, the pilot system can achieve more accurate estimations, and thus a better performance. Results are first presented for typical SEM waveforms for the case where the fundamental frequency of the SEM is known. The algorithms are then extended to include a frequency estimation step and the mitigation algorithm is shown also to be effective in this case.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8485363/ACO-OFDMDCO-OFDMestimationintensity modulated direct-detection OFDMinterferenceVLC
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohammed M. A. Mohammed
Cuiwei He
Jean Armstrong
spellingShingle Mohammed M. A. Mohammed
Cuiwei He
Jean Armstrong
Mitigation of Side-Effect Modulation in Optical OFDM VLC Systems
IEEE Access
ACO-OFDM
DCO-OFDM
estimation
intensity modulated direct-detection OFDM
interference
VLC
author_facet Mohammed M. A. Mohammed
Cuiwei He
Jean Armstrong
author_sort Mohammed M. A. Mohammed
title Mitigation of Side-Effect Modulation in Optical OFDM VLC Systems
title_short Mitigation of Side-Effect Modulation in Optical OFDM VLC Systems
title_full Mitigation of Side-Effect Modulation in Optical OFDM VLC Systems
title_fullStr Mitigation of Side-Effect Modulation in Optical OFDM VLC Systems
title_full_unstemmed Mitigation of Side-Effect Modulation in Optical OFDM VLC Systems
title_sort mitigation of side-effect modulation in optical ofdm vlc systems
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Side-effect modulation (SEM) has the potential to be a significant source of interference in future visible light communication (VLC) systems. SEM is a variation in the intensity of the light emitted by a luminaire and is usually a side effect caused by the power supply used to drive the luminaires. For LED luminaires powered by a switched mode power supply, the SEM can be at much higher frequencies than that emitted by conventional incandescent or fluorescent lighting. It has been shown that the SEM caused by commercially available LED luminaires is often periodic and of low power. In this paper, we investigate the impact of typical forms of SEM on the performance of optical OFDM VLC systems; both ACO-OFDM and DCO-OFDM are considered. Our results show that even low levels of SEM power can significantly degrade the bit-error-rate performance. To solve this problem, an SEM mitigation scheme is described. The mitigation scheme is decision-directed and is based on estimating and subtracting the fundamental component of the SEM from the received signal. We describe two forms of the algorithm; one uses blind estimation, while the other uses pilot-assisted estimation based on a training sequence. Decision errors, resulting in decision noise, limit the performance of the blind estimator even when estimation is based on very long signals. However, the pilot system can achieve more accurate estimations, and thus a better performance. Results are first presented for typical SEM waveforms for the case where the fundamental frequency of the SEM is known. The algorithms are then extended to include a frequency estimation step and the mitigation algorithm is shown also to be effective in this case.
topic ACO-OFDM
DCO-OFDM
estimation
intensity modulated direct-detection OFDM
interference
VLC
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8485363/
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AT cuiweihe mitigationofsideeffectmodulationinopticalofdmvlcsystems
AT jeanarmstrong mitigationofsideeffectmodulationinopticalofdmvlcsystems
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