Inside
job for low power network system with reduced error
rate
By
Joanne Aslett Electronics
Times (01/08/01
11:43 AM GMT)
Engineers
from Pennsylvania State University's Center for Information
and Communications Technology Research have demonstrated a
system for use in indoor local area communication networks.
Using
a non-line-of-sight IR wireless broadband transmissions
system, the team claims the technology offers low power and a
reduced error rate.
The
system uses a link design consisting of a multi-beam
transmitter with a narrow field of view receiver, which
filters out noise. It has a bit error rate of one error per
billion bits at bit rates up to a few hundred megabits per
second, and it operates at milliwatt transmitted power levels.
Dr
Mohsen Kavehrad, professor of electrical engineering at Penn
State University, said: "This error rate is unmatched
considering the offered transmission capacity."
To
form a lan for a group of machines, each machine is equipped
with a low-power IR source and a holographic beam splitter.
A
low-power beam is separated into several narrow beams, which
strike the ceiling and walls to form an invisible grid
encompassing the whole room. The beams are reflected at the
strike points so they can be used to send and receive
information.
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