Penn State engineers have shown that
broadband, wireless, indoor, local area
communication networks that rely on
non-line-of-sight infrared (IR) signal
transmission can offer low error rates as well as
safe, low power levels.
Dr. Mohsen Kavehrad, professor of electrical
engineering and holder of the W. L. Weiss
(AMERITECH) chair, says, “Line-of-sight or
point-to-point infrared signal transmission, which
is used, for example, in television remote
controls, is highly efficient at low power levels
but suffers from the need for alignment between
the transmitter and receiver.
"If someone ‘shadows’ or blocks the remote
control beam while you’re trying to change the
channel, the signal can’t get through.
“On the other hand, non-line-of-sight
transmission, which uses a broad diffuse beam,
suffers less from shadowing but usually forfeits
the power efficiency, broadband and low error rate
values that infrared transmission can offer.”
Now, however, Kavehrad and his colleagues at
Penn State’s Center for Information and
Communications Technology Research have developed
a new link design that uses a multi-beam
transmitter with a narrow field of view receiver.
The system has a bit-error rate of only one error
per billion bits and uses milliwatt transmitted
power levels.
Kavehrad says, “This error rate is unmatched
considering the offered transmission capacity.”
The Penn State researcher detailed the system
Sunday (July 22) at the Fifth World
Multi-Conference on Systemics, Cybernetics and
Informatics SCI 2001 meeting in Orlando, Florida.
His paper, “Some Recent Advances in Indoor
Broadband Infrared Wireless Communications,” is
co-authored by Dr. Svetla Jivkova, research
associate.
To use the Penn State signaling scheme, for
example, to form a local area network for a group
of computers in a room, each machine is equipped
with a low power infrared source and a holographic
beam splitter.
The original low power beam is separated into
several narrow beams, which strike the ceiling and
walls at points that form an invisible grid
throughout the entire volume of the room. Because
the beams are also reflected at each of the strike
points, they can be used to send or receive
information.
Since the beams created by the splitter are
narrow, narrow field-of-view receivers are used.
Using a narrow field of view receiver makes it
easier to filter out noise. In addition, receivers
consisting of more than one element can insure
continued coverage when some of the transmitter
beams are blocked.
Kavehrad notes, “Others have attempted to
develop local area networks with radio
frequencies. However, indoors, radio frequencies
can pose a radiation hazard.
“Infrared signals, on the other hand, pose no
such hazard, especially at the low powers used by
our system. However, since the sun is an infrared
emitter, as well as fluorescent and incandescent
bulbs, light coming in through windows or from
artificial lighting can add background noise to
the system. This noise, to some extent, can be
filtered at the receivers.”
The Penn State team developed a framework for
computer simulation under which properties of
room, transmitter and receiver are quantified.
Using the simulation results, they showed that the
system has a bit-error rate of only one error per
billion bits in 99 percent of the coverage area at
bit rates up to a few hundred megabits per second.
In addition, the system uses transmitted power
levels well below one Watt.
The wireless
infrared communication system is being patented by
the University. The research was supported by
grants from the National Science Foundation and
the Pennsylvania technology development program
known as the Pittsburgh Digital Greenhouse.
[Contact: Dr. Mohsen
Kavehrad, A'ndrea Elyse
Messer]
25-Jul-2001