White LEDs offer wi-fi alternative
University Park, PA | 11 January 2006 -- Penn State
engineers have shown that a white-LED system for lighting and
high data-rate indoor wireless communications, coupled with
broadband over either medium- or low-voltage power line grids
(BPL), can offer transmission capacities that exceed DSL or
cable and are more secure than RF.
Colored LEDs or light emitting diodes are currently found
in the numbers on digital clocks, remote controls, traffic
lights and other applications. Recently, white LEDs have
emerged in the market and the tiny white lights are being
considered as replacements for incandescent and fluorescent
bulbs.
Some researchers predict that by 2012, tiny white LEDs will
deliver light brighter than a 60 watt-bulb yet draw only as
much current as provided by four D-size batteries. A Japanese
team recently suggested using white LEDs not only for lighting
but also as light sources for wireless in-house
communications.
Now, Dr. Mohsen Kavehrad, the W. L. Weiss professor of
electrical engineering and director of the Center for
Information and Communications Technology Research, and his
team have shown that, in the system they designed, coupling
white LEDs to BPL can deliver secure, wireless bit rates of a
gigabit per second, a rate only exceeded by fiber.
Kavehrad will detail the Penn State system and its
performance in simulation in a paper, "Hybrid MV-LV Power
Lines and White Light Emitting Diodes for Triple-Play
Broadband Access Communications," at the IEEE Consumer
Communications and Networking Conference in Las Vegas, Nev.,
Tuesday, Jan. 10. His co-author is Pouyan Amirshahi, a
doctoral candidate in electrical engineering.
In the Penn State system, white LEDs are positioned so that
the room is lit as uniformly as possible. Since the LEDs are
plugged into the room's electrical system, broadband data,
voice or video delivered via the power lines can piggyback on
the light that fills the room to reach any wireless receiving
devices present.
Since light does not penetrate walls, as do the microwaves
used in RF, the white LED system is more secure. In addition,
there are no known health hazards associated with exposure to
LED light.
Kavehrad notes, "Optical path differences can cause signal
distortion in high-speed data transmission. This distortion is
highly dependent on the room?s dimensions and system
configuration. However, if a system is designed appropriately,
this distortion can be minimized. For example, in our proposed
system, at worst, distortion limits the data rate to one
gigabit."
Although white LEDs are not yet commercially available for
this type of application, Kavehrad is confident that they will
be. He says, "White LEDs are not there yet but by 2010, they
will be available and economical. Their low-energy consumption
will make them especially attractive. In the future, when you
turn on the lights for indoor low-cost lighting, you could
receive broadband via the same white light LED."
The study was supported through Penn State's Center for
Information and Communications Technology Research.
See the original release.
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