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1
Light Fidelity
(Li-Fi)
MEC
2
Contents
• Introduction.
• Li-Fi Working.
• Wi-Fi Limitations
• Li-Fi Advantages and Drawbacks.
• Li-Fi Modulation Schemes.
• Li-Fi Applications.
• Comparison of Speeds.
3
Li-Fi
• Professor Harald Haas, the Chair of
Mobile Communications at the University
of Edinburgh - founder of Li-Fi.
• Prof. Haas coined the term Li-Fi, co-
founder of pure LiFi.
• Li-Fi regarded as light-based Wi-Fi.
• Use of visible portion of electromagnetic
spectrum.
• Prof. Haas demonstrated a Li-Fi prototype
at TED Global conference, Edinburgh on
12th July 2011.
4
Li-Fi
• Prof. Haas used a table lamp with an LED
bulb to transmit a video of a blooming
flower that was then projected onto a
screen.
• Haas periodically blocked light from the
lamp with his hand to show that the lamp
was indeed the source of video data.
• Li-Fi use transceivers fitted with LED
lamps that could light a room as well as
transmit and receive information.
5
.
6
Li-Fi Building Blocks
7
Li-Fi Working
8
9
10
Wi-Fi Limitations
• Use of 2.4 – 5 GHz radio frequencies to
deliver wireless internet access.
• Bandwidth limited to 50 - 100 Mbps.
• Reliability drops with increase in number
of Wi-Fi hotspots and volume of Wi-Fi
traffic.
• Security and speed concerns.
• Wi-Fi vulnerable to hackers, penetrates
easily through walls.
11
Wi-Fi Challenges
 Capacity:
• Spectrum scarcity with the arrival of 3G,
4G and higher.
 Efficiency:
• Radio masts consume massive amounts
of energy, more energy needed for cooling
the station rather than transmission of
radio waves, station efficiency only 5%.
12
Wi-Fi Challenges
 Availability:
• Radio waves cannot be used in all
environments, in aircrafts, chemical and
power plants and in hospitals.
 Security:
• Penetrates through walls, can be
intercepted.
 Latency:
• Of the order of ms.
13
Li-Fi Scores
 Capacity:
• Visible light spectrum 10,000 times wider
than radio spectrum. Li-Fi has greater
bandwidth and readily available
equipments.
 Efficiency:
• LED lights consume less energy, highly
efficient.
14
Li-Fi Scores
 Availability:
• Light sources easily available.
 Security:
• Light does not penetrate through walls.
• Data transmission more secure.
 Latency:
• Of the order of μs.
 Li-Fi modelled after protocols established
by IEEE 802 workgroup.
15
Spectrum Usage
16
17
18
“Li-Fi can achieve the same data rates as
USB cables which is challenging for wireless
technologies such as Bluetooth and Wi-Fi”.
- Frank Deicke, Head of Li-Fi development,
Fraunhofer Institute for Photonic Microsystems,
Dresden, Germany
19
Visible Light Communication
• Method of using rapid pulses of light to
transmit information wirelessly.
• Uses visible light between 400 THz (780
nm) and 800 THz (375 nm) as the optical
carrier for data transmission and for
illumination.
• Data rates of greater than 100 Mbps using
high speed LEDs with multiplexing.
• IEEE 802 workgroup defines physical
layer (PHY) & media access control (MAC)
layer for VLC/Li-Fi.
20
Visible Light Communication
 MAC layer:
• supports 3 multi-access technologies:
peer-to-peer, star configuration and
broadcast mode.
• handles physical layer management
issues such as addressing, collision
avoidance and data acknowledgement
protocols.
21
Li-Fi Modulation Schemes
• Physical layer divided into 3 types: PHY I,
II, III and employ a combination of different
modulation schemes.
• On-Off Keying.
• Variable Pulse Position Modulation.
• Colour Shift Keying.
• Sub-Carrier Inverse PPM.
• Frequency Shift Keying.
• Subcarrier Index Modulation OFDM.
22
Visible Light Communication
• Parallel data transmission LED arrays.
• Each LED transmits a separate stream of
data, increase in VLC data rate.
• Lights to be kept on to transmit data, can
be dimmed that they are not visible to
humans but still be capable of transmitting
data.
23
On-Off Keying
• Manchester coding - period of positive
pulses = period of negative pulses.
• Doubles the bandwidth required for
transmission.
• For higher bit rates, spectrally more
efficient run length limited (RLL) coding
used.
• Dimming supported by adding OOK
extension to adjust aggregate output to the
correct level.
24
Variable Pulse Position Modulation
• Encode data using pulse position within a
set time period.
• Pulse duration long enough to allow
different positions to be identified.
• Allows pulse width to be controlled to
support light dimming.
25
Colour Shift Keying
• Used if illumination system uses RGB-type
LEDs.
• Output data carried by the colour itself.
• Output intensity can be near constant.
• Mixing of RGB primary sources produces
different colours which are coded as
information bits.
• Transceiver complexity increased.
26
Sub-Carrier Inverse PPM
• Sub-carrier part and DC part.
• When there is no requirement for lighting
or indicating, sub - carrier PPM used to
save energy.
• DC part used only for lighting or indicating.
27
Frequency Shift Keying
• Data represented by varying the
frequencies of carrier signal.
• Two distinct values (0 and 1) using two
distinct frequencies.
28
Sub-Carrier Index Modulation
OFDM
• Use of sub-carrier index to convey
information to the receiver.
• Adds additional dimension to conventional
2D amplitude/phase modulation (APM)
techniques such as QAM and ASK.
29
Li-Fi Limitations
• Light cannot pass through objects, if the
receiver is blocked, signal will immediately
be cut off.
• Need to switch to radio waves if light
signal is blocked.
• Reliability and network coverage.
• Interference from external light sources
like sunlight, normal bulbs and opaque
materials in the transmission path.
30
Li-Fi Limitations
• High installation costs.
• Can’t have a light bulb to provide data to a
high-speed moving object.
• Still need Wi-Fi in case of obstacles (trees,
walls, structures) along the light path.
31
Criticisms
• Can’t work in the dark or if it is raining or
foggy.
• Not built into modern computers.
• Why people should switch to Li-Fi?
• Will take time before Li-Fi gains broad
acceptance.
32
Challenges
• Driving illumination grade LEDs at high
speeds.
• Increasing data rate with parallelism/arrays.
• Achieving low complexity/low cost
modulation.
• Overcoming the line of sight constraint.
• Achieving seamless interoperability with other
networks.
• Making Li-Fi work in environments with little
or no light.
33
Applications
 Line of Sight Applications:
- vehicle to vehicle communication.
- indoor GPS systems.
 RF Avoidance:
- solution for hypersensitivity to radio
frequencies.
- where radio waves cannot be used for
communication or data transfer.
34
Li-Fi for Vehicle Communication
35
Applications
 Indoor Wireless Communication:
- use of a free, unlicensed spectrum.
- unaffected by RF noise.
- indoor locations would have sufficient
amount of light sources.
- secure since Li-Fi cannot penetrate
through walls.
 In interactive toys.
36
Applications
 Mobile Connectivity:
- Laptops, tablets, smart phones and
other other mobile devices can
interconnect with each other.
- high data rates, increased security.
 RF Spectrum Relief:
- to relieve RF spectrum of excessive
capacity demands of cellular networks.
37
Applications
 Smart Lighting:
- street lamps to provide Li-Fi hotspots.
- to control and monitor lighting and data.
 GigaSpeed Technology
- fastest wireless data transfer.
- transmission rates of up to 10 Gbps, can
be expanded to several 100 Gbps in future.
- 2 hour HDTV film transfer in less than 30
seconds.
38
Applications
 Hidden Communications:
- military and defense, communications in
hospitals.
 Casinos:
- casinos employ large amount of video
monitoring equipment.
- rich lighting environments could be
harnessed for Li-Fi.
39
Applications
 Retail Analytics:
- rich lighting environment with
abundant light sources for Li-Fi.
- to track the behaviour of individual
shoppers.
- simplifies shopping process.
- Li-Fi to connect to smartphones to link
up people, product and purchasing.
40
Applications
 Spatial Reuse:
- as alternative in areas of high density
wireless communication with 500 or
more users.
- to share some of the load of Wi-Fi.
 Smart Class Rooms:
- Visual inputs for each student.
41
Li-Fi for Education
42
Components of a Li-Fi Enabled
Smart Class
• Transmission Source: a high brightness
white LED.
• Receiving Element: a silicon photodiode.
• Server: database to store all the required
data.
• Interactive board: as an input device and a
monitor, control by touching the board,
connects with the computer and the
projector.
43
Components of a Li-Fi Enabled
Smart Class
• Projector: projects image on to interactive
board.
• Computer: with smart class applications
connected to the interactive board, server
and projector.
• More student attention.
• Li-Fi enabled connectivity, issues with
wired LAN resolved.
44
Li-Fi Smart Class
• Wired LANs require drilling holes in the
wall, running cables in lofts, fitting sockets,
etc.
• Equipment expensive to install, time
consuming to setup, not flexible and
requires maintenance by skilled
technicians.
• Li-Fi enabled smart classes to solve the
problems.
45
Technology Versus Speed
46
Thank You

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Light fidelity

  • 2. 2 Contents • Introduction. • Li-Fi Working. • Wi-Fi Limitations • Li-Fi Advantages and Drawbacks. • Li-Fi Modulation Schemes. • Li-Fi Applications. • Comparison of Speeds.
  • 3. 3 Li-Fi • Professor Harald Haas, the Chair of Mobile Communications at the University of Edinburgh - founder of Li-Fi. • Prof. Haas coined the term Li-Fi, co- founder of pure LiFi. • Li-Fi regarded as light-based Wi-Fi. • Use of visible portion of electromagnetic spectrum. • Prof. Haas demonstrated a Li-Fi prototype at TED Global conference, Edinburgh on 12th July 2011.
  • 4. 4 Li-Fi • Prof. Haas used a table lamp with an LED bulb to transmit a video of a blooming flower that was then projected onto a screen. • Haas periodically blocked light from the lamp with his hand to show that the lamp was indeed the source of video data. • Li-Fi use transceivers fitted with LED lamps that could light a room as well as transmit and receive information.
  • 5. 5 .
  • 8. 8
  • 9. 9
  • 10. 10 Wi-Fi Limitations • Use of 2.4 – 5 GHz radio frequencies to deliver wireless internet access. • Bandwidth limited to 50 - 100 Mbps. • Reliability drops with increase in number of Wi-Fi hotspots and volume of Wi-Fi traffic. • Security and speed concerns. • Wi-Fi vulnerable to hackers, penetrates easily through walls.
  • 11. 11 Wi-Fi Challenges  Capacity: • Spectrum scarcity with the arrival of 3G, 4G and higher.  Efficiency: • Radio masts consume massive amounts of energy, more energy needed for cooling the station rather than transmission of radio waves, station efficiency only 5%.
  • 12. 12 Wi-Fi Challenges  Availability: • Radio waves cannot be used in all environments, in aircrafts, chemical and power plants and in hospitals.  Security: • Penetrates through walls, can be intercepted.  Latency: • Of the order of ms.
  • 13. 13 Li-Fi Scores  Capacity: • Visible light spectrum 10,000 times wider than radio spectrum. Li-Fi has greater bandwidth and readily available equipments.  Efficiency: • LED lights consume less energy, highly efficient.
  • 14. 14 Li-Fi Scores  Availability: • Light sources easily available.  Security: • Light does not penetrate through walls. • Data transmission more secure.  Latency: • Of the order of μs.  Li-Fi modelled after protocols established by IEEE 802 workgroup.
  • 16. 16
  • 17. 17
  • 18. 18 “Li-Fi can achieve the same data rates as USB cables which is challenging for wireless technologies such as Bluetooth and Wi-Fi”. - Frank Deicke, Head of Li-Fi development, Fraunhofer Institute for Photonic Microsystems, Dresden, Germany
  • 19. 19 Visible Light Communication • Method of using rapid pulses of light to transmit information wirelessly. • Uses visible light between 400 THz (780 nm) and 800 THz (375 nm) as the optical carrier for data transmission and for illumination. • Data rates of greater than 100 Mbps using high speed LEDs with multiplexing. • IEEE 802 workgroup defines physical layer (PHY) & media access control (MAC) layer for VLC/Li-Fi.
  • 20. 20 Visible Light Communication  MAC layer: • supports 3 multi-access technologies: peer-to-peer, star configuration and broadcast mode. • handles physical layer management issues such as addressing, collision avoidance and data acknowledgement protocols.
  • 21. 21 Li-Fi Modulation Schemes • Physical layer divided into 3 types: PHY I, II, III and employ a combination of different modulation schemes. • On-Off Keying. • Variable Pulse Position Modulation. • Colour Shift Keying. • Sub-Carrier Inverse PPM. • Frequency Shift Keying. • Subcarrier Index Modulation OFDM.
  • 22. 22 Visible Light Communication • Parallel data transmission LED arrays. • Each LED transmits a separate stream of data, increase in VLC data rate. • Lights to be kept on to transmit data, can be dimmed that they are not visible to humans but still be capable of transmitting data.
  • 23. 23 On-Off Keying • Manchester coding - period of positive pulses = period of negative pulses. • Doubles the bandwidth required for transmission. • For higher bit rates, spectrally more efficient run length limited (RLL) coding used. • Dimming supported by adding OOK extension to adjust aggregate output to the correct level.
  • 24. 24 Variable Pulse Position Modulation • Encode data using pulse position within a set time period. • Pulse duration long enough to allow different positions to be identified. • Allows pulse width to be controlled to support light dimming.
  • 25. 25 Colour Shift Keying • Used if illumination system uses RGB-type LEDs. • Output data carried by the colour itself. • Output intensity can be near constant. • Mixing of RGB primary sources produces different colours which are coded as information bits. • Transceiver complexity increased.
  • 26. 26 Sub-Carrier Inverse PPM • Sub-carrier part and DC part. • When there is no requirement for lighting or indicating, sub - carrier PPM used to save energy. • DC part used only for lighting or indicating.
  • 27. 27 Frequency Shift Keying • Data represented by varying the frequencies of carrier signal. • Two distinct values (0 and 1) using two distinct frequencies.
  • 28. 28 Sub-Carrier Index Modulation OFDM • Use of sub-carrier index to convey information to the receiver. • Adds additional dimension to conventional 2D amplitude/phase modulation (APM) techniques such as QAM and ASK.
  • 29. 29 Li-Fi Limitations • Light cannot pass through objects, if the receiver is blocked, signal will immediately be cut off. • Need to switch to radio waves if light signal is blocked. • Reliability and network coverage. • Interference from external light sources like sunlight, normal bulbs and opaque materials in the transmission path.
  • 30. 30 Li-Fi Limitations • High installation costs. • Can’t have a light bulb to provide data to a high-speed moving object. • Still need Wi-Fi in case of obstacles (trees, walls, structures) along the light path.
  • 31. 31 Criticisms • Can’t work in the dark or if it is raining or foggy. • Not built into modern computers. • Why people should switch to Li-Fi? • Will take time before Li-Fi gains broad acceptance.
  • 32. 32 Challenges • Driving illumination grade LEDs at high speeds. • Increasing data rate with parallelism/arrays. • Achieving low complexity/low cost modulation. • Overcoming the line of sight constraint. • Achieving seamless interoperability with other networks. • Making Li-Fi work in environments with little or no light.
  • 33. 33 Applications  Line of Sight Applications: - vehicle to vehicle communication. - indoor GPS systems.  RF Avoidance: - solution for hypersensitivity to radio frequencies. - where radio waves cannot be used for communication or data transfer.
  • 34. 34 Li-Fi for Vehicle Communication
  • 35. 35 Applications  Indoor Wireless Communication: - use of a free, unlicensed spectrum. - unaffected by RF noise. - indoor locations would have sufficient amount of light sources. - secure since Li-Fi cannot penetrate through walls.  In interactive toys.
  • 36. 36 Applications  Mobile Connectivity: - Laptops, tablets, smart phones and other other mobile devices can interconnect with each other. - high data rates, increased security.  RF Spectrum Relief: - to relieve RF spectrum of excessive capacity demands of cellular networks.
  • 37. 37 Applications  Smart Lighting: - street lamps to provide Li-Fi hotspots. - to control and monitor lighting and data.  GigaSpeed Technology - fastest wireless data transfer. - transmission rates of up to 10 Gbps, can be expanded to several 100 Gbps in future. - 2 hour HDTV film transfer in less than 30 seconds.
  • 38. 38 Applications  Hidden Communications: - military and defense, communications in hospitals.  Casinos: - casinos employ large amount of video monitoring equipment. - rich lighting environments could be harnessed for Li-Fi.
  • 39. 39 Applications  Retail Analytics: - rich lighting environment with abundant light sources for Li-Fi. - to track the behaviour of individual shoppers. - simplifies shopping process. - Li-Fi to connect to smartphones to link up people, product and purchasing.
  • 40. 40 Applications  Spatial Reuse: - as alternative in areas of high density wireless communication with 500 or more users. - to share some of the load of Wi-Fi.  Smart Class Rooms: - Visual inputs for each student.
  • 42. 42 Components of a Li-Fi Enabled Smart Class • Transmission Source: a high brightness white LED. • Receiving Element: a silicon photodiode. • Server: database to store all the required data. • Interactive board: as an input device and a monitor, control by touching the board, connects with the computer and the projector.
  • 43. 43 Components of a Li-Fi Enabled Smart Class • Projector: projects image on to interactive board. • Computer: with smart class applications connected to the interactive board, server and projector. • More student attention. • Li-Fi enabled connectivity, issues with wired LAN resolved.
  • 44. 44 Li-Fi Smart Class • Wired LANs require drilling holes in the wall, running cables in lofts, fitting sockets, etc. • Equipment expensive to install, time consuming to setup, not flexible and requires maintenance by skilled technicians. • Li-Fi enabled smart classes to solve the problems.