An experimental study of a micro-projection enabled optical terminal for short-range bidirectional multi-wavelength visible light communications

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Abstract

A micro-projection enabled short-range communication (SRC) approach using red-, greenand blue-based light-emitting diodes (RGB-LEDs) has experimentally demonstrated recently that micro-projection and high-speed data transmission can be performed simultaneously. In this research, a reconfigurable design of a polarization modulated image system based on the use of a Liquid Crystal on Silicon based Spatial Light Modulator (LCoS-based SLM) serving as a portable optical terminal capable of micro-projection and bidirectional multi-wavelength communications is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. For the proof of concept, the system performance was evaluated through a bidirectional communication link at a transmission distance over 0.65 m. In order to make the proposed communication system architecture compatible with the data modulation format of future possible wireless communication system, baseband modulation scheme, i.e., Non-Return-to-Zero On-Off-Keying (NRZ_OOK), M-ary Phase Shift Keying (M-PSK) and M-ary Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (M-QAM) were used to investigate the system transmission performance. The experimental results shown that an acceptable BER (satisfying the limitation of Forward Error Correction, FEC standard) and crosstalk can all be achieved in the bidirectional multi-wavelength communication scenario.

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Chou, H. H., Tsai, C. Y., & Jiang, J. S. (2018). An experimental study of a micro-projection enabled optical terminal for short-range bidirectional multi-wavelength visible light communications. Sensors (Switzerland), 18(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/s18040983

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