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The darklight rises: visible light communication in the dark: demo

Published: 03 October 2016 Publication History

Abstract

Visible Light Communication (VLC) emerges as a new wireless communication technology with appealing benefits not present in radio communication. However, current VLC designs commonly require LED lights to emit perceptible light beams, which greatly limits the applicable scenarios of VLC (e.g., in a sunny day when indoor lighting is not needed), and brings high energy overhead and unpleasant visual experiences for mobile devices to transmit data using VLC. We design and develop DarkLight, a new VLC primitive that allows light-based communication to be sustained even when LEDs emit extremely-low luminance. The key idea is to encode data into ultra-short, imperceptible light pulses. We tackle challenges in circuit designs, data encoding/decoding schemes, and DarkLight networking, to efficiently generate and reliably detect ultra-short light pulses using off-the-shelf, low-cost LEDs and photodiodes. Our DarkLight prototype supports 1.3-m distance with 1.6-Kbps data rate. By loosening up VLC's reliance on visible light beams, DarkLight presents an unconventional direction of VLC and fundamentally broadens VLC's application scenarios.

References

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Bar-David, I., and Kaplan, G. Information rates of photon-limited overlapping pulse position modulation channels. IEEE Transactions on Information Theory 30, 3 (May 1984), 455--464.
[2]
Dimitrov, S., and Haas, H. Principles of LED Light Communications: Towards Networked Li-Fi. Cambridge University Press, 2015.
[3]
Ghassemlooy, Z., Popoola, W., and Rajbhandari, S. Optical wireless communications: system and channel modelling with Matlab®. CRC Press, 2012.
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Komine, T., and Nakagawa, M. Integrated system of white LED visible-light communication and power-line communication. IEEE Transactions on Consumer Electronics 49, 1 (2003), 71--79.
[5]
Szeliski, R. Computer vision: algorithms and applications. Springer Science & Business Media, 2010.

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MobiCom '16: Proceedings of the 22nd Annual International Conference on Mobile Computing and Networking
October 2016
532 pages
ISBN:9781450342261
DOI:10.1145/2973750
Permission to make digital or hard copies of part or all of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for third-party components of this work must be honored. For all other uses, contact the Owner/Author.

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Association for Computing Machinery

New York, NY, United States

Publication History

Published: 03 October 2016

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MobiCom'16

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MobiCom '16 Paper Acceptance Rate 31 of 226 submissions, 14%;
Overall Acceptance Rate 440 of 2,972 submissions, 15%

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