Exploiting Polarization and Color to Enable MIMO Backscattering with Light

Conference Paper (2024)
Author(s)

Seyed Keyarash Ghiasi (TU Delft - Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science)

Marco Zuniga (TU Delft - Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science)

Research Group
Networked Systems
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1145/3666025.3699373 Final published version
More Info
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Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Research Group
Networked Systems
Pages (from-to)
771-783
ISBN (electronic)
979-8-4007-0697-4
Event
22nd ACM Conference on Embedded Networked Sensor Systems, SenSys 2024 (2024-11-04 - 2024-11-07), Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China
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Abstract

Multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) methods play a pivotal role in increasing the capacity of wireless communication systems, but they have not been analyzed systematically in the nascent area of passive communication with visible light (passive-VLC). The main challenge in passive-VLC is its low data rate. This limitation is caused by the slow switching speed of the most popular modulator used in the state-of-the-art: liquid crystal cells (LCs). Several studies use sophisticated modulation schemes with multiple LCs to increase the data rate. However, these efforts have only led to logarithmic improvements. A transmitter with a single LC can provide 1 kbps, and a transmitter with 64 LCs delivers 8 kbps: resulting in an efficiency of 125 bps per LC cell. Ideally, the capacity should increase linearly with the number of LCs.

We propose a general framework to achieve reliable MIMO communications with passive-VLC. Our approach, which has a theoretical and empirical foundation, has three desirable properties: (i) does not assume orthogonality of the individual channels (overcomes co-channel interference), (ii) can exploit multiple properties of light (polarization and color); and (iii) is agnostic to LC parameters (which some studies rely on). Our results show that a transmitter with 9 LCs increases its capacity almost linearly up to 9 channels, attaining 6.8 kbps (750 bps per LC) using the simplest modulation method in the SoA.