In order to provide a cost-effective indoor positioning and tracking service for autonomous ground vehicles and other important assets in smart factories, we report the theory and experiments for a real-time indoor positioning system using commercially available LED lamps. Inspired by the fundamental theory of the global navigation satellite system, the proposed system uses the phase difference of arrival (PDOA) approach to obtain the time difference of arrival of each carrier transmitted from individual modified LED lamps so as to estimate the receiver position. A prototype of the atto-cellular positioning system covering an area of 2.2 × 1.8 m2 with a height of 2 m was designed and experimentally demonstrated. For the design, we performed a simulation based on the Crámer–Rao bound to achieve optimal LED lamp arrangement, RF power, and other parameters. Furthermore, a virtual local oscillator for the PDOA scheme was applied to reduce the hardware complexity and to ensure the processing speed. In the experiment, the receiver was mounted on a movable material buffer station in a smart workshop, and the positioning performance was validated by tracking the trajectory of the material buffer station moving within the positioning coverage area. The experimental results show that an average positioning accuracy of ∼7 cm was achieved.
We propose a hybrid space-frequency domain pre-equalization technique for indoor multiple-input multiple-output visible light communication (MIMO-VLC) systems using DC-biased optical orthogonal frequency division multiplexing with an imaging receiver. The proposed hybrid space-frequency domain pre-equalization is jointly performed in both space and frequency domains for the purpose of achieving comparable signal-to-noise ratio performances of different channels in an imaging MIMO-VLC system. It is shown by the simulation results that a four-channel imaging MIMO-VLC system with a raw data rate of 1.2 Gb/s using hybrid space-frequency domain pre-equalization achieves significantly improved bit error rate performance than the system using only frequency domain pre-equalization, resulting in up to 52.6% improvement in communication coverage area at a target BER of 10–3.
We propose and analyze an optimized Lambertian order (OLO) of light-emitting diode for both indoor cellular optical wireless communication and positioning systems. We carry out analysis for the system consisting of a Lambertian source and a tilted optical receiver, and develop an expression for OLO for four-, six-, and nine-cell configurations. We investigate the channel characteristics including the optical path loss, impulse response, transmission bandwidth, and positioning accuracy for the proposed systems with and without OLO, showing that there is a significant improvement in the transmission bandwidth as well as the positioning accuracy when employing OLO. For example, for a four-cell configuration with the optimum Lambertian order, 99% of cumulative distribution function of the estimation errors is within the Cramer–Rao bound (CRB) accuracy of 6.7 to 26.7 cm, compared to the CRB accuracy of 12.8 to 29.7 cm for the Lambertian order of m=1.
A simple, cost-effective, centrally controlled, self-protection, colorless wavelength division multiplexing passive optical network is proposed. By using an optical switch at the optical line terminal and an N×N arrayed waveguide grating at a remote node, it can provide 1∶1 protection for downstream traffic and 1+1 protection for upstream data, respectively. The scheme feasibility is verified with 1.25 Gb/s for upstream and 2.5 Gb/s for downstream data rates based on gain-saturated reflective semiconductor optical amplifier, in both normal working and protection modes. The network performance in terms of complexity and availability is also evaluated.
In order to integrate local ultra-wideband (UWB) environment into fixed wired networks or wireless wide-area
infrastructures and eliminate the high cost of microwave electrical circuits or devices, UWB-over-fiber systems have
emerged to exploit the advantages offered by optical fiber. We experimentally demonstrate a photonic UWB monocycle
pulse generation and pulse position modulation (PPM). The UWB monocycle pulse with inverse polarity can be
generated based on the two differently-biased Mach-Zehnder modulators, subsequently the PPM of the UWB monocycle
pulse is realized through the nonlinear polarization rotation (NPR) arising in a semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA).
We proposed and experimentally demonstrated an effective procedure to generate and maintain a linear output state of
polarization (SOP) during the course of the nonlinear polarization rotation (NPR) of an SOA. High performance of
polarization switching can be achieved. The proposed scheme is more preferable for the UWB-over-fiber applications
due to its compact size and high stability.
Identifying various impairments is critically important in optical channel monitoring. We present a new approach for analyzing and characterizing the amplitude histogram of optical signals. This new approach is based on the X2 distance, which was originally used in digital image processing. To effectively distinguish various impairments, we introduce two different metrics: (1) the difference between the X2 distance of the mark histogram and the X2 distance of the space histogram, and (2) the asymmetry property of the mark and space histograms. Using these two metrics together, we show by simulation that three major impairments, namely, inband crosstalk, amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) noise, and chromatic dispersion can be effectively identified.
We investigated the property of conversion between phase modulation (PM) and amplitude modulation (AM) in optical
fiber transmission link due to chromatic dispersion (CD) for the purpose of clock information generation. As a result, a
novel all-optical clock recovery (CR) scheme from 10 Gbps
non-return-to-zero differential phase-shift-keying (NRZ-DPSK)
signal has been demonstrated experimentally. We introduce a chromatic dispersion induced clock tone from the
NRZ-DPSK signal and feed it into a free-running semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) based fiber ring laser to
achieve an injection mode-locking. The generated mode-locked pulse is the corresponding regenerated clock of the
original signal. Since no special component is required for NRZ-DPSK demodulation, our proposed method is very
promising because of its simple configuration and higher stability. In experiments, 20km standard single mode fiber is
employed to accumulate CD and generate PM-AM conversion hence regenerate clock tone of the NRZ-DPSK signal.
The recovered clock signal with the extinction ratio over 15 dB and the root-mean-square timing jitter of 720 fs is
achieved under 231-1 pseudorandom binary sequence
NRZ-DPSK signals measurement. We also demonstrated a similar
CR system by using a chirped fiber Bragg grating (CFBG) as the dispersion device. With the same operation principle, it
is quite convenient and promising to extend our configuration to implement all-optical CR for NRZ-DPSK signal with
data rate up to 40Gbps.
We present a new simultaneous differential phase-shift keying (DPSK) payload and subcarrier-multiplexed (SCM) label generation technique using a single dual-electrode Mach-Zehnder modulator (DE-MZM). We conduct simulations to verify the feasibility of the new SCM labeling scheme and examine the mutual interference between the DPSK payload and the SCM label. By selecting the subcarrier at half of the payload bit-rate frequency, we can significantly suppress the SCM label induced-power penalty to the DPSK payload. Moreover, we apply the SCM label generated by the proposed labeling technique to chromatic dispersion monitoring for DPSK systems. Simulation results show that by detecting radio frequency power of both the clock tone and the SCM label, the monitoring range is greatly improved.
We evaluate the performance of the externally modulated optical minimum shift keying (MSK) signal. The tolerance against fiber dispersion, linear crosstalk, self phase modulation (SPM), and stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) threshold for MSK is studied and compared with that of 50% duty cycle return-to-zero differential phase shift keying (RZ-DPSK) and 50% duty cycle RZ on-off-keying (RZ-OOK), via both experiment and simulation. Simulation results show that the MSK signal has the widest tolerance against SPM and the smallest linear crosstalk among these formats. Experimental results agree with the simulation on negative penalty against SPM tolerance and show widest tolerance against dispersion tolerance for MSK. The measured SBS threshold of both MSK and RZ-DPSK is more than 10 dB higher than that of an RZ-OOK system.
In today's high-bit-rate WDM systems, it is essential to monitor the residual chromatic dispersion (CD) to ensure that it does not exceed the designed tolerance. Among the schemes for CD monitoring reported so far, inband subcarrier tone method is relatively simple and effective for CD monitoring. However, this technique may be influenced by both polarization mode dispersion (PMD) and the chirp fluctuation of the external modulator. In this paper, we investigate the effect of PMD and chirp on CD monitoring and show that the presence of PMD and chirp induces significant CD monitoring errors. To tackle this problem, we propose a CD monitoring technique to
suppress the influence caused by PMD and chirp fluctuation. In the proposed CD monitoring scheme, two RF tones are added at the transmitter. The light is coupled into an apriori known dispersion offset and then split into two branches in the monitoring module. A fiber Bragg grating filter which can remove one sideband is inserted before the photodetector of one branch. The PMD effect is eliminated by optically sideband filtering and RF power ratio detection, and the monitoring error induced by the small chirp fluctuation can be suppressed using two RF tones and a dispersion offset. The operational principle is analyzed and the experimental investigation is presented. Experimental results show that this technique can accurately monitor the accumulated CD without being affected by the PMD and small chirp fluctuation.
The paper presents a novel microwave transversal filter based on spectral tapping of broadband light using fiber Bragg grating array. This structure has the advantages that it can achieve arbitrary tap weighting by controlling the reflectivity of the grating array in the fabrication, is readily scalable to a large number of taps without insertion loss increasing, and is tunable by adjusting the center wavelengths of the gratings to adjust the basic time delay provided by a dispersive element. Experimental results demonstrate our conclusions in the paper.
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