Abstract

Fog has a strong attenuation effect on the optical channel, which will greatly degrade the performance of visible light communication (VLC). Studying the effect of the fog on communication performance is crucial to realize outdoor VLC for next generation networks, but there is little research on this topic. In this work, the transmission characteristics of visible light band in the foggy channel were measured and a high-speed VLC system based on a 450 nm blue laser diode (LD) and 16-ary quadrature amplitude modulation orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (16-QAM-OFDM) in the artificial fog environment was demonstrated experimentally. Through a foggy channel of 60 cm, a maximum data rate of up to 4 Gbps was achieved at the pass loss of 13.06 dB with a bit error rate (BER) of 3.5 × 10-3 below the forward error correction (FEC) limit (3.8 × 10-3), which was the highest data rate ever reported for VLC in the foggy channel. Even at a higher pass loss of 17.32 dB, the proposed system still could achieve a data rate of 2.84 Gbps with a BER of 2.8 × 10-3. Further extending the distance to 16.9 m for a more practical application, a data rate of 2.0 Gbps was also demonstrated successfully.

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