Polarized OFDM-Based Pulse Position Modulation for High-Speed Wireless Optical Underwater Communications
Zhuoran Qi, Xueyuan Zhao, Dario Pompili
Abstract
An underwater wireless optical communication link can provide high-speed data transfer for robotics applications in deep waters. However, optical links are limited in terms of coverage range because of the high attenuation of light in water caused by absorption and scattering effects. In this work, a new optical transceiver architecture is proposed to solve this coverage problem via a novel Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM)-based Polarized Pulse Position Modulation (in short, P-OFDM-PPM) with time-frequency spreading. The optical polarization diversity and multiplexing are utilized at the optical transmitter to improve the system’s robustness and the transmission data rate. This new scheme is able to boost the range coverage by several folds as verified via simulations using realistic models of optical channel propagation. The proposed architecture can be integrated into existing underwater robots to enable next-generation range-extended and high-speed optical links for oceanic explorations.