Title: MultiElement Array Antennas for FreeSpace Optical FSO Networks
1Multi-Element Array Antennas for Free-Space
Optical (FSO) Networks
D/N
Node 1
Node 2
Repeater 1
Repeater 2
Repeater N-1
- Jayasri Akella, Murat Yuksel, Shiv Kalyanaraman
- Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI), ECSE
- akellj_at_rpi.edu, yuksem_at_ecse.rpi.edu,
shivkuma_at_ecse.rpi.edu
shiv rpi
2Outline
- Background and Motivation
- Introduction to free-space optical communication
using 2-dimensional arrays - Inter-channel interference in 2-dimensional
arrays - Channel capacity between arrays
- Bandwidth-Volume product
- Audio Mixing Experiment with a 2-Channel FSO
system - Conclusions
3Why FSO Arrays?
- High aggregate bandwidth spatial reuse
(multiplexing space) to RF-MIMO - Link robustness due to spatial diversity leverage
spatial channel coding - Optical transceivers are capable of operating at
bandwidths greater than 100 Mbps. - With each transceiver operating at a speed of 100
Mbps, a 1010 array will give 10 Gbps in
aggregate capacity. - Use inexpensive off the-shelf opto-electronic
components - But cross talk due to inter-channel interference
4Laser/HBLED Beam Profile
- Lateral distance Y, from the axis of the laser
beam - Horizontal distance Z
- Received Intensity here is given by I(Y).
- Thus intensity drops off exponentially with Y.
- gt motivation to closely pack transceivers on the
2-d array.
5Eg Indoor Music Transfer w/ FSO
62-Dimensional FSO Arrays Parameters
- Parameters of the array
- Package density of the optical transceivers ?
- Distance between the arrays d
- Angle of the transceiver ?
72-D FSO arrays (contd)
- Consider the transmission from the transceiver T0
on the array A, TA0 to T0 on the array B, TB0 - A cone from the transceiver TA0 onto the array B
defines field of view. - The cone not only covers the intended receiver
TB0 , but also TB1 , TB2 , TB4 , TB7 . - gt possible interference, cross-talk
82-D FSO arrays (contd)
- Similarly TB0 receives the signal from TA1 , TA2
, TA4 , TA7. - gt potential interferers.
- For N interferers, cross talk occurs at TB0 if
the intensity from them exceeds IT . - Because the intensity across the laser is
Gaussian distributed, all the potential
interferers may not be contributing to cross talk.
9Fresnel Lens At Xmit/Rcvr ? ?, ??
10Inter-channel interference in 2-dimensional arrays
- Define a lateral distance on the array
- The transceivers on the array must be spaced more
than . - If is
- Distance is 100 meters,
- Transceiver angle of 1 mrad
- gt is about 40 cms.
- gt We cannot pack the optical transceivers too
closely on a compact array.
11Inter-channel interference continued
- Let the spacing on the arrays be
- Let there be N potential interferers for the
transceiver TB0 - Crosstalk occurs at TB0 when
-
12Inter-channel interference continued
- Interference happens when a subset of these
potential interferers transmit when TA0 is
transmitting. The probability that such an event
occurs gives the error probability due to
crosstalk. - Where p0 is the probability that a ZERO is
transmitted.
13Package density (?) ? gt Error Probability ?
But, distance (d) ? allows ? package density (?)
14Tighter beams (? divergence angle ?) gt ? package
density ?
15Channel capacity Between Arrays
- Error due to inter-channel interference occurs
only when a ZERO is being transmitted by TA0 to
TB0, so the interference channel is asymmetric.
ON/OFF Keying - Thus, the cross talk for the channel between two
arrays can be modeled as a Binary Asymmetric
Channel (BAC).
16Capacity of Binary Asymm. Channel (BAC)
- The capacity of such a BAC is given by
- The maximizing input distribution can be found by
plotting the above for various pe.
17- The capacity of array drops with increasing
package density. - The drop is more rapid at larger distances.
18The capacity of arrays drops with package density
and divergence angle of the transceivers.
19All is not gloomy
- Though per-channel capacity decreases with (?
package density, ? distance and ? divergence
angle) - For specific points on the capacity curve,
- the aggregate capacity of array is higher than
a single channel - Example
- 5 channel array, each channel _at_ 100 Mbps gt an
aggregate bandwidth of 0.5 Gbps. - In same space, 10 channels, each operating at
3/4ths of its capacity and with an aggregate
bandwidth of 0.75 Gbps. - We introduce a metric to measures the
effectiveness of the 2-D array Bandwidth-Volume
Product.
20Bandwidth-Volume Product
- We define the performance of an FSO communication
channel by three design parameters - Number of channels per array
- The capacity of each of the channel in bits per
second (determined by packing density, distance,
angle etc) - The distance over which the arrays can
communicate with that capacity. - BVP is similar to the Bandwidth-Distance
Product metric of a fiber-optic link. - In a fiber-optic link, the fiber dispersion
adversely effects the aggregate capacity, - whereas in the multi-channel FSO link, it is
interference cross-talk
21Bandwidth-Volume Product vs Package density and
Inter-Array Distance
22Bandwidth Volume Product (Contd)
- BVP is a useful metric that integrates all the
design parameters of the multi-element 2-D array
system. - The curve (BVP vs package density) gives us
design guidance regarding which parameters to
choose for the 2-D array communication. - For example, for a 200 meter range,
- the optimal package density
- 25 channels per square meter (2.5Gbits),
- at a transceiver angle of 1.5 m rad.
23Two Channel Experiment Audio Mixing
a) Two transmitters on different channels
b) Single receiver and circuit for both the
channels
24Typical Link with Marktech Photo Diode on the
receiver side
25Typical Receiver circuit operated on batteries as
power supply
26Conclusions
- 2-dimensional arrays give an very good bandwidth
performance over short range (100s of meters)
free-space optical communications. - To use these arrays over long distances outdoors,
very narrow beams coupled with auto-aligning
mechanisms are needed. - We are experimenting with new optical (hardware)
modules to manage the critical 2-d array
parameters - Multi-hop transmission is a natural way to extend
range. - Bandwidth-Volume product is a useful metric that
provides design guidance on the optimal
implementation of the 2-D arrays.
27Thanks!
Students Jayasri Akella, sri_at_networks.ecse.rpi.e
du Dr. Murat Yuksel (post-doc)
yuksem_at_ecse.rpi.edu
shiv rpi
Ps Online free videos of all my advanced
networking classes
28Details
29A typical FSO communication system
- Free-space as medium of transmission
- ON-OFF keying digital modulation of the light
beam at the transmitter. - The receiver is a threshold detector. Outputs a
ONE if the received intensity I gt IT , and a
ZERO if I lt I T. where IT is pre-set threshold
intensity level. - Typically duplex communication
30Inter-channel interference continued
- We define the package density for which
there is no crosstalk such that - The total number of potential interferers for
a package density is given by - N transceivers, includes TA0 and N-1 potential
interferers for TB0.
31- Let us assume that these N-1 transceivers are
distributed along J circles around TA0. We can
calculate the error probability in terms of each
of these J circles either being ON (transmit a
ONE) or OFF (transmit a ZERO). - The number of circles for a transceiver spacing
of YSep is given by - The radius of the jth circle rj is given by
- The number of transceivers on the jth circle is a
function of the package density and is given by
32- Crosstalk can happen only when the transceivers
on each of the J circles are such that
- Consider the following cases
- TA0 transmits a 0 and Kj transmit a 0
- TA0 transmits a 0 and Kj transmit a 1
- TA0 transmits a 1 and Kj transmit a 0
- TA0 transmits a 1 and Kj transmit a 1
- Interference happens only in the above Case2,
since only then TB0 receives a false threshold.
The probability of such an event is given by - Where p0 is the probability that a ZERO is
transmitted.
33Design guidelines for 2-D arrays
- As the package density increases, the error
probability increases and hence the capacity
decreases. - The specific package density at which the
capacity drops is a function of the distance
between the arrays, and the angle of the
transceivers and the specific arrangement of the
transceivers on the array. The figures
demonstrate the behavior of the capacity for a
uniformly spaced transceiver configuration. - We can choose the package density such that each
channels operates at a full capacity.
Alternatively, we choose a package density
wherein each channel operates at a lower capacity
point and gets a higher aggregate bandwidth due
to multiple operating channels. - For example, we can choose an array with 5
transceivers, each operating at 100 Mbps each,
with an aggregate bandwidth of 0.5 Gbps.
Alternatively, we can pack 10 transceivers, each
operating at 3/4ths of its capacity and with an
aggregate bandwidth of 0.75 Gbps.
34Bandwidth-Volume Product
- Bandwidth denotes the capacity of a single
channel, i.e. the unit of Bandwidth is Mbps.
Volume describes the 2-dimensional nature of
the array and the distance over which they can
communicate. The volume is simply multiplication
of the number of channels on the array and the
communication distance, i.e. the unit of the
Volume here is meter. This means unit of BVP is
Mbps-meter - The advantage of BVP is that it provides an
integrated performance evaluation measure to aid
the decision process for choosing various
parameters (e.g. d, ?) of the multi-element FSO
system. The distance of operation, number of
channels should be carefully chosen to achieve
the desired capacity. - Even if each of the channel is not operated at
full capacity, one can still achieve high bit
rates due to the presence of multiple
simultaneous transmissions.