Undersampled Differential Phase Shift On–Off Keying for Visible Light Vehicle-to-Vehicle Communication
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Related Work
3. Approach
3.1. Rolling-Shutter Effect
3.2. Modulation
3.3. Phase Shifts Between Frames
3.3.1. Phase Slipping
3.3.2. Blooming
3.4. Demodulation
3.4.1. Vehicle and Taillight Detection
3.4.2. Taillight State Recognition
4. Evaluation
4.1. Experimental Setup
- Bit rate: The bit rate defines how many bits are transmitted per second and per modulated light source. For the used modulation method, the bit rate must be equal to the frame rate of the camera used for receiving the signal. In the experiment, a camera with 30 FPS was used, therefore 30 bits per second per modulated LED could be transmitted.
- Periods per bit: This value defines how many periods of the modulation signal are used to send one bit. This value must be an integer number and actually defines the modulation frequency. In the experiment, a modulation frequency of 120 Hz was used, which means, this value was set to 4 periods per bit to send 30 bits per second and per modulated LED.
- Modulation mode: With this settings flag, it can be selected how phase shifts are applied if a logic 1 needs to be transmitted to encode the message. With the standard mode, the signal is inverted by toggling the phase between 0° and 180°, or 0 and , respectively. In the mode the phase is shifted between 90° and 270°, or and , respectively. This mode allows inversion of the signal with smaller changes of the average brightness of the light source, and hence, the modulation cannot be perceived by a human observer. Figure 13 shows how the application of a phase shift to transmit a logic 1 looks in a close-up image of the modulated light source for both modulation modes.
- Delay offset for one bit: The offset in microseconds for the dynamic delay for one bit in the modulation signal.
- Delay offset for one period: The offset in microseconds for the dynamic delay for one period of a bit of the modulation signal.
- Delay offset for a state: The offset in microseconds for the dynamic delay for a single state within a period of the modulation signal.
- Pulse width difference: With this value for a time in microseconds, the pulse with ratio of the modulation signal can be adjusted very precisely. For example, if this value is set to 150 µs, ON states get 150 µs shorter and OFF states are extended by 150 µs.
4.2. Modulation Mode
4.3. Pulse Width Adjustments
4.4. Loose Synchronization
4.5. Error Distribution
5. Conclusions
Future Work
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ADAS | Advanced Driver Assistance Systems |
BER | Bit Error Rate |
CMOS | Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor |
DSLR | Digital Single-lens Reflex Camera |
FPS | Frames Per Second |
GPIO | General-Purpose Input Output |
OCC | Optical Camera Communication |
OWC | Optical Wireless Communication |
ROI | Region of Interest |
SSD | Single-Shot Multibox Detector |
UDPSOOK | Undersampled Differential Phase Shift On–Off Keying |
UDPSOOKED | Undersampled Differential Phase Shift On–Off Keying with Error Detection |
V2I | Vehicle-to-Infrastructure Communication |
V2LC | Vehicular Visible Light Communication |
V2V | Vehicle-to-Vehicle Communication |
VLC | Visible Light Communication |
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Layer | Type | Output Size | Activation Function | Kernel Size | Stride |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Input | 28 × 28 × 3 | |||
2 | Convolutional 2D | 28 × 28 × 6 | ReLU | 5 × 5 | 1 |
3 | Convolutional 2D | 14 × 14 × 12 | ReLU | 5 × 5 | 2 |
4 | Convolutional 2D | 7 × 7 × 24 | ReLU | 4 × 4 | 2 |
5 | Flatten | 1176 | |||
6 | Dense | 200 | ReLU | ||
7 | Dense (Output) | 2 | Softmax |
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Plattner, M.; Ostermayer, G. Undersampled Differential Phase Shift On–Off Keying for Visible Light Vehicle-to-Vehicle Communication. Appl. Sci. 2021, 11, 2195. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11052195
Plattner M, Ostermayer G. Undersampled Differential Phase Shift On–Off Keying for Visible Light Vehicle-to-Vehicle Communication. Applied Sciences. 2021; 11(5):2195. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11052195
Chicago/Turabian StylePlattner, Michael, and Gerald Ostermayer. 2021. "Undersampled Differential Phase Shift On–Off Keying for Visible Light Vehicle-to-Vehicle Communication" Applied Sciences 11, no. 5: 2195. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11052195
APA StylePlattner, M., & Ostermayer, G. (2021). Undersampled Differential Phase Shift On–Off Keying for Visible Light Vehicle-to-Vehicle Communication. Applied Sciences, 11(5), 2195. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11052195