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CEA-Leti breaks throughput record for LiFi using single GaN blue micro-LED

Date:

11 June 2020

Micro/nanotechnology R&D center CEA-Leti of Grenoble, France has broken the throughput record of 5.1Gbps in visible light communications (VLC) using a single gallium nitride (GaN) blue micro-LED. The data transmission rate of 7.7Gbps achieved with a 10µm micro-LED marks another step toward commercialization and widespread use of LiFi communication.

VLC, or LiFi (light fidelity), is an emerging wireless communication system that offers an alternative or a complementary technology to radio frequency (RF) systems such as WiFi and 5G. It is considered to be promising for security-related applications because light propagation can be confined to a room with no information leakage, in contrast to WiFi communication, which penetrates walls. LiFi also holds promise for ultra-high-speed data transmission in environments where RF emissions are controlled, like hospitals, schools and airplanes.

Single micro-LED communication offers an ultra-high data transmission rate for a variety of opportunities for new applications. These include industrial wireless high-speed links in demanding environments such as assembly lines and data centers, and contact-less connectors, or chip-to-chip communication. But their weak optical power limits their applications to short-range communications. In contrast, matrices of thousands of micro-LEDs contain higher optical powers than open mid- and long-range applications. However, preserving the bandwidth of each micro-LED within a matrix requires that each signal has to be brought as close as possible to the micro-optical source.

Potential for mass-market applications

CEA-Leti says that its expertise in micro-LED epitaxial processing produces micro-LEDs as small as 10µm (among the smallest in the world). The smaller the emissive area of the LED, the higher the communication bandwidth – 1.8GHz in CEA-Leti’s single-blue micro-LED project. The team also produced multi-carrier modulation combined with digital signal processing. This high-spectrum-efficiency waveform was transmitted by the single LED and was received on a high-speed photodetector and demodulated using a direct sampling oscilloscope.

“This technology has exciting potential for mass-market applications,” believes research scientist Benoit Miscopein. “Multi-LED systems could replace WiFi, but wide-scale adoption will require a standardization process to ensure the systems’ interoperability between different manufacturers,” he adds. “The Light Communications Alliance was created in 2019 to encourage the industry to implement this standardization.”

In addition to a stand-alone WiFi-like standard, the possibility of including this new technology as a component carrier in the downlink of 5G new radio (NR) – a radio-access technology for 5G mobile considerations – is also under investigation to bring a large additional license-free bandwidth.

“This may be feasible because CEA-Leti’s LiFi physical layer relies on the same concepts as WiFi and 5G technologies,” says Miscopein. “Matrices of thousands of micro-LEDs could also open the way to mid- to long-range applications, such as indoor wireless multiple access.”

Preserving the bandwidth of each micro-LED within a matrix requires that each signal is generated as close as possible to the micro-optical source.

“To meet this challenge, we expect to hybridize the micro-LED matrix onto another matrix of CMOS drivers: one simple CMOS driver will pilot one micro-LED,” Miscopein says. “This will also enable the additional feature of piloting each micro-LED pixel independently, and that allows new types of digital-to-optical waveforms that could eliminate the need for digital-to-analog converters commonly used in the conventional ‘analog’ implementations of LiFi,” he adds.

While the Light Communications Alliance will promote interoperability between different manufacturers’ LiFi systems, CEA-Leti will continue its research in two areas:

  • a better understanding of the electrical behavior of single LEDs in high-frequency regimes and the link between bandwidth and electro-migration patterns, and
  • techniques to improve the range and/or increase the data rate using multi-LED emissive devices; this requires adapting the waveform generation as well as a CMOS interposer to drive the matrix on a pixel basis.

See related items:

Light Communications Alliance formed

Leti develops CMOS-driven micro-LEDs with simplified transfer process that eliminates TFT backplane

Tags: GaN-on-Si microLED

Visit: www.leti.fr

Visit: www.LightCommunications.org

Source: http://www.semiconductor-today.com/news_items/2020/jun/leti-110620.shtml

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