LiFi uses visible light as a medium for the transmission of data. As a type of VLC system, it requires two components: a photodiode and a light source. The photodiode acts as a transceiver that receives light signals and transmits them back. The light source transmits data using emitted light as the medium. In this case, light emitting diodes (LED) serve as the light source. They are outfitted with a chip that serves as the signal processing unit.
LED light bulbs are semiconductors. This means current supplied to the bulb can be modulated, which in turn, modulates the light they emit. This process occurs at extremely high speeds that are unperceivable to the human eye. Data is fed into the light bulb and sends the data at extremely high speeds to the photodiode. It converts the data received into a binary data stream perceivable by humans such as video and audio applications.
To send data over light, LiFi systems require a strong, robust light source like LED bulbs. LEDs are different from halogen or filament bulbs as they do not need to warm up. As previously stated, they are semiconductors. They start up quickly and emit light according to the current passed through them.
Within the light, the intensity of the colors red, green, and blue (RGB) is finely modulated to embed data into the LED light. (Again, this process is undetectable to the naked eye.) This fine modulation of RGB can be better described as a form of code. Once the light is received by a photodiode, the light is demodulated. The information received is either relayed to a cloud server or transcribed by the receiver itself. Content is then displayed according to the code obtained.
— David Gonzalez 2021/03/11 18:38