Wifi tagged posts

Electric Light Transmits Data 100 times Faster than WiFi

Electric light transmits data 100 times faster than Wi-Fi
Organic visible light communication system based on mixed white light illumination and color-selective OPDs fabricated with OLEDs. Credit: POSTECH

Li-fi, a communication technology harnessing visible light for data transmission, has a potential to surpass Wi-Fi’s speed by more than 100 times and boasts a high bandwidth, facilitating the simultaneous transmission of copious information. Notably, Li-fi ensures robust security by exclusively transmitting data to areas illuminated by light.

Most important, it capitalizes on existing indoor lighting infrastructure, such as LEDs, eliminating the need for separate installations. However, implementing visible light communication (VLC) in practical lighting systems poses an issue of diminished stability and accuracy in data transmission.

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New Metamaterial with Unusual Reflective Property Could Boost your Wi-Fi Signal

A figure from Eleftheriades and Taravati’s research paper shows asymmetric angles in both the forward wave (blue) and the backward, reflected wave (green) striking a metasurface. (Image courtesy: George Eleftheriades)

Engineers have achieved a practical mechanism for ‘full-duplex nonreciprocity,’ a property in metamaterials that allows for manipulation of both incoming and reflective beams of light.

Your office wall might play a part in the next generation of wireless communications. University of Toronto Engineering researchers Professor George Eleftheriades and postdoctoral fellow Sajjad Taravati have shown how reflectors made of metamaterials can channel light to enable more wireless data to be transmitted over a single frequency.

They project that this newly realized proper...

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WiFi Capacity Doubled at Less than Half the Size

This is the first CMOS full duplex receiver IC with integrated magnetic-free circulator. Credit: Negar Reiskarimian, Columbia Engineering

This is the first CMOS full duplex receiver IC with integrated magnetic-free circulator. Credit: Negar Reiskarimian, Columbia Engineering

An engineer has integrated a non-reciprocal circulator and a full-duplex radio on a nanoscale silicon chip for the first time. This breakthrough technology needs only one antenna, thus enabling an even smaller overall system than one he developed last yea. It could revolutionize the field of telecommunications.

Krishnaswamy, director of the Columbia High-Speed and Mm-wave IC (CoSMIC) Lab said: “Our circulator is the first to be put on a silicon chip, and we get literally orders of magnitude better performance than prior work...

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