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Let There Be Visible Light Communication Wireless

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LET THERE BE VISIBLE LIGHT WIRELESS ENGINEERING COMMUNICATION

WiFi has revolutionized how and where we access the internet and has become increasingly ubiquitous in the last two decades. But within the next 10 years, assistant professor Tao Shu expects it to become obsolete, replaced by visible light communication, or VLC. Using light waves to transmit information, VLC capitalizes on a license-free spectrum and abundant bandwidth with transmission rates that dwarf WiFi’s capabilities. However, there are major security concerns to overcome, and that’s where Shu comes in. Since the light is visible, it is open to eavesdropping. A bad actor could also block the light source, similar to a denial of service attack, and then spoof a false signal. With the support of an Early-concept Grant for Exploratory Research from the National Science Foundation, Shu is investigating the use of a Multiple Input-Multiple Output architecture to overcome these vulnerabilities. “When multiple LED lights are illuminated, you cannot tell which signal comes from a particular LED. The signals are mixed together,” Shu said. “However, we are using orthogonal coding to encode the light emitted by the LEDs. An algorithm on the receiver side can then decode or detect the special code from the transmitter.” Shu’s lab has also developed a framework to demonstrate other potential security issues, such as information being exposed when the light reflects off objects. “Security is a huge issue for VLC and our efforts are making great contributions to improve the security of this technology,” he said.

TAO SHU

Assistant Professor of Computer Science and Software Engineering 334-844-5170 tshu@auburn.edu Website: aub.ie/TShu

Auburn University is committing unprecedented levels of support for research across the Auburn campus, bolstering engineering research programs that have long been on the ascendancy. Our faculty and students are conducting novel research in many emerging and established research areas, including advanced manufacturing and materials, cybersecurity and intelligent systems, energy and environment, infrastructure and transportation, and biomedical and health systems engineering .

A researcher is pictured in the Center for Polymer and Advanced Composites.

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