1. Introduction
Visible light communication (VLC) exploits light rays emitted by light-emitting diode (LED) to transmit data [
1,
2]. Acting as a burgeoning wireless communication technology, VLC possesses many remarkable advantages, including low cost, license-free optical spectrum, high-speed data transmission, no electromagnetic contamination, etc. Given these remarkable advantages, VLC has gained great attention from both academia and the industry. It has also been recognized as a potential technology of the sixth generation (6G) of wireless communication [
3,
4].
In wireless communications, the booming development of information technology has led to explosively increased mobile data and smart devices [
5]. Therefore, how to significantly boost the data rate and enhance the ability of user connectivity has become an urgent problem of 6G communication, which is also one of the main ongoing research efforts of VLC. On the other hand, one of the main drawback lies in the low communication bandwidth of the existing commercial LEDs in VLC, which makes this urgent problem more challenging for VLC [
6,
7]. In order to tackle the problem, multiple access (MA) technology plays a significant role.
In conventional orthogonal MA (OMA) schemes, strict orthogonality in the time or frequency domains is required to eliminate the multiuser interference. However, due to this strict orthogonality of the supported users, the OMA schemes cannot accommodate requirements of the explosively increased mobile data and smart devices well. Against this background, non-orthogonal MA (NOMA) has gained tremendous attention and is deemed to be a potential MA technology of the next generation. Superior to OMA, NOMA can serve the simultaneous communication of multiple users in the same time and frequency resource, and notably enhances spectral efficiency and ability of the user connectivity in comparison with OMA [
8]. Therefore, NOMA has numerous applications in VLC, and is regarded as one of the research directions [
7,
9]. NOMA should be used in combination with modulation. Relying on high spectral efficiency, orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) constitutes competitive modulation in VLC. Furthermore, more ambitious system performance can be expected by combing NOMA with OFDM, which constitutes the concept of OFDM-NOMA [
10].
In VLC, a real and non-negative signal is required due to the intensity-modulated direct detection [
11,
12]. Therefore, a variety of optical OFDM (O-OFDM) strategies have been conceived for VLC. With the aid of frequency-domain Hermitian symmetry, a real O-OFDM signal can be produced. For the sake of the non-negativity, numerous strategies have been conceived. A simple strategy is direct-current-biased O-OFDM (DCO-OFDM), in which a direct-current bias is used [
13]. However, DCO-OFDM has to employ a comparatively large DC bias to avert non-linear distortion, resulting in a poor performance in terms of power efficiency. To address it, asymmetrically clipped O-OFDM (ACO-OFDM) has been designed, which generates a unipolar signal through direct clip of the negative part [
14,
15]. The same philosophy has been extended to discrete multitone modulation (DMT), yielding pulse-amplitude-modulated DMT (PAM-DMT). Nevertheless, these O-OFDM schemes waste half of the subcarrier resources, thus leading to spectral inefficiency [
16].
To address the problem of conventional O-OFDM, more advanced hybrid O-OFDM schemes have been conceived [
17]. In VLC, hybrid ACO-OFDM (HACO-OFDM) is deemed to be one of the widely used hybrid schemes, which exploits an amalgam of the ACO-OFDM and PAM-DMT techniques [
18]. To expound further, the time-domain ACO-OFDM and PAM-DMT signals occupying different subcarriers are transmitted in parallel through direct superimposition. An iterative receiver can be utilized in HACO-OFDM to successively detect the two signal components. Given that the clipping operation of ACO-OFDM induces the interference with PAM-DMT, additional operation of eliminating the clipping distortion is required before detecting the PAM-DMT signal [
19]. Compared with conventional schemes, HACO-OFDM can achieve substantial improvement of the spectral efficiency, whist maintaining high power efficiency. Therefore, HACO-OFDM has been widely applied in various scenarios of VLC [
20,
21,
22].
Recently, there have been several important contributions to OFDM-NOMA in VLC. In [
23], the performance of a multiple-input multiple-output-based, multiuser VLC system using DCO-OFDM-NOMA was investigated. By using the real-time software reconfigurable technique, Shi et al. [
24] demonstrated an OFDM-NOMA VLC system with dynamic resource allocation. Furthermore, an OFDM-NOMA VLC with the aid of offset quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) was experimentally demonstrated in [
25]. For the sake of the improvement in both user fairness and throughput, a resource allocation method was investigated for the OFDM-NOMA VLC in [
26]. In [
27], joint power allocation and user pairing was studied for ACO-OFDM-NOMA system to achieve massive connectivity and energy saving. However, these exciting works are mainly developed based on ACO-OFDM and DCO-OFDM, which suffer from spectral and power inefficiency, respectively. OFDM-NOMA using the more advanced hybrid O-OFDM has not been deeply investigated. Moreover, users with worse channel quality can only partially decode the transmitted symbols. Although, when the existing hybrid O-OFDM scheme is combined with NOMA, the clipping distortion elimination should depend on the transmitted symbols of all users. Therefore, error propagation can be induced for users with the worse channel, leading to performance degradation.
In the paper, a novel reconstructed hybrid O-OFDM-NOMA (RHO-OFDM-NOMA) is designed for VLC. In RHO-OFDM-NOMA, the ACO-OFDM and clipping-free O-OFDM signals using the odd-indexed subcarrier for transmission are adopted for different NOMA users according to their channel quality in the proposed scheme to avoid error propagation. Furthermore, these O-OFDM signals are combined with PAM-DMT to yield the spectrum-efficient RHO-OFDM signal, which is subsequently made non-negative by introducing a reconstruction process. The novelty and contributions are summarized as follows:
- 1.
The proposed RHO-OFDM exploits the simultaneous transmission of multiple O-OFDM signals, which effectively enhances the spectral efficiency compared with ACO-OFDM. Meanwhile, no direct-current bias is added in RHO-OFDM, thus leading to high power efficiency.
- 2.
Moreover, compared with conventional HACO-OFDM, RHO-OFDM can eliminate error propagation in NOMA-VLC systems, whilst maintaining both high spectral and power efficiency.
- 3
Thanks to no error propagation, the proposed RHO-OFDM-NOMA achieves better BER performance than HACO-OFDM-NOMA for users with worse channel quality. Moreover, a significantly high data rate is achieved by RHO-OFDM-NOMA compared with the NOMA schemes using conventional O-OFDM.
3. Transmitter Design of RHO-OFDM-NOMA
The transmitted symbols of the NOMA users are superimposed in different power levels. Without loss of generality, we sort the M users in ascending order on the basis of channel qualities. In the NOMA system, successive interference cancellation (SIC) is employed to decode the transmitted symbols. To be specific, the m-th user decodes the transmitted symbols of the first users, and subsequently removes the interference of the decoded symbols from the received signal. Furthermore, the symbol of the m-th user can be decoded by treating the transmitted symbols of the remaining users as noise. When HACO-OFDM is directly combined with NOMA, the clipping distortion is determined by the transmitted symbols of all users. However, the users with worse channel qualities can only decode the transmitted symbols of part users. Therefore, the clipping distortion cannot be successfully removed for the users with worse channel quality, leading to unavoidable error propagation.
To address the problem of error propagation, a novel hybrid OFDM scheme, termed RHO-OFDM, is conceived for NOMA-VLC. In the proposed hybrid methodology, different OFDM schemes are adopted for the transmission of the NOMA users according to their channel qualities at the odd-indexed subcarriers. Since the transmitted symbol of the first user can be decoded by all users and consumes most of the transmitted power, the power-efficient ACO-OFDM scheme is adopted for the first user. Let
denote the QAM symbol loaded at the
k-th subcarrier for the
m-th user. The frequency-domain signal of the first user is written as
where
,
is the power allocated to
, and
N represents the number of subcarriers. After the IFFT operation is performed on
, the signal
is obtained as
By directly removing the negative part of
, the non-negative ACO-OFDM signal can be generated in a power-efficient manner. Furthermore, the transmitted symbols of the remaining users cannot be decoded by all users. Therefore, the clipping-free O-OFDM signal is used for the transmitted symbols of the remaining users, in which the clipping operation is not used to avoid the clipping distortion. The frequency-domain signal for the remaining users is written as
where
denotes the power allocated to
. The time-domain clipping-free signal, denoted by
, is generated through the IFFT operation, which is expressed as
Since the clipping distortion is avoided, the error propagation can be eliminated.
In order to effectively exploit the subcarrier resource, the
M NOMA users further share the real parts of the even-indexed subcarriers through PAM-DMT. Let
represent the PAM symbol loaded at the
k-th subcarrier for the
m-th user. Furthermore, the frequency-domain signal of PAM-DMT-NOMA is expressed as
where
. The signal
is input into the IFFT module to yield the signal
, given by
which is subsequently clipped for the sake of the non-negativity. Furthermore, the ACO-OFDM, clipping-free O-OFDM, and PAM-DMT signals are superimposed to realize high spectral efficiency, which is given by
where
denotes the clipping operation. Note that
is bipolar due to the signal component
. Therefore, a reconstruction signal is further introduced to guarantee the non-negativity. In this way, the RHO-OFDM signal is written as
where
is the reconstruction signal. For the sake of the non-negativity and no interference with the transmitted symbols, the reconstruction signal can be calculated as
where
denotes the minimum of the sequence, and
is the operation for calculating the remainder. It can be proved that the reconstruction signal in (
12) can guarantee the non-negativity, and is only loaded at the real part of the even-indexed subcarrier, which implies that no interference is imposed on the transmitted symbols. The detailed proof is provided in
Appendix A.
The architecture of the RHO-OFDM-NOMA transmitter is provided in
Figure 2. The transmitted symbols of the NOMA users are modulated by ACO-OFDM, the clipping-free O-OFDM, and PAM-DMT. Subsequently, the three O-OFDM signal components are combined for hybrid transmission, and the reconstruction signal is further added to generate the non-negative RHO-OFDM signal.
4. Receiver of RHO-OFDM-NOMA
With the aid of the photodiode, the light signal is detected and converted into the electrical signal at the receiver, which is expressed as
where ∗ denotes the convolution operation,
is the channel impulse response, and
denotes the noise with variance of
. Since the multipath delays are negligible in VLC,
is considered in the simulation, where
is the Dirac Delta function. The received signal is subsequently processed by an FFT block. The frequency-domain signal for the
m-th user is given by
where
,
, and
are the FFT output of
,
, and
, respectively. After one-tap equalization, the equalized signal of
is written as
Observing the odd-indexed subcarriers that convey the transmitted symbols, we have
The user can decode the transmitted symbol through the SIC process. Furthermore, at the imaginary part of the even-indexed subcarrier, the frequency-domain signal is written as
where
is the clipping distortion caused by ACO-OFDM, and
and
denote the imaginary part of
and
, respectively. Note that the clipping distortion is only determined by the transmitted symbol of the first user, which can be decoded by all users. Therefore, the clipping distortion is first regenerated and removed from the received signal
based on the decoded symbol of the first user. Subsequently, the transmitted PAM symbol can be decoded through the SIC process.
The block diagram of the RHO-OFDM-NOMA receiver is provided in
Figure 3. By executing the FFT operation on the received signal, the frequency-domain signal is obtained, which can be used to decode the transmitted QAM symbol of the user through the SIC process. Furthermore, the clipping distortion caused by the ACO-OFDM branch is reproduced and removed from the received signal based on the decoded QAM symbol of the first user. Subsequently, the transmitted PAM symbol of the user can be decoded through the SIC process.
6. Simulation Results and Discussion
Simulations are performed to characterize the performance of different NOMA schemes. In the simulation, one LED array installed on the ceiling is used as a transmitter, which simultaneously serves two users distributed on the receiver plane. The receiver plane is located 2 m away from the ceiling. The relevant system parameters are summarized in
Table 1 [
29,
30].
The BER curves of two users in the hybrid OFDM-NOMA system are illustrated in
Figure 4 and
Figure 5, respectively. In the simulation, 64-QAM and 8-PAM are adopted, and two scenarios are considered. In Scenario 1, the locations of the two users are
and
, respectively. In Scenario 2, the locations of the two users are
and
, respectively. The two users in Scenario 1 are located close to each other while the users are located far from each other in Scenario 2. In both scenarios, User 1 has worse channel quality than User 2 since it is located farther from the LED array. Therefore, most of the power is allocated to User 1 according to the philosophy of NOMA. In the simulation, the proportion of the power of User 1 is set to
.
In the NOMA-based system, successive interference cancellation (SIC) is employed for NOMA users at the receiver. Since the first user has worse channel quality, the first user can only decode its own transmitted symbol, and the transmitted symbol of User 2 is treated as noise. However, when HACO-OFDM is directly combined with NOMA, the clipping noise is determined by the transmitted symbols of all users [
18]. Therefore, the clipping distortion cannot be successfully regenerated and eliminated for User 1, leading to error propagation. By contrast, the error propagation can be eliminated in the proposed RHO-OFDM-NOMA. Therefore, it is observed from
Figure 4 that RHO-OFDM-NOMA achieves better BER performance than HACO-OFDM-NOMA for User 1. On the other hand, User 2 can decode the transmitted symbols of two users. Therefore, the clipping distortion can be eliminated in HACO-OFDM-NOMA. Meanwhile, in contrast to HACO-OFDM, the reconstruction process is introduced to guarantee the non-negativity. It is clearly seen from
Figure 5 that HACO-OFDM-NOMA and RHO-OFDM-NOMA achieve similar BER performance for User 2, which implies that the proposed RHO-OFDM still has the superiority of high power efficiency, regardless of using the reconstruction process or not.
Furthermore, the sum rates of RHO-NOMA-VLC for Scenario 1 and Scenario 2 are illustrated in
Figure 6 and
Figure 7, respectively. The sum rates of HACO-OFDM-NOMA, DCO-OFDM-NOMA, and ACO-OFDM-NOMA are provided for comparison [
26,
31]. The DC bias of 10 dB is taken into consideration in DCO-OFDM-NOMA. Compared with conventional DCO-OFDM-NOMA and ACO-OFDM-NOMA, the proposed RHO-OFDM-NOMA has the advantage of high power efficiency, whist improving spectral efficiency. Meanwhile, the error propagation in HACO-OFDM-NOMA induces the sum rate reduction. Therefore, it is seen from
Figure 6 and
Figure 7 that the proposed RHO-OFDM-NOMA substantially outperforms other NOMA schemes in terms of the sum rate.
In order to make a comprehensive evaluation, the average sum rate of different OFDM-NOMA schemes for VLC system are provided in
Figure 8. A circular VLC cell with a radius of
m is considered. The average sum rate is obtained by assuming that the two users are uniformly distributed in the VLC cell. It is seen from
Figure 8 that the performance of RHO-OFDM-NOMA is much better than that of the conventional scheme. Furthermore, the spectral efficiency is defined as the ratio of the data rate to the bandwidth. Since the same bandwidth is adopted for different schemes, the higher data rate indicates higher spectral efficiency. Therefore, the proposed RHO-OFDM-NOMA has higher spectral efficiency than other schemes, which makes it a competitive transmission scheme for multiuser VLC.