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21 pages, 3942 KB  
Article
Experimental Demonstration of Terahertz-Wave Signal Generation for 6G Communication Systems
by Yazan Alkhlefat, Amr M. Ragheb, Maged A. Esmail, Sevia M. Idrus, Farabi M. Iqbal and Saleh A. Alshebeili
Optics 2025, 6(3), 34; https://doi.org/10.3390/opt6030034 - 28 Jul 2025
Viewed by 1143
Abstract
Terahertz (THz) frequencies, spanning from 0.1 to 1 THz, are poised to play a pivotal role in the development of future 6G wireless communication systems. These systems aim to utilize photonic technologies to enable ultra-high data rates—on the order of terabits per second—while [...] Read more.
Terahertz (THz) frequencies, spanning from 0.1 to 1 THz, are poised to play a pivotal role in the development of future 6G wireless communication systems. These systems aim to utilize photonic technologies to enable ultra-high data rates—on the order of terabits per second—while maintaining low latency and high efficiency. In this work, we present a novel photonic method for generating sub-THz vector signals within the THz band, employing a semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) and phase modulator (PM) to create an optical frequency comb, combined with in-phase and quadrature (IQ) modulation techniques. We demonstrate, both through simulation and experimental setup, the generation and successful transmission of a 0.1 THz vector. The process involves driving the PM with a 12.5 GHz radio frequency signal to produce the optical comb; then, heterodyne beating in a uni-traveling carrier photodiode (UTC-PD) generates the 0.1 THz radio frequency signal. This signal is transmitted over distances of up to 30 km using single-mode fiber. The resulting 0.1 THz electrical vector signal, modulated with quadrature phase shift keying (QPSK), achieves a bit error ratio (BER) below the hard-decision forward error correction (HD-FEC) threshold of 3.8 × 103. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first experimental demonstration of a 0.1 THz photonic vector THz wave based on an SOA and a simple PM-driven optical frequency comb. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Photonics and Optical Communications)
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8 pages, 866 KB  
Proceeding Paper
Internet of Things and Predictive Artificial Intelligence for SmartComposting Process in the Context of Circular Economy
by Soukaina Fouguira, Emna Ammar, Mounia Em Haji and Jamal Benhra
Eng. Proc. 2025, 97(1), 16; https://doi.org/10.3390/engproc2025097016 - 10 Jun 2025
Viewed by 1496
Abstract
To promote sustainable development, adopting circular economy principles is crucial for preserving natural resources and ensuring environmental continuity. Among solid waste management strategies, composting plays a significant role by converting biodegradable waste into eco-friendly biofertilizers. Traditional composting methods, which rely on open-window techniques, [...] Read more.
To promote sustainable development, adopting circular economy principles is crucial for preserving natural resources and ensuring environmental continuity. Among solid waste management strategies, composting plays a significant role by converting biodegradable waste into eco-friendly biofertilizers. Traditional composting methods, which rely on open-window techniques, face challenges in controlling critical physico-chemical parameters such as temperature, humidity, and gaseous emissions. Additionally, these methods require significant labor and over 100 days to achieve compost maturity. To address these issues, we propose an intelligent, automated composting system leveraging the Internet of Things (IoT) and wireless sensor networks (WSNs). This system integrates sensors for real-time monitoring of key parameters: DS18b20 for waste temperature, HD-38 for humidity, DHT11 for ambient conditions, and MQ sensors for detecting CO2, NH3, and CH4. Controlled by an ESP32 microcontroller unit (MCU), the system employs a mixer and heating elements to optimize waste degradation based on sensor feedback. Data transmission is managed using the MQTT protocol, allowing real-time monitoring via a cloud-based platform (ThingSpeak). Furthermore, the degradation process was analyzed during the first 24 h, and a recurrent neural network (RNN) algorithm was employed to predict the time required for reaching optimal compost maturity, ensuring an efficient and sustainable solution. Full article
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13 pages, 2180 KB  
Article
Wide Field-of-View Air-to-Water Rolling Shutter-Based Optical Camera Communication (OCC) Using CUDA Deep-Neural-Network Long-Short-Term-Memory (CuDNNLSTM)
by Yung-Jie Chen, Yu-Han Lin, Guo-Liang Shih, Chi-Wai Chow and Chien-Hung Yeh
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(11), 5971; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15115971 - 26 May 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 711
Abstract
Nowadays, underwater activities are becoming more and more important. As the number of underwater sensing devices grows rapidly, the amount of bandwidth needed also increases very quickly. Apart from underwater communication, direct communication across the water–air interface is also highly desirable. Air-to-water wireless [...] Read more.
Nowadays, underwater activities are becoming more and more important. As the number of underwater sensing devices grows rapidly, the amount of bandwidth needed also increases very quickly. Apart from underwater communication, direct communication across the water–air interface is also highly desirable. Air-to-water wireless transmission is crucial for sending control information or instructions from unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) or ground stations above the sea surface to autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs). On the other hand, water-to-air wireless transmission is also required to transmit real-time information from AUVs or underwater sensor nodes to UAVs above the water surface. Previously, we successfully demonstrated a water-to-air optical camera-based OWC system, which is also known as optical camera communication (OCC). However, the reverse transmission (i.e., air-to-water) using OCC has not been analyzed. It is worth noting that in the water-to-air OCC system, since the camera is located in the air, the image of the light source is magnified due to diffraction. Hence, the pixel-per-symbol (PPS) decoding of the OCC pattern is easier. In the proposed air-to-water OCC system reported here, since the camera is located in the water, the image of the light source in the air will be diminished in size due to diffraction. Hence, the PPS decoding of the OCC pattern becomes more difficult. In this work, we propose and experimentally demonstrate a wide field-of-view (FOV) air-to-water OCC system using CUDA Deep-Neural-Network Long-Short-Term-Memory (CuDNNLSTM). Due to water turbulence and air turbulence affecting the AUV and UAV, a precise line-of-sight (LOS) between the AUV and the UAV is difficult to achieve. OCC can provide wide FOV without the need for precise optical alignment. Results revealed that the proposed air-to-water OCC system can support a transmission rate of 7.2 kbit/s through a still water surface, and 6.6 kbit/s through a wavy water surface; this satisfies the hard-decision forward error correction (HD-FEC) bit-error-rate (BER). Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Screen-Based Visible Light Communication)
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20 pages, 1134 KB  
Article
Study on Outage Probability of RF-UWOC Hybrid Dual-Hop Relaying Systems with Decode-and-Forward Protocol
by Meng Guo, Yueheng Li, Yong Lv and Meiyan Ju
Electronics 2025, 14(11), 2110; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics14112110 - 22 May 2025
Viewed by 482
Abstract
This paper investigates the outage probability of a hybrid Radio Frequency–Underwater Wireless Optical Communication (RF-UWOC) system that employs the Decode-and-Forward protocol under composite fading channels. It is assumed that the RF link experiences Generalized K distribution fading along with atmospheric path loss, while [...] Read more.
This paper investigates the outage probability of a hybrid Radio Frequency–Underwater Wireless Optical Communication (RF-UWOC) system that employs the Decode-and-Forward protocol under composite fading channels. It is assumed that the RF link experiences Generalized K distribution fading along with atmospheric path loss, while the UWOC link endures generalized Gamma distribution turbulent fading, accounting for underwater path loss and pointing errors. Based on these assumptions, when intensity modulation with direct detection (IM/DD) and heterodyne detection (HD) are, respectively, utilized at the receiver, the average outage probability and its corresponding asymptotic expression for the considered hybrid dual-hop systems under high signal-to-noise ratios are derived. Subsequently, Monte Carlo simulations are conducted to validate the accuracy of the theoretical analysis results and to explore the influence of various key system parameters on the dual-hop systems. Full article
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15 pages, 2803 KB  
Article
Exploiting Extrinsic Information for Serial MAP Detection by Utilizing Estimator in Holographic Data Storage Systems
by Thien An Nguyen and Jaejin Lee
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(1), 139; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15010139 - 27 Dec 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 690
Abstract
In the big data era, data are created in huge volume. This leads to the development of storage devices. Many technologies are proposed for the next generation of storage fields. However, among them, holographic data storage (HDS) has attracted much attention and has [...] Read more.
In the big data era, data are created in huge volume. This leads to the development of storage devices. Many technologies are proposed for the next generation of storage fields. However, among them, holographic data storage (HDS) has attracted much attention and has been introduced as the promising candidate to meet the increasing demand for capacity and speed. For signal processing, HDS faces two major challenges: inter-page interference (IPI) and two-dimensional (2D) interference. To access the IPI problem, we can use balanced coding, which converts user data into an intensity level with uniformly distributed values for each page. For 2D interference, we can use the equalizer and detection to mitigate the 2D interference. However, the often-used equalizer and detection are methods in wireless communication and only handle the one-dimensional (1D) signal. Thus, we can combine the equalizer, detection, and estimator to reduce 2D interference into 1D interference. In this paper, we proposed a combined model using serial maximum a posteriori (MAP) detection and estimator to improve the detection of HDS systems. In our proposed model, instead of using an estimator with the Viterbi algorithm to predict the upper–lower interference (UPI) or left–right interference (LRI) and converting the received signal into 1D ISI, we used the estimator to predict the extrinsic information for serial MAP detection. This preserves the 2D information in the received signal in serial MAP detection and improves the detection of serial MAP detection by extrinsic information. The simulation results demonstrate that our proposed model significantly improves the bit-error rate (BER) performance compared to previous studies. Full article
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13 pages, 10213 KB  
Article
2 km Uncompressed HD Video Wireless Transmission at 100 GHz Based on All-Optical Frequency Up- and Down-Conversion
by Shuang Gao, Yutong Jiang, Zhuoxin Li, Qing Zhong, Min Zhu and Jiao Zhang
Micromachines 2024, 15(12), 1488; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi15121488 - 11 Dec 2024
Viewed by 1084
Abstract
The millimeter-wave wireless transmission system is widely regarded as a promising solution for applications of future 6G communication. This paper presents an experimental comparison between all-optical and all-electric receivers for millimeter-wave communication systems over a 15 m wireless link and demonstrates 200 m [...] Read more.
The millimeter-wave wireless transmission system is widely regarded as a promising solution for applications of future 6G communication. This paper presents an experimental comparison between all-optical and all-electric receivers for millimeter-wave communication systems over a 15 m wireless link and demonstrates 200 m and 2 km real-time uncompressed HD video transmission using an all-optical transceiver at 100 GHz. The systems leverage photonics-assisted heterodyne beating techniques at the transmitter, while the receivers employ either an avalanche photodiode (APD)-based all-optical approach or an envelope detection-based all-electric approach. Experimental results show that the all-optical transceiver supports significantly higher transmission rates, achieving error-free transmission at up to 11.318 Gbps over a 200 m wireless link without clock recovery, compared to the all-electric receiver, which is limited to only 3.125 Gbps error-free 15 m transmission. This work proves that the proposed system based on the all-optical receiver is more promising for supporting future 6G scenarios requiring ultra-wideband, high capacity, and wide coverage high-speed wireless communications. Full article
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14 pages, 4157 KB  
Article
D-Band 4.6 km 2 × 2 MIMO Photonic-Assisted Terahertz Wireless Communication Utilizing Iterative Pruning Deep Neural Network-Based Nonlinear Equalization
by Jingwen Lin, Sicong Xu, Qihang Wang, Jie Zhang, Jingtao Ge, Siqi Wang, Zhihang Ou, Yuan Ma, Wen Zhou and Jianjun Yu
Photonics 2024, 11(11), 1009; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics11111009 - 26 Oct 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1504
Abstract
In this paper, we explore the enhancement of a 4.6 km dual-polarization 2 × 2 MIMO D-band photonic-assisted terahertz communication system using iterative pruning-based deep neural network (DNN) nonlinear equalization techniques. The system employs advanced digital signal processing (DSP) methods, including down-conversion, resampling, [...] Read more.
In this paper, we explore the enhancement of a 4.6 km dual-polarization 2 × 2 MIMO D-band photonic-assisted terahertz communication system using iterative pruning-based deep neural network (DNN) nonlinear equalization techniques. The system employs advanced digital signal processing (DSP) methods, including down-conversion, resampling, matched filtering, and various equalization algorithms to combat signal distortions. We demonstrate the effectiveness of DNN and iterative pruning techniques in significantly reducing bit error rates (BERs) across a range of symbol rates (10 Gbaud to 30 Gbaud) and polarization states (vertical and horizontal). Before pruning, at 10 GBaud transmission, the lowest BER was 0.0362, and at 30 GBaud transmission, the lowest BER was 0.1826, both of which did not meet the 20% soft-decision forward error correction (SD-FEC) threshold. After pruning, the BER at different transmission rates was reduced to below the hard decision forward error correction (HD-FEC) threshold, indicating a substantial improvement in signal quality. Additionally, the pruning process contributed to a decrease in network complexity, with a maximum reduction of 85.9% for 10 GBaud signals and 63.0% for 30 GBaud signals. These findings indicate the potential of DNN and pruning techniques to enhance the performance and efficiency of terahertz communication systems, providing valuable insights for future high-capacity, long-distance wireless networks. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Advances in Optical Wireless Communication)
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12 pages, 6773 KB  
Article
Dual-Slope Path Loss Model for Integrating Vehicular Sensing Applications in Urban and Suburban Environments
by Herman Fernández, Lorenzo Rubio, Vicent M. Rodrigo Peñarrocha and Juan Reig
Sensors 2024, 24(13), 4334; https://doi.org/10.3390/s24134334 - 4 Jul 2024
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 2002
Abstract
The development of intelligent transportation systems (ITS), vehicular ad hoc networks (VANETs), and autonomous driving (AD) has progressed rapidly in recent years, driven by artificial intelligence (AI), the internet of things (IoT), and their integration with dedicated short-range communications (DSRC) systems and fifth-generation [...] Read more.
The development of intelligent transportation systems (ITS), vehicular ad hoc networks (VANETs), and autonomous driving (AD) has progressed rapidly in recent years, driven by artificial intelligence (AI), the internet of things (IoT), and their integration with dedicated short-range communications (DSRC) systems and fifth-generation (5G) networks. This has led to improved mobility conditions in different road propagation environments: urban, suburban, rural, and highway. The use of these communication technologies has enabled drivers and pedestrians to be more aware of the need to improve their behavior and decision making in adverse traffic conditions by sharing information from cameras, radars, and sensors widely deployed in vehicles and road infrastructure. However, wireless data transmission in VANETs is affected by the specific conditions of the propagation environment, weather, terrain, traffic density, and frequency bands used. In this paper, we characterize the path loss based on the extensive measurement campaign carrier out in vehicular environments at 700 MHz and 5.9 GHz under realistic road traffic conditions. From a linear dual-slope path loss propagation model, the results of the path loss exponents and the standard deviations of the shadowing are reported. This study focused on three different environments, i.e., urban with high traffic density (U-HD), urban with moderate/low traffic density (U-LD), and suburban (SU). The results presented here can be easily incorporated into VANET simulators to develop, evaluate, and validate new protocols and system architecture configurations under more realistic propagation conditions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Vehicular Sensing for Improved Urban Mobility)
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9 pages, 1885 KB  
Article
Ergodic Rate Analysis for Full-Duplex and Half-Duplex Networks with Energy Harvesting
by Bin Zhong, Liang Chen and Zhongshan Zhang
Electronics 2024, 13(11), 2195; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics13112195 - 4 Jun 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1020
Abstract
Considering energy harvesting, the ergodic data rates for both in band full-duplex (FD) and half-duplex (HD) wireless communications were studied. The analytic expressions of downlink and uplink ergodic rates for the proposed system were first derived with independent and identically distributed (i.i.d.) Rayleigh [...] Read more.
Considering energy harvesting, the ergodic data rates for both in band full-duplex (FD) and half-duplex (HD) wireless communications were studied. The analytic expressions of downlink and uplink ergodic rates for the proposed system were first derived with independent and identically distributed (i.i.d.) Rayleigh fading link. It was revealed that the uplink data rate can be improved by decreasing the downlink data rate. Furthermore, the uplink/downlink data rates are also shown to be influenced by some significance parameters, for example, the power split parameter and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) (i.e., PS/σ2) of each link. Additionally, unlike the HD, the proposed FD node is capable of harvesting energy during the communication process; however, this is at the cost of performance loss induced by the residual self-interference (RSI), which is caused by the essence of simultaneous uplink and downlink transmissions in a single frequency band. Full article
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25 pages, 1744 KB  
Article
Secrecy Performance Enhancement Using Self-Interference Cancellation in Wireless Mutual Broadcast Networks for Proximity-Based Services
by Taesoo Kwon and HyeonWoo LEE
Sensors 2024, 24(11), 3389; https://doi.org/10.3390/s24113389 - 24 May 2024
Viewed by 1144
Abstract
With the increasing demand for data exchange between nearby devices in proximity-based services, enhancing the security of wireless mutual broadcast (WMB) networks is crucial. However, WMB networks are inherently vulnerable to eavesdropping due to the open broadcast nature of their communication. This paper [...] Read more.
With the increasing demand for data exchange between nearby devices in proximity-based services, enhancing the security of wireless mutual broadcast (WMB) networks is crucial. However, WMB networks are inherently vulnerable to eavesdropping due to the open broadcast nature of their communication. This paper investigates the improvement of secrecy performance in random-access-based WMB (RA-WMB) networks by integrating physical layer security (PLS) techniques with hybrid duplex (HBD) operations under a stochastic geometry framework. The HBD method balances half-duplex (HD) receiving and full-duplex (FD) transceiving, utilizing self-interference cancellation (SIC) to enhance PLS performance. Key operational parameters, including transmission probability (TxPr), friendly jammer density, and conditions for FD operation, are designed to maximize secrecy performance. The analytical and numerical results demonstrate significant improvements in PLS performance, with SIC playing a critical role, particularly in scenarios with dense legitimate nodes, and with TxPr adjusted to balance HD receiving and FD transceiving based on SIC imperfections. The proposed design principles provide a comprehensive framework for enhancing the security of WMB networks, addressing the complex interplay of interference and SIC in various network configurations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Wireless Ad-Hoc and Sensor Networks towards 6G)
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16 pages, 5537 KB  
Article
A 2.4 GHz Wide-Range CMOS Current-Mode Class-D PA with HD2 Suppression for Internet of Things Applications
by Nam-Seog Kim
Sensors 2024, 24(5), 1616; https://doi.org/10.3390/s24051616 - 1 Mar 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2265
Abstract
Short-range Internet of Things (IoT) sensor nodes operating at 2.4 GHz must provide ubiquitous wireless sensor networks (WSNs) with energy-efficient, wide-range output power (POUT). They must also be fully integrated on a single chip for wireless body area networks (WBANs) and wireless personal [...] Read more.
Short-range Internet of Things (IoT) sensor nodes operating at 2.4 GHz must provide ubiquitous wireless sensor networks (WSNs) with energy-efficient, wide-range output power (POUT). They must also be fully integrated on a single chip for wireless body area networks (WBANs) and wireless personal area networks (WPANs) using low-power Bluetooth (BLE) and Zigbee standards. The proposed fully integrated transmitter (TX) utilizes a digitally controllable current-mode class-D (CMCD) power amplifier (PA) with a second harmonic distortion (HD2) suppression to reduce VCO pulling in an integrated system while meeting harmonic limit regulations. The CMCD PA is divided into 7-bit slices that can be reconfigured between differential and single-ended topologies. Duty cycle distortion compensation is performed for HD2 suppression, and an HD2 rejection filter and a modified C-L-C low-pass filter (LPF) reduce HD2 further. Implemented in a 28 nm CMOS process, the TX achieves a wide POUT range of from 12.1 to −31 dBm and provides a maximum efficiency of 39.8% while consuming 41.1 mW at 12.1 dBm POUT. The calibrated HD2 level is −82.2 dBc at 9.93 dBm POUT, resulting in a transmitter figure of merit (TX_FoM) of −97.52 dB. Higher-order harmonic levels remain below −41.2 dBm even at 12.1 dBm POUT, meeting regulatory requirements. Full article
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11 pages, 3743 KB  
Article
Minimalist Deployment of Neural Network Equalizers in a Bandwidth-Limited Optical Wireless Communication System with Knowledge Distillation
by Yiming Zhu, Yuan Wei, Chaoxu Chen, Nan Chi and Jianyang Shi
Sensors 2024, 24(5), 1612; https://doi.org/10.3390/s24051612 - 1 Mar 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2178
Abstract
An equalizer based on a recurrent neural network (RNN), especially with a bidirectional gated recurrent unit (biGRU) structure, is a good choice to deal with nonlinear damage and inter-symbol interference (ISI) in optical communication systems because of its excellent performance in processing time [...] Read more.
An equalizer based on a recurrent neural network (RNN), especially with a bidirectional gated recurrent unit (biGRU) structure, is a good choice to deal with nonlinear damage and inter-symbol interference (ISI) in optical communication systems because of its excellent performance in processing time series information. However, its recursive structure prevents the parallelization of the computation, resulting in a low equalization rate. In order to improve the speed without compromising the equalization performance, we propose a minimalist 1D convolutional neural network (CNN) equalizer, which is reconverted from a biGRU with knowledge distillation (KD). In this work, we applied KD to regression problems and explain how KD helps students learn from teachers in solving regression problems. In addition, we compared the biGRU, 1D-CNN after KD and 1D-CNN without KD in terms of Q-factor and equalization velocity. The experimental data showed that the Q-factor of the 1D-CNN increased by 1 dB after KD learning from the biGRU, and KD increased the RoP sensitivity of the 1D-CNN by 0.89 dB with the HD-FEC threshold of 1 × 10−3. At the same time, compared with the biGRU, the proposed 1D-CNN equalizer reduced the computational time consumption by 97% and the number of trainable parameters by 99.3%, with only a 0.5 dB Q-factor penalty. The results demonstrate that the proposed minimalist 1D-CNN equalizer holds significant promise for future practical deployments in optical wireless communication systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Novel Technology in Optical Communications)
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18 pages, 9098 KB  
Article
A Full-Duplex 60 GHz Transceiver with Digital Self-Interference Cancellation
by Yisheng Wang, Bharatha Kumar Thangarasu, Nagarajan Mahalingam, Kaixue Ma, Fanyi Meng, Yibo Huang and Kiat Seng Yeo
Electronics 2024, 13(3), 483; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics13030483 - 24 Jan 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2489
Abstract
This paper presents the design and measurement of an IEEE 802.11ad standard compatible RF transceiver for 60 GHz wireless communication systems. In addition to the traditional half-duplex (HD) mode, this work supports full-duplex (FD) operations to deliver better channel utilization and faster response [...] Read more.
This paper presents the design and measurement of an IEEE 802.11ad standard compatible RF transceiver for 60 GHz wireless communication systems. In addition to the traditional half-duplex (HD) mode, this work supports full-duplex (FD) operations to deliver better channel utilization and faster response times for the system. The isolation between the transmitter and receiver from the architecture design to system integration for FD operations has been fully considered. A digital self-interference cancellation (DSIC) is implemented in MATLAB to verify the FD performance. The super-heterodyne architecture with an intermediate frequency (IF) of 12 GHz is designed to suppress the image frequencies without using extra filters. A flexible phase-locked loop (PLL) synthesizer provides a local oscillator (LO) frequency with a 2 kHz resolution. Other than the time division duplex (TDD) mode used in the conventional 60 GHz system, a wide-bandwidth baseband digital variable-gain amplifier (DVGA) with a 3 dB bandwidth of more than 4 GHz also supports frequency division duplex (FDD) operations. The transceiver chip is fabricated using the Tower Jazz 0.18 µm SiGe BiCMOS process. With an on-board antenna, the transceiver covers all four channels in the 802.11ad standard, with MCS-12 (7.04 Gbps under 1.76 GSym/s and 16-QAM) under 1.5 m. In the proposed system design, the RF frontend-based self-interference (SI) suppression from the local transmitter to receiver LNA is around 54 dB. To achieve a practical FD application, the SI is further suppressed with the help of a digital SI compensation. The measured power consumption for the transmitter and receiver configurations are 194 mW and 231 mW, respectively, in HD mode and 398 mW for the FDD or FD operation mode. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue CMOS Integrated Circuits Design)
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14 pages, 10011 KB  
Article
Deep Learning Equalizer Connected with Viterbi-Viterbi Algorithm for PAM D-Band Radio over Fiber Link
by Tangyao Xie, Qiang Sheng and Jianguo Yu
Sensors 2023, 23(24), 9773; https://doi.org/10.3390/s23249773 - 12 Dec 2023
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 1871
Abstract
D-band (110–170 GHz) has been regarded as a potential candidate for the future 6G wireless network because of its large available bandwidth. At present, the lack of electrical amplifiers operating in the high frequency band and the strong nonlinear effect, i.e., the D-band, [...] Read more.
D-band (110–170 GHz) has been regarded as a potential candidate for the future 6G wireless network because of its large available bandwidth. At present, the lack of electrical amplifiers operating in the high frequency band and the strong nonlinear effect, i.e., the D-band, are still important problems. Therefore, effective methods to mitigate the nonlinear issue resulting from the ROF link are indispensable, among of which machine learning is considered the most effective paradigm to model the nonlinear behavior due to its nonlinear active function and structure. In order to reduce the computation amount and burden, a novel deep learning neural network equalizer connected with typical mathematical frequency offset estimation (FOE) and carrier phase recovery (CPR) algorithms is proposed. We implement D-band 45 Gbaud PAM-4 and 20 Gbaud PAM-8 ROF transmission simulations, and the simulation results show that the real value neural network (RVNN) equalizer connected with the Viterbi-Viterbi algorithm exhibits better compensation ability for nonlinear impairment, especially when dealing with serious inter-symbol interference and nonlinear effects. In our experiment, we employ coherent detection to further improve the receiver sensitivity, so a complex baseband signal after down conversion at the receiver is inherently produced. In this scenario, the complex value neural network (CVNN) and RVNN equalizer connected with the Viterbi-Viterbi algorithm have better BER performance with an error rate lower than the HD-FEC threshold of 3.8 × 10−3. Full article
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15 pages, 1712 KB  
Article
The Validity of Hawkin Dynamics Wireless Dual Force Plates for Measuring Countermovement Jump and Drop Jump Variables
by Andrew J. Badby, Peter D. Mundy, Paul Comfort, Jason P. Lake and John J. McMahon
Sensors 2023, 23(10), 4820; https://doi.org/10.3390/s23104820 - 17 May 2023
Cited by 46 | Viewed by 10873
Abstract
Force plate testing is becoming more commonplace in sport due to the advent of commercially available, portable, and affordable force plate systems (i.e., hardware and software). Following the validation of the Hawkin Dynamics Inc. (HD) proprietary software in recent literature, the aim of [...] Read more.
Force plate testing is becoming more commonplace in sport due to the advent of commercially available, portable, and affordable force plate systems (i.e., hardware and software). Following the validation of the Hawkin Dynamics Inc. (HD) proprietary software in recent literature, the aim of this study was to determine the concurrent validity of the HD wireless dual force plate hardware for assessing vertical jumps. During a single testing session, the HD force plates were placed directly atop two adjacent Advanced Mechanical Technology Inc. in-ground force plates (the “gold standard”) to simultaneously collect vertical ground reaction forces produced by 20 participants (27 ± 6 years, 85 ± 14 kg, 176.5 ± 9.23 cm) during the countermovement jump (CMJ) and drop jump (DJ) tests (1000 Hz). Agreement between force plate systems was determined via ordinary least products regression using bootstrapped 95% confidence intervals. No bias was present between the two force plate systems for any of the CMJ and DJ variables, except DJ peak braking force (proportional bias) and DJ peak braking power (fixed and proportional bias). The HD system may be considered a valid alternative to the industry gold standard for assessing vertical jumps because fixed or proportional bias was identified for none of the CMJ variables (n = 17) and only 2 out of 18 DJ variables. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Biosensors for Gait Measurements and Patient Rehabilitation)
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