Rapid Prototyping of Standard-Compliant Visible Light Communications System
Ciprian George-Gavrincea, Jorge Baranda, Pol Henarejos

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a rapid, flexible prototype of a standard-compliant visible light communication system using off-the-shelf components, aiming to bridge the gap between research and industry adoption.
Contribution
It presents a low-cost, modular prototype based on IEEE 802.15.7 standard utilizing software defined radio, enabling quick development and potential for future application deployment.
Findings
Prototype successfully implements IEEE 802.15.7 standard
System demonstrates flexibility and modularity
Reduces development time for VLC applications
Abstract
This article describes the implementation of a prototype visible light communications system based on the IEEE 802.15.7 standard using low-cost commercial off-the-shelf analog devices. The aim of this article is to show that this standard provides a framework that could promote the introduction of applications into the market. Thus, these specifications could be further developed, reducing the gap between the industry and research communities. The implemented prototype makes use of software defined radio platforms to interface between the analog devices and the computer where the signal processing is performed. The use of this concept provides the system with enough flexibility and modularity to include new features in the prototype without requiring long development time.
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