OFDM-Based Optical Spatial Modulation
Anil Yesilkaya, Rui Bian, Iman Tavakkolnia, Harald Haas

TL;DR
This paper investigates OFDM-based optical spatial modulation techniques, specifically FD-SM and TD-SM, demonstrating through experiments and simulations that TD-SM with MAP detection offers superior performance for optical wireless communications.
Contribution
It provides the first practical experimental comparison of FD-SM and TD-SM in optical wireless systems, highlighting the advantages of TD-SM with MAP detection.
Findings
TD-SM outperforms FD-SM in experimental tests.
MAP detection significantly enhances TD-SM performance.
Optical SM systems can benefit from combining OFDM with spatial modulation.
Abstract
Spatial modulation (SM) has proven to be a promising multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) technique which provides high energy efficiency and reduces system complexity. In SM, only one transmitter is active at any given time while the rest of them remain silent. The index of the active transmitter carries information. This spatial information is in addition to the data carried by the constellation symbols in the signal domain. Therefore, SM increases the transmission rate of the communication system compared to single-input-single-output and space-time block coding (STBC)-MIMO. For signal domain data encoding, orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) has been widely adopted. The key benefits in multi-carrier intensity-modulation and direct-detection (IM/DD) systems are: i) the capability to achieve high spectral efficiency and ii) the ability to effectively mitigate…
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