Li-Fi: Wi-Fi
alternative uses light bulbs to transmit data 250 times faster than broadband
The fastest speed previously
reported was 3Gbit/s, achieved earlier this year by the Fraunhofer Heinrich
Hertz Institute in Germany. Chinese researchers also claimed this month to have
produced a 150Mbp/s connection, but some experts were doubtful without seeing
further proof.
The term Li-Fi was coined by
Edinburgh University's Prof Harald Haas during a TED talk in 2011 (see below
for video) though the technology is also known as visible light communications
(VLC). Many experts claim that Li-Fi represents the future of mobile internet
thanks to its reduced costs and greater efficiency compared to traditional
Wi-Fi.
Both Wi-Fi and Li-Fi transmit
data over the electromagnetic spectrum, but whereas Wi-Fi utilises radio waves,
Li-Fi uses visible light. This is a distinct advantage in that the visible
light is far more plentiful than the radio spectrum (10,000 times more in fact)
and can achieve far greater data density.
Li-Fi signals work by switching
bulbs on and off incredibly quickly – too quickly to be noticed by the human
eye. This most recent breakthrough builds upon this by using tiny micro-LED
bulbs to stream several lines of data in parallel.
The research was carried out by
the Ultra Parallel Visible Light Communications project, a joint venture
between the universities of Oxford, Cambridge, Edinburgh, St Andrews and
Strathclyde, and funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research
Council.
Existing LED light bulbs could be
converted to transmit Li-Fi signals with a single microchip, and the technology
would also be of use in situations where radio frequencies cannot be used for
fear of interfering with electronic Circuitry.
And although Li-Fi bulbs would
have to be kept on to transmit data, the bulbs could be dimmed to the point
that they were not visible to humans and yet still functional. One drawback is
that the data receiver would have to be in sight of the transmitter-bulb as
visible light does not penetrate solid materials.
The makers of Li-Fi note that
this quality might actually be an advantage in some scenarios, making Li-Fi
more secure than Wi-Fi with hackers unable to access unsecured internet
connections from out of sight of the transmitter.


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