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Green Optical Wireless Communications Facilitated by Photonic Power Harvesting "GreenCom"

Lead Research Organisation: University of Strathclyde
Department Name: Electronic and Electrical Engineering

Abstract

Today, mobile devices such as smartphones and wearables are usually powered by batteries, while a data connection to the internet is provided by radio frequency (RF) signals. The need for the daily charging of our mobile devices is considered a hurdle to scale the number of internet of things (IoT) connections and the large-scale introduction of new devices such as augmented and virtual reality (AR/VR) and industry 4.0 applications. At the same time, the demand for higher data rates and ultra-low latency data connections is set to increase in future sixth generation (6G) cellular networks. The GreenCom project will address both requirements jointly. We are developing optical wireless communication systems that achieve a 10 times higher data rate compared to current wireless systems, while the system harvests energy from the data link as well as the ambient light. The project will unlock new potentials for energy-efficient, ultra-high speed, and ultra-low latency wireless connectivity. The ambitious goals of this project are achieved through an international collaboration with the German Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems (ISE) who are world-leading in the development of energy efficient photovoltaic (PV) cells. ISE will develop unique semiconductor devices for combined power harvesting and data reception with unprecedented photovoltaic conversion efficiency and digital data reception capability. The University of Strathclyde's LiFi Research and Development Centre (LRDC) will develop the communication techniques, algorithms and protocols to facilitate optimum energy harvesting and ultra-high data rates and ultra-low latency in a multiuser environment. Scalability of both harvested power and data rates will be achieved by creating parallel transmission links separated in space and by means of different wavelengths. This partnership will create new applications in the fields of future sustainable mobile wireless communications (including optical wireless fronthaul, optical wireless backhaul) as well as smart wireless devices for the Internet of Things (IoT), the Internet of Senses and Industry 4.0 applications, and thereby lay the foundation for a new research area. Joint experimentation within the project will push the performance boundaries of optical wireless multiuser links and will set a new benchmark for simultaneous harvested power and transmitted data rates with 1 W harvested power at 10 m distance and 10 Gb/s link data rate, respectively.

Related Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Award Value
EP/X027511/1 01/03/2023 31/03/2024 £731,757
EP/X027511/2 Transfer EP/X027511/1 31/03/2024 31/12/2026 £576,959
 
Description This research area advances the current state-of-the-art by using optical signals to both transmit data and deliver power. This novel technology offers unique features, such as the ability to reduce the energy footprint of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) systems, thereby significantly enhancing the energy efficiency of optical wireless communication. Wireless data communication is expanding to optical wireless technologies to increase bandwidth, addressing the ever-growing demand for faster and more reliable mobile data. PV cells, as single devices, could simultaneously achieve multiple Gb/s wireless data transmission speeds while transferring energy between sender and receiver, thereby providing greater autonomy from traditional grid-based power sources. This versatile technology has a vast application space, ranging from powering Internet of Things (IoT) devices to supporting next-generation wireless networks in applications like fixed
wireless access (FWA).

We have for the first time experimentally validated multi-junction photonic power converters (PPCs) and photovoltaic (PV) cells and found that multi-junction devices provide higher power conversion efficiencies while also enabling higher data rates. PPCs outperform PV cells in terms of data rate.
Exploitation Route We are in the process of spinning out a new company, IOLux, at the University of Cambridge. The findings will form part of the technologies licensed to the company.
Sectors Aerospace

Defence and Marine

Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software)

Electronics

Energy

Environment

Healthcare

 
Description The technology has been demonstrated at Mobile World Congress 2025; and appeared on Spanish TV.
First Year Of Impact 2025
Impact Types Cultural