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Underwater marine and freshwater environments are vast and mysterious, but our ability to explore them is limited by the inflexibility and inconvenience of monitoring systems. To overcome this problem, in this work, we present a proof-of-concept deployment of a real-time Internet of Underwater Things (IoUT) using blue light-emitting-diode-based visible light communication (VLC). Pulse-amplitude modulation with four levels is employed. To relax the focus point and increase the received power, four avalanche photodiodes (APDs) are adopted. Moreover, to reduce the error rate, the convolutional code with constraint-7 is used, which is the simplest to implement. Encoding and decoding are implemented by a field-programmable gate array. The results are verified by experimental demonstration. A baud rate of 9600 is used, but, unfortunately, we only have a 2 m long tank. System performance is improved when the number of APDs is increased; we investigated the effects of up to four APDs. Notably, bit error-free data transmission can be achieved. Additionally, this method would make underwater monitoring very conventional and dependable, and low-cost real-time monitoring would be possible, with data shown on the Grafana dashboard tool.
Details
Freshwater environments;
Random access memory;
Underwater communication;
Decoding;
Light emitting diodes;
Systems design;
Avalanche diodes;
Data transmission;
Transmitters;
Photodiodes;
Codes;
Field programmable gate arrays;
Monitoring;
Monitoring systems;
Internet of Things;
Low cost;
Artificial intelligence;
Optical wireless;
Signal to noise ratio;
Error correction & detection;
Underwater exploration;
Sensors;
Algorithms;
Communications systems;
Real time;
Pulse amplitude modulation
; Wannaree, Wongtrairat 2 1 Department of Electronics and Telecommunication Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Rajamangala University of Technology Isan, Khon Kaen Campus, Khon Kaen 40000, Thailand
2 Department of Electronics Engineering, Faculty of Engineering and Technology, Rajamangala University of Technology Isan, Nakornratchasrima 30000, Thailand; [email protected]