Li-Fi is a Wireless Technology which could be an alternative To Wi-Fi and it is going to be 100 times faster than current Wi-Fi technology
Professor Harald Haas from Edinburgh University invented a wireless
broadband technology in 2011 that uses LEDs to send data a hundred times
faster than today’s wi-fi networks. The system is also more energy
efficient than wi-fi and has 10,000 times the bandwidth. It is believed
that the Li-Fi wireless technology will compliment existing wi-fi
systems.
Li-Fi uses specialised LED driver chips.
These can dim and brighten LEDs encoding data much like a fast form of
Morse code. The entire process happens so fast that it is completely
imperceptible to humans.
At its simplest, a li-fi system consists
of an LED transmitter and solar panel receiver system. It might sound
basic, but it works, and it is fast. In the lab, li-fi has clocked in at
speeds of up to 224 gigabits per second. Back in the real world, data
speeds from a single 5Mw micro LED are around a still zippy 1-3 gigabit
per second.
It’s also secure. Wi-Fi signals can penetrate most
walls to pass beyond the boundary of your home or business and can be
intercepted. Light doesn’t penetrate walls so securing a Li-Fi network
can be as simple as drawing the blinds.
You’d be forgiven for thinking that staying online with Li-Fi would
need the lights left on. Haas’s Li-Fi system is so sensitive that he’s
demonstrated it working with LED bulbs dimmed to such low levels that
they appear turned off.
Commercial interest is mounting. Velmenni,
an Estonian company, has already developed a commercial version of the
technology. It was tested in an office, to allow workers to access
the internet and in an industrial space, where it provided a smart
lighting solution. The Velmenni version of Li-Fi has recorded
speeds of up to 1GBps. this is up to 100-times faster than the current crop of wi-fi technologies.
Wi-Fi uses unlicensed 2.4 GHz or 5 GHz radio spectrum. Li-Fi uses
visible light between 400 and 800 terahertz. As the number of Wi-Fi
devices proliferates, overcrowding could render Wi-Fi unusable. Li-Fi
could help ease this congestion.
But to use Li-Fi technology, Consumers must wait at least three to four years.
1 Comments
Li-Fi will again change the way we use internet
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