LiFi – internet at the speed of light

LiFi, the term that somehow feel rhyming to word WiFi. WiFi is Wireless Fidelity, the same way LiFi is Light Fidelity. Yes, that’s true, LiFi technology will allow us to connect to the internet using light from lamps, streetlights or LED televisions. In addition to being cheaper, safer and faster than wifi, it does not need a router. All you need to do is point your mobile or tablet towards a light bulb to surf the web.

 

LiFi (light fidelity) is a bidirectional wireless system that transmits data via LED or infrared light. It was first unveiled in 2011 and, unlike wifi, which uses radio frequency, LiFi technology only needs a light source with a chip to transmit an internet signal through light waves.

This is an extraordinary advance over today’s wireless networks. LiFi multiplies the speed and bandwidth of WiFi, 3G and 4G. The latter have a limited capacity and become saturated when the number of users surfing increases, causing them to crash, reducing speeds and even interrupting the connection.

With LiFi, however, its band frequency of 200,000 GHz, versus the maximum 5 GHz of the WiFi, is 100 times faster and can transmit much more information per second. A 2017 study by the University of Eindhoven obtained a download rate of 42.8 Gbit/s with infrared light with a radius of 2.5 meters, when the best Wi-Fi would barely reach 300 Mbit/s.

 

It is currently being tested with LED luminaires in offices around the world and the aeronautical industry is already working on solutions to integrate it into commercial aircraft.

Airports, hospitals and city streets are other spaces where LiFi technology could become popular. The boom in mobile devices and the growing demand for higher bandwidth systems are expected to drive the development of this social technology in the next decade, as noted in the Global Market for LiFi Technology Analysis and Forecast 2018-2028.

 

LIFI VS. WIFI: WHO WINS WIRELESS NETWORKS CROWN?

LiFi technology is faster, cheaper and even more secure than wifi. Its main advantages include:

Faster: the current speed of wifi oscillates between 11 and 300 Mbit/s, while that of LiFi is also highly variable according to the last studies carried out. The most widely accepted speed is 10 Gbit/s, but it has been proven that it could reach 224 Gbit/s and that a 1.5 Gbit film could be downloaded in thousandths of a second.

Cheaper and more sustainable: it is up to 10 times cheaper than wifi, requires fewer components and uses less energy. All you have to do is turn on a light!

More accessible: any light fitting can easily be converted into an internet connection point, as only a simple LiFi emitter needs to be fitted.

More secure: light does not pass through walls like radio waves do, and this prevents intruders from intercepting LiFi communications through a wireless network.

More bandwidth: the light spectrum is 10,000 times wider than the radio spectrum, which increases the volume of data it can carry and transmit per second.

More reliable: LiFi transmits its signal without interruptions, making communication more stable than with wifi.

No interference: electronic light does not interfere with radio communications, interact with other systems or compromise transmissions from aircraft, ships, etc.

Wireless and invisible: LiFi takes advantage of lights and dispenses with the router, so it works without the need for cables. In addition, it can operate with infrared light, which is invisible to the human eye, or with visible LED light at very low intensity so as to avoid disturbance.

No saturation: internet connection via light could prevent the collapse of the radio spectrum which, according to LiFi’s inventor Harald Haas, could take place by 2025.

With the emergence and development of LiFi technology, many foreshadow the obsolescence of wifi and other wireless networks. We will have to wait a few more years to see if streetlights, in addition to illuminating our streets, will connect us to the internet at the speed of light.

henil

Henil is a post graduate in computer science. He is a techno-geek and likes to take on challenges and learn new technologies.
He wanted share an interesting topic to uplift the developer community.

Henil Mamaniya, Software Engineer at GlobalVox. | Posted on: February 1, 2022