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Visible Light Communication for Underwater Applications: Principles, Challenges, and Future Prospects

DOAJ
Authors: Vindula L. Jayaweera, Chamodi Peiris, Dhanushika Darshani, Sampath Edirisinghe, Nishan Dharmaweera, Uditha Wijewardhana

Year

2025

Paper ID

22394

Status

Peer-reviewed

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

162

Citations

N/A

Abstract

Underwater wireless communications face significant challenges due to high attenuation, turbulence, and water turbidity. Traditional methods like acoustic and radio frequency (RF) communication suffer from low data rates (<100 kbps), high latency (>1 s), and limited transmission distances (<10 km).Visible Light Communication (VLC) emerges as a promising alternative, offering high-speed data transmission (up to 5 Gbps), low latency (<1 ms), and immunity to electromagnetic interference. This paper provides an in-depth review of underwater VLC, covering fundamental principles, environmental factors (scattering, absorption), and dynamic water properties. We analyze modulation techniques, including adaptive and hybrid schemes (QAM-OFDM achieving 4.92 Gbps over 1.5 m), and demonstrate their superiority over conventional methods. Practical applications—underwater exploration, autonomous vehicle control, and environmental monitoring—are discussed alongside security challenges. Key findings highlight UVLC’s ability to overcome traditional limitations, with experimental results showing 500 Mbps over 150 m using PAM4 modulation. Future research directions include integrating quantum communication and Reconfigurable Intelligent Surfaces (RISs) to further enhance performance, with simulations projecting 40% improved spectral efficiency in turbulent conditions.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Quantum Simulation research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2025 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • Underwater wireless communications face significant challenges due to high attenuation, turbulence, and water turbidity.

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