When the manned submersible dives into the deep sea, the acoustic wave which can penetrate the seawater becomes the only communication medium between the submersible and its mothership.
However, when the acoustic signal from the seabed reaches the surface, it becomes no longer clear due to the noise pollution caused by the mothership. The traditional solution is to keep the receiving transducer array on the surface away from the noise source, which is inconvenient and unsafe for the operation, especially under extreme sea conditions.
A research team led by Prof. ZHU Min from the Institute of Acoustics (IOA) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences proposed advanced signal processing schemes to overcome the deterioration of the signal quality and developed a multi-service communication system between the submersible and the mothership in the shipborne mode. The study was published in China Ocean Engineering.
In the development of the 7000m-depth manned submersible Jiaolong, Prof. ZHU’s team achieved a large-depth multi-service transmission involving images, speeches, data, and texts, by lowering a transducer array to decrease the noise level. While the submersible Deepsea Challenger driven by James Cameron dived to the depth of 11000m, the surface receiver was lowered from an inflatable boat to receive voice and short messages from the submersible.
When designing the communication system of 4500m-depth manned submersible Shenhai Yongshi, Prof. ZHU’s team adopted the shipborne mode and found that the in-band noise power was increased by 100 times compared with previous non-shipborne data.
To achieve high-speed communication in the low signal-to-noise ratio condition, researchers employed advanced code modulation and receiving algorithms, with the sparse adaptive turbo equalization algorithm based on turbo code proposed for the coherent transmission. In the scheme, the sparse decision-directed soft equalizer automatically adjusts the tap pattern and the tap weights according to the varying channel, while the turbo code significantly suppresses the error floor and decreases the turbo equalizer’s iteration times.
From the 4680 records of the coherent communication in the 28 dives up to the depth of 4534m in 2017, the failure rate of the coherent frames was 6.13%, where both synchronization errors and decoding errors were taken into account. The error-free transmissions of color images were achieved by the inter-frame error correcting code and the transmission duration of each image was less than 45 seconds.
As the next step, Prof. ZHU’s team will further research array signal processing and high spectral-efficiency acoustic communication technology to achieve the high-data-rate multi-service communication of the full ocean depth submersibles.
Funding for this research came from National Key Research and Development Program of China (No. 2016YFC0300300, 2016YFC0300605), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 61471351), and the National High Technology Research and Development Program of China (863 Program, No. 2009AA093301).
Figure.1 Installation of the shipborne array (Image by IOA)
Figure.2 In-situ images received by the mothership (Image by IOA)
Reference:
WU Yanbo, ZHU Min, LIANG Tao, WANG Wei, YANG Bo, ZHANG Linyuan, LI Xinguo, LIU Yeyao. Shipborne underwater acoustic communication system and sea trials with submersible Shenhai Yongshi. China Ocean Engineering, 32(6): 746–754, DOI:10.1007/s13344-018-0076-z.
Contact:
WANG Rongquan
Institute of Acoustics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 100190 Beijing, China
E-mail: media@mail.ioa.ac.cn