Title: ANALOG MODULATION
1ANALOG MODULATION
2What is Angle Modulation?
- In angle modulation, information is embedded in
the angle of the carrier. - We define the angle of a modulated carrier by the
argument of...
3Phasor Form
- In the complex plane we have
t3
Phasor rotates with nonuniform speed
t1
t0
4Angular Velocity
- Since phase changes nonuniformly vs. time, we can
define a rate of change - This is what we know as frequency
5Instantaneous Frequency
- We are used to signals with constant carrier
frequency. There are cases where carrier
frequency itself changes with time. - We can therefor talk about instantaneous
frequency defined as
6Examples of Inst. Freq.
- Consider an AM signal
- Here, the instantaneous frequency is the
frequency itself, which is constant
7Impressing a message on the angle of carrier
- There are two ways to form a an angle modulated
signal. - Embed it in the phase of the carrier
- Phase Modulation(PM)
- Embed it in the frequency of the carrier
- Frequency Modulation(FM)
-
8Phase Modulation(PM)
- In PM, carrier angle changes linearly with the
message - Where
- 2pfcangle of unmodulated carrier
- kpphase sensitivity in radians/volt
9Frequency Modulation
- In FM, it is the instantaneous frequency that
varies linearly with message amplitude, i.e. - fi(t)fckfm(t)
10FM Signal
- We saw that I.F. is the derivative of the phase
- Therefore,
11FM for Tone Signals
- Consider a sinusoidal message
- The instantaneous frequency corresponding to its
FM version is
12Illustrating FM
Inst.frequency Moves with the Message amplitude
13Frequency Deviation
- Inst. frequency has upper and lower bounds given
by
14FM Modulation index
- The equivalent of AM modulation index is ? which
is also called deviation ratio. It quantifies how
much carrier frequency swings relative to message
bandwidth
15Examplecarrier swing
- A 100 MHz FM carrier is modulated by an audio
tone causing 20 KHz frequency deviation.
Determine the carrier siwng and highest and
lowest carrier frequencies
16Example deviation ratio
- What is the modulation index (or deviation ratio)
of an FM signal with carrier swing of 150 KHz
when the modulating signal is 15 KHz?
17Myth of FM
- Deriving FM bandwidth is a lot more involved than
AM - FM was initially thought to be a bandwidth
efficient communication because it was thought
that FM bandwidth is simply 2?f - By keeping frequency deviation low, we can use
arbitrary small bandwidth
18FM bandwidth
- Deriving FM bandwidth is a lot more involved than
AM and it can barely be derived for sinusoidal
message - There is a graphical way to illustrate FM
bandwidth
19Piece-wise approximation of baseband
- Look at the following representation
Baseband bandwidth W
1/2W
20Corresponding FM signal
- FM version of the above is an RF pulse for each
square pulse. - The frequency of the kth RF pulse at ttk is
given by the height of the pulse. i.e.
21Range of frequencies?
- We have a bunch of RF pulses each at a different
frequency. - Inst.freq corresponding to square pulses lie in
the following range
mmax
mmin
22A look at the spectrum
- We will have a series of RF pulses each at a
different frequency. The collective spectrum is a
bunch of sincs
highest
lowest
f
4W
23So what is the bandwidth?
- Measure the width from the first upper zero
crossing of the highest term to the first lower
zero crossing of the lowest term
24Closer look
- The highest sinc is located at fckfmp
- Each sinc is 1/2W wide. Therefore, their zero
crossing point is always 2W above the center of
the sinc.
f
2W
25Range of frequenices
- Above range lies
- ltfc-kfmp-2W,fckfmp2Wgt
26FM bandwidth
- The range just defined is one expression for FM
bandwidth. There are many more! - BFM4W2kfmp
- Using ??f/W with ?fkfmp
- BFM2(?2)W
27Carsons Rule
- A popular expression for FM bandwidth is Carsons
rule. It is a bit smaller than what we just saw - BFM2(?1)W
28Commercial FM
- Commercial FM broadcasting uses the following
parameters - Baseband15KHz
- Deviation ratio5
- Peak freq. Deviation75KHz
- BFM2(?1)W2x6x15180KHz
29Wideband vs. narrowband FM
- NBFM is defined by the condition
- ?fltltW BFM2W
- This is just like AM. No advantage here
- WBFM is defined by the condition
- ?fgtgtW BFM2 ?f
- This is what we have for a true FM signal
30Boundary between narrowband and wideband FM
- This distinction is controlled by ?
- If ?gt1 --gt WBFM
- If ?lt1--gtNBFM
- Needless to say there is no point for going with
NBFM because the signal looks and sounds more
like AM
31Commercial FM spectrum
- The FM landscape looks like this
25KHz guardband
carrier
FM station B
FM station A
FM station C
150 KHz
200 KHz
32 FM stereomultiplexing
- First, two channels are created (leftright) and
(left-right) - Leftright is useable by monaural receivers
-
33Subcarrier modulation
- The mono signal is left alone but the difference
channel is amplitude modulated with a 38 KHz
carrier
-
34Stereo signal
- Composite baseband signal is then frequency
modulated
Composite baseband
Left channel
FM transmitter
mono
Right channel
DSB-SC fsc38 kHz
-
freq divider
fsc 38KHz
35Stereo spectrum
- Baseband spectrum holds all the information. It
consists of composite baseband, pilot tone and
DSB-SC spectrum
36Stereo receiver
- First, FM is stripped, i.e. demodulated
- Second, composite baseband is lowpass filtered to
recover the leftright and in parallel amplitude
demodulated to recover the left-right signal
37Receiver diagram
Leftright
left
lowpass filter(15K)
coherent detector
15 KHz
right
-
bandpass at 38KHz
X
lowpass
38 KHz
19 KHz
FM receiver
PLL
X
lowepass
VCO
Divide 2
38Subsidiary communication authorization(SCA)
- It is possible to transmit special programming
,e.g. commercial-free music for banks, department
stores etc. embedded in the regular FM
programming - Such programming is frequency multiplexed on the
FM signal with a 67 KHz carrier and ?7.5 KHz
deviation
39SCA spectrum
Leftright
DSB-SC
SCA signal
38 KHz
19 KHz
59.5 67 74.5
f(KHz)
15 KHz
40FM receiver
- FM receiver is similar to the superhet layout
RF
mixer
limiter
Discrimi- nator
deemphasis
IF
LO
AF power amp
41Frequency demodulation
- Remember that message in an FM signal is in the
instantaneous frequency or equivalently
derivative of carrier angle
Do envelope detection on s(t)
42Receiver componentsRF amplifier
- AM may skip RF amp but FM requires it
- FM receivers are called upon to work with weak
signals (1?V or less as compared to 30 ?V for
AM) - An RF section is needed to bring up the signal to
at least 10 to 20 ?V before mixing
43Limiter
- A limiter is a circuit whose output is constant
for all input amplitudes above a threshold - Limiters function in an FM receiver is to remove
unwanted amplitude variations of the FM signal
Limiter
44Limiting and sensitivity
- A limiter needs about 1V of signal, called
quieting or threshold voltage, to begin limiting - When enough signal arrives at the receiver to
start limiting action, the set quiets, i.e.
background noise disappears - Sensitivity is the min. RF signal to produce a
specified level of quieting, normally
45Sensitivity example
- An FM receiver provides a voltage gain of
200,000(106dB) prior to its limiter. The
limiters quieting voltage is 200 mV. What is the
receivers sensitivity? - What we are really asking is the required signal
at RFs input to produce 200 mV at the output - 200 mV/200,000 1?V-gtsensitivity
46Discriminator
- The heart of FM is this relationship
- What we need is a device that linearly follows
inst. frequency
fi(t)fckfm(t)
fcarrier is at the IF frequency Of 10.7 MHz
Disc.output
-75 KHz
75 KHz
f
fcarrier
Deviation limits
47Examples of discriminators
- Slope detector - simple LC tank circuit operated
at its most linear response curve
This setup turns an FM signal into an AM
48Phase-Locked Loop
- PLLs are increasingly used as FM demodulators
and appear at IF output
Output proportional to Difference between fin and
fvco
Phase comparator
Lowpass filter
fin
Error signal
Control signalconstant When finfvco
VCO
VCO input
fvco
49PLL states
- Free-running
- If the input and VCO frequency are too far apart,
PLL free-runs - Capture
- Once VCO closes in on the input frequency, PLL
is said to be in the tracking or capture mode - Locked or tracking
- Can stay locked over a wider range than was
necessary for capture
50PLL example
- VCO free-runs at 10 MHZ. VCO does not change
frequency until the input is within 50 KHZ. - In the tracking mode, VCO follows the input to
200 KHz of 10 MHz before losing lock. What is
the lock and capture range? - Capture range 2x50KHz100 KHz
- Lock range2x200 KHz400 KHz
51Advantages of PLL
- If there is a carrier center frequency or LO
frequency drift, conventional detectors will be
untuned - PLL, on the other hand, can correct itself. PLLs
need no tuned circuits
If fc drifts detector has no way of correcting
itself
Slope detector
52Zero crossing detector
FM input
more frequent ZCs means higher inst freq in turn
means Larger message amplitudes
Hard limiter
ZC detector
multiV
Averaging circuit
53NOISE IN ANALOG MODULATION
54Receiver Model
- The objective here is to establish a relationship
between input and and output SNR of an AM receiver
Modulated signal s(t)l
BPF
detector
output
BT2W
filter
Noise n(t)
fc
-fc
55Establishing a reference SNR
- Define channel SNR measured at receiver input
- (SNR)cavg. power of modulated signal/
- avg. noise power in the message bandwidth
56Noise in DSB-SC Receiver
- Tuner plus coherent detection
BPF
LPF
DSB-SC
x(t)
v(t)
s(t)
n(t)
Cos(2pfct)
57Receiver input SNR
- Also defined as channel SNR
No/2
Flat noise spectrumwhite noise
Noise powerhatched area
W
-W
58Output SNR
- Carrying signal and noise through the rest of the
receiver, it can be shown that output SNR comes
out to be equal to the input. Hence - Therefore, any reduction in input SNR is linearly
reflected in the output
59(SNR)o for DSB-AM
- Following a similar approach,
- Best case is achieved for 100 modulation index
which, for tone modulation, is only 1/3
60DSB-AM and DSB-SC noise performance
- An AM system using envelope detection needs 3
times as much power to achieve the same output
SNR as a suppressed carrier AM with coherent
detection - This is a result similar to power efficiency of
the two schemes
61Threshold effect-AM
- In DSB-AM (not DSB-SC) there is a phenomenon
called threshold effect - This means that there is a massive drop in output
SNR if input SNR drops below a threshold - For DSB-AM with envelope detection, this
threshold is about 6.6 dB
62NOISE IN ANALOG MODULATION
63Receiver model
- Noisy FM signal at BPFs output is
FM s(t)
BFP
Limiter
FM detector
LPF (W)
n(t)
64Phasor model
- We can see the effect of noise graphically
?(t)-?(t)
noise
??(t)
Received signal
FM signal
?(t)
?(t)
reference
The angle FM detector will extract
65Small noise
- For small noise, it can be approximated that the
noise inflicted phase error is - ??r/AcSin(????
- So the angle available to the FM detector is ???
- FM Detector computes the derivative of this
angle. It will then follow that...
66FM SNR for tone modulation
- Skipping further detail, we can show that for
tone modulation, we have the following ratio - SNR rises as power of 2 of bandwidth e.g.
doubling deviation ratio quadruples the SNR
Bandwidth-SNR exchange
67Comparison with AM
- In DSB-SC the ratio was 1 regardless.
- For commercial FM, ?5. Therefore,
- (SNR)o/(SNR)c(1.5)x2537.5
- Compare this with just 1 for AM
68Capture effect in FM
- An FM receiver locks on to the stronger of two
received signals of the same frequency and
suppresses the weaker one - Capture ratio is the necessary difference(in dB)
between the two signals for capture effect to go
into action - Typical number for capture ratio is 1 dB
69Normalized transmission bandwidth
- With all these bandwidths numbers, it is good to
have a normalized quantity. - Define
- normalized bandwidthBnBT/W
- Where W is the baseband bandwidth
70Examples of Bn
- For AM
- BnBT/W2W/W2
- For FM
- BnBT/W2? to 3?
- For ?5 in commercial FM, this is a very large
expenditure in bandwidth which is rewarded in
increased SNR
71Noise/bandwidth summary
72Noise/bandwidth summary
- DSB-SC/coherent detection
- (SNR)o(SNR)c
- Bn2
- SSB
- (SNR)o(SNR)c
- Bn1
73Noise/bandwidth summary
- FM-tone modulation and ?5
- (SNR)o1.5 ?2(SNR)c37.5 (SNR)c
- Bn16 for ?5
74Preemphasis and deemphasis
- High pitched sounds are generally of lower
amplitude than bass. In FM lower amplitudes means
lower frequency deviation hence lower SNR. - Preemphasis is a technique where high frequency
components are amplified before modulation - Deemphasis network returns the baseband to its
original form
75Pre/deemphasis response
- Flat up to 500Hz, rises from 500-15000 Hz
17dB
Deemphasis circuit Is between the detector And
the audio amplifier
preemphasis
3dB
-3dB
deemphasis
-17dB
500 Hz 2120 Hz 15KHz
76Suggested homework