Title: Eeng 360 1
1- Chapter 3
- Time Division Multiplexing
- The concept of Time Division Multiplexing
- TDM Examples
- Frame Synchronization
- TDM Hierarchy
- Packet Transmission
Huseyin Bilgekul Eeng360 Communication Systems
I Department of Electrical and Electronic
Engineering Eastern Mediterranean University
2Frequency Division Multiplex
- Separation of spectrum into smaller frequency
bands - Channel gets band of the spectrum for the whole
time - Advantages
- no dynamic coordination needed
- works also for analog signals
- Disadvantages
- waste of bandwidth if traffic distributed
unevenly - inflexible
- guard spaces
Channels ki
k3
k4
k5
k6
c
f
t
3Time Division Multiplex
- Channel gets the whole spectrum for a certain
amount of time - Advantages
- only one carrier in themedium at any time
- throughput high even for many users
- Disadvantages
- precise synchronization necessary
Channels ki
k2
k3
k4
k5
k6
k1
c
f
t
4Time and Frequency Division Multiplex
- A channel gets a certain frequency band for a
certain amount of time (e.g. GSM) - Advantages
- better protection against tapping
- protection against frequency selective
interference - higher data rates compared tocode multiplex
- Precise coordinationrequired
Channels ki
k2
k3
k4
k5
k6
k1
c
f
t
5Code Division Multiplex
Channels ki
k2
k3
k4
k5
k6
k1
- Each channel has unique code
- All channels use same spectrum at same time
- Advantages
- bandwidth efficient
- no coordination and synchronization
- good protection against interference
- Disadvantages
- lower user data rates
- more complex signal regeneration
- Implemented using spread spectrum technology
c
f
t
6 Two basic forms of multiplexing. (a)
Frequency-division multiplexing (FDM) (with
guardbands). (b) Time-division multiplexing
(TDM) no provision is made here for
synchronizing pulses.
Multiplexing
FDM
TDM
7 Composition of one frame of a multiplexed PAM
signal incorporating four voice-signals and a
synchronizing pulse.
TDM
8 Block diagram of FDM system, showing the
important constituents of the transmitter and
receiver.
Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM)
9Time Division Multiplexing
Definition Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) is
the time interleaving of samples from several
sources so that the information from these
sources can be transmitted serially over a single
communication channel.
- At the Transmitter
- Simultaneous transmission of several signals on a
time-sharing basis. - Each signal occupies its own distinct time slot,
using all frequencies, for the duration of the
transmission. - Slots may be permanently assigned on demand.
- At the Receiver
- Decommutator (sampler) has to be synchronized
with the incoming waveform ? Frame
Synchronization - Low pass filter
- ISI poor channel filtering
- Feedthrough of one channel's signal into another
channel -- Crosstalk
Applications of TDM Digital Telephony, Data
communications, Satellite Access, Cellular
radio.
10Time Division Multiplexing
Conceptual diagram of multiplexing-demultiplexing.
PAM TDM System
11Illustrating 4-Channel PAM TDM Multiplexing
12Digital Time Division Multiplexing
- Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) can be
accomplished at bit or byte (word) level. - Channhels having different data rates can also
be TDM multiplexed but must be interleaved
accordingly.
Digit Interleaving
Interleaving channel with different bit rates
WORD or Byte Interleaving
Interleaving channel with different bit rates
using two multiplexers
13Block diagram of TDM system.
PAM TDM System
A Typical Framing Structure for TDM
14Time Division Multiplexing
Frame structure of a certain TDM signal
Composite Signal Format
15Time Division Multiplexing
Pulse width of TDM PAM
Pulse width of TDM PCM
16Pulse Stuffing in TDM
- Stuff bits, which are dummy bits are inserted in
the TDM output data when the different inputs are
not completeley synchronized or the different
input rates are not related by a ratinal number.
17Pulse Stuffing in TDM
- Stuff bits, which are dummy bits are inserted in
the TDM output data when the different inputs are
not completeley synchronized or the different
input rates are not related by a ratinal number.
Multiplexing of two data streams with bit stuffing
18TDM Example (Multiplexing Analog and Digital)
- Source 1 2 kHz bandwidth.
- Source 2 4 kHz bandwidth.
- Source 3 2 kHz bandwidth.
- Source 4-11 Digital 7200 bits/sec.
16 ksam/s
64 kb/s
8x7.257.6 kb/sUse stuff bits to complete 7.2 to
8 kb/s.Now 8 and 64 rates are complete multiples
128 kb/s
19Frame Synchronization
- To sort and direct the received multiplexed data
to the appropriate output channel - Two ways to provide frame sync to the
demultiplexer circuit - - Over a separate channel
- - Deriving from the TDM signal itself
- Frame sync (unique k-bits) Information words of
an N-channel TDM system
20TDM PAM for Radio Telemetry
21CCITT Digital TDM Hierarchy
22Packet Transmission System
- TDM is Synchronous Transfer Mode (STM)
technology - - Data source is assigned a specific time
slot fixed data rate - - More efficient when sources have a fixed
data rate - - Inefficient to accommodate bursty data
source
Solution?
- Packet Transmission System
- - Partitions source data into data packets
(destination address, header) - - Efficiently assigns network resources when
the sources have bursty data - - Examples Internet TCP/IP technology and
the Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)
technology.
23Summary
- How information in analog waveforms can be
represented by digital signaling - How to compute the spectra for line codes
- How filtering of the digital signal, due to the
communication channel affects our ability to
recover the digital information at the receiver
ISI - How we can merge information from several
sources into one digital signal by using time
division multiplexing (TDM)