Title: Amplitude Modulation
1Chapter 2
2In this chapter you will learn..
- Definition of amplitude modulation
- Type of AM modulation
- Voltage and power analysis
- Time and frequency domain waveform
- Double side band, single side band and vestigial
side band - AM, DSB, and SSB modulator and demodulator
- Advantage and disadvantage of single side band
over double side band - Applications of AM
3Revision..
- Why do we need modulation?
- What are the types of modulation?
- What is AM?
- Why use AM?
4Introduction
- Amplitude Modulation is the process of changing
the Amplitude of a relatively high frequency
carrier signal in accordance with the amplitude
of the modulating signal (Information). - It is a low quality form of modulation and often
used for commercial broadcasting of both audio
and video signals. - AM Modulators are nonlinear devices with 2 inputs
and 1 output a single, high frequency of carrier
signal of constant-amplitude carrier signal and
the low frequency information signal. - The Output of AM Modulator is called Modulated
Wave and the shape of the Modulated Wave is
called AM Envelope.
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6An example of amplitude modulator circuit using a
transformer
7Types of AM
- 1) Double sideband full carrier (DSBFC)
- - Contains USB, LSB and Carrier
- 2) Double sideband suppressed carrier (DSBSC)
- - Contains only USB LSB
- - A circuit that produces DSBSC is
Balanced modulator - 3) Single sideband (SSB)
- - Contains either LSB or USB
- - Produce efficient system in term or
- power consumption and bandwidth
8AM Waveform
- Generally.
- Carrier Signal gt VCsin(2?fct)
- Modulating Signal gt Vmsin(2?fmt)
- Modulated Wave gt Vam(t)
- For Double sideband full carrier (DSBFC) AM
waveform consists of - DC voltage
- The carrier frequency fc
- Lower side frequency (fc - fm)
- Upper side frequency (fc fm)
- ? Known as AM envelope
- Then the AM waveform is shown in the next figure
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10- The AM waveform reaches maximum value when the
modulating signal amplitude is at maximum value. - The AM waveform reaches minimum value when the
modulating signal amplitude is at maximum
negative. - The repetition rate of the envelope is equal to
the frequency of the modulating signal, and the
shape of the envelope is identical to the shape
of the modulating signal.
11Frequency Spectrum
- The Frequency Spectrum of AM DBSFC is shown
below - Frequencies between and fc is called
lower side band (LSB) - Frequencies between fc and is called upper
side band (USB) - The Bandwidth of AM DBSFC is FB 2fm (max)
- AM signal does not contain modulating signal
frequency
Carrier
Lower side band
Upper side band
Amplitude
Upper side frequencies
Lower side frequencies
fcfm(max)
Frequency
fc-fm(max
fc
fc-fm(max)
fcfm(max)
12EXAMPLE 1
- AM DBSFC Modulator with a carrier frequency, fc
100 kHz and maximum modulating signal frequency,
fm of 10 kHz, determine the following - a. LSB USB
- b. Bandwidth
- c. Upper and Lower side frequencies if the
modulating signal is a single frequency of 5kHz. - d. Draw the output frequency spectrum
13Solution
Lower side band
Upper side band
Carrier
Frequency
100kHz
95kHz
105kHz
90kHz
110kHz
fc
fUSF
fc-fm(max
fcm(max
fLSF
14Modulation Output
- The output voltage of the modulated wave can be
described as below - 1. Vmax Vc Vusf Vlsf
-
- 2. - Vmax -(Vc Vusf Vlsf)
- 3. Vmin Vc -Vusf - Vlsf
- 4. - Vmin -Vc Vusf Vlsf
15Modulation Index
- Modulation index or coefficient is an indicator
to describe the amount of amplitude change
(modulation) present in an AM waveform (depth of
modulation), basically stated in form of
percentage.It is defined mathematically as - Where mmodulation coefficient (unitless)
- Em peak change in the amplitude of the output
waveform voltage - Ec peak change in the amplitude of the
unmodulated carrier voltage - Percent modulation
16- The relationship between Em , Ec , Vmax or Vmin
are shown in the diagram below
17- If the modulating signal is pure, single
frequency sine wave and the modulation process is
symmetrical, then -
- Em ½ (Vmax - Vmin) , and Ec ½
(Vmax Vmin) - Thus we can obtain M from
-
- Where Vmax Ec Em , and Vmin Ec - Em
- Since Em Eusf Elsf and Eusf Elsf ,
then - Where Eusf peak amplitude of the upper side
frequency (V) - Elsf peak amplitude of the lower side
frequency (V)
18- 50 Modulated Wave gt Em Ec / 2
- 100 Modulated Wave gt Em Ec (Vmin 0V)
19Voltage Distribution
- An unmodulated carrier (carrier signal) is
described by the following equation - -
- Vc (t) Ec sin (2?fct)
- The Amplitude of the AM Wave varies proportional
to the amplitude of the modulation signal, and
the maximum of the modulated wave equal to Ec
Em. - Thus the amplitude of the modulated wave can be
expressed as - - Vam(t) Ec Emsin(2?fmt) sin (2?fct)
- Ec Emsin(2?fmt) ? Amplitude of modulated wave.
- Em Peak Change in the Amplitude of Envelope
- fm Frequency of Modulating signal
20Voltage Modulation
- Since Em mEc and by developing the equation
for modulated wave, the final equation of the
modulated wave can be expressed in term of its
Carrier Component and Side Frequencies Component
(usf lsf)- - Where Ecsin(2?fct)? carrier signal (V)
-
- ? upper side frequency signal (V)
- ? lower side frequency signal (V)
- Carrier wave is 90 out of phase with the upper
and lower side frequencies - The upper and lower side frequencies are 180
out of phase with each other
21EXAMPLE 2
- Given the first input to AM Modulator is 500 kHz
Carrier signal with Amplitude of 20V. The second
input to AM Modulator is the 10kHz modulating
signal which cause a change in output signal of - 7.5 Vp. Determine the following -
- a. USF LSF
- b. Modulation Index or Coefficient, M
- c. Peak Amplitude of modulated carrier
- d. Upper Lower side frequency voltage
- e. Maximum Minimum Amplitude of the
- envelope, Vmax and Vmin
- f. Expression of Modulated Wave
- g. Output Spectrum Envelope
22Power Distribution
- The Average power dissipated in a load by carrier
signal (unmodulated carrier) is equal to the rms
carrier voltage squared divided by the load
resistance. It is expressed mathematically as
below - Pc (Ec)2 / 2R
- where Pc carrier power (W)
- Ec peak carrier voltage(V)
- R load resistance (Ohm)
- The total power, PT distribution during a
modulation process is affected by modulation
index (depth) and defined mathematically as - PT Pc1 (m2 /2)
- A power at sideband frequencies (LSF USF) is
defined as - Plsf Pusf m2 Pc/4
23- EXAMPLE 3
- For AM DSBFC wave with an unmodulated carrier
voltage, Vc 10 Vp , a load resistance of 10 ?
and modulation index of 1, determine the
following - a. Power of the carrier, and sideband
frequencies (Plsf Pusf) - b. Total Power of sideband, PT
- c. Draw Power Spectrum
24- EXAMPLE 4
- An AM Transmitter has a carrier power output
of 50W. Determine the total power that produced
80 modulation. -
- SOLUTION
- 1. Total Power is defined as
- PT Pc1 (m2 /2)
- Thus,
- PT (50 W)1 ((0.8)2 /2)
- 66 W
25Modulation of complex signal
- The modulating signal (information signal) is
often a complex form consists of many sinusoidal
wave with different Amplitude and Frequencies - v(t) V1sin(2?f1t) V2sin(2?f2t)
V3sin(2?f3t) - V4sin(2?f4t) V5sin(2?f5t) .
- Thus, after modulation, the output wave will be
in the form of - vam(t) Ecsin(2?fct) - ½ m1Ec
cos2?(fcfm1)t ½ - m1Ec cos2?(fc-fm1)t - ½ m2Ec
cos2?(fcfm2)t - ½ m2Ec cos2?(fc-fm2)t - ½
m3Ec cos2?(fcfm3)t - ½ m3 Ec cos2?(fc-fm3)t -
- The Total Modulation Index will be
- m sqrt (m12 m22 m32
mn2)
26- EXAMPLE
- For AM DSBFC transmitter with an unmodulated
carrier Power, Pc 100 W is modulated
simultaneously with 3 other modulating signals
with coefficient index of m1 0.2, m1 0.4, m1
0.5, - determine the following -
- a. Total Modulation Index or Coefficient
- b. Upper and Lower sideband power
- c. Total transmitted power
27AM Modulator
- Modulation circuit designs can be broadly divided
into low and high level. It is determined from
the location where modulation occurs in
transmitter. - The Low-Level AM Modulator
- Modulation takes place prior to the output
element of the final stage of the transmitter - It can be a Class A or Class AB or Class B
Amplifier. - It is an 2 input Modulator.
- It is also called as Emitter Modulator.
- The High-Level AM Modulator
- Modulation occurred in the final element of the
final stage where carrier signal is at maximum
amplitude - A Class C Amplifier which is also called
Collector Modulator because a modulating signal
is applied directly to the Modulator.
28Low-Level AM Modulator
- Advantages
- Less modulating signal power is required to
achieve high percentage of modulation - The advantage of using a linear RF amplifier is
that the smaller early stages can be modulated,
which only requires a small audio amplifier to
drive the modulator. - Disadvantages
- The great disadvantage of this system is that the
amplifier chain is less efficient, because it has
to be linear to preserve the modulation.
29Low-Level AM Modulator Voltage Gain
- The voltage gain for emitter modulator is
obtained from - Av Aq 1 m sin(2?fmt)
- Where Av amplifier voltage gain with modulation
- Aq amplifier quiescent (without modulation)
voltage gain with - Since sin(2?fmt) always goes from 1 to -1
- Av Aq(1 m)
- For 100 modulation (m1),
- Av(max) 2Aq
- Av(min) 0
30High-Level AM Modulator
- Advantages
- One advantage of using class C amplifiers in a
broadcast AM transmitter is that only the final
stage needs to be modulated, and that all the
earlier stages can be driven at a constant level.
- These class C stages will be able to generate the
drive for the final stage for a smaller DC power
input. - Disadvantages
- A large audio amplifier will be needed for the
modulation stage, at least equal to the power of
the transmitter output itself. - Traditionally the modulation is applied using an
audio transformer, and this can be bulky.
31AM Demodulator
- It is a circuit that accepts a modulated signal
and recovers the original modulating signal. - It is a key circuit in Receiver and also called
as DETECTOR. - The widely used AM Demodulator is DIODE DETECTOR,
by means of a diode rectifier, which may be
either a vacuum tube or a semiconductor diode. - The demodulator must meet three requirements
- It must be sensitive to the type of modulation
applied at the input, - it must be nonlinear
- it must provide filtering.
32- Remember that the AM waveform contains only three
RF frequencies the carrier frequency, the sum
frequency, and the difference frequency. - The modulating signal is contained in the
difference between these frequencies. - The vector addition of these frequencies
provides the modulation envelope which
approximates the original modulating waveform. - Thus it is this modulation envelope that the
DIODE DETECTORS use to reproduce the original
modulating frequencies.
33Diode rectifier
34AM Transmitters
Modulating signal driver amplifier
Modulating signal source
Preamplifier
Bandpass filter
AM modulator and output power amplifier
Linear intermediate power amplifier
Linear final power amplifier
Bandpass filter
Antenna
RF carrier oscillator
Buffer amplifier
Carrier driver
Low level
35AM Transmitters
Modulating signal driver amplifier
Modulating signal power amplifier
Modulating signal source
Preamplifier
Bandpass filter
AM modulator and output power amplifier
Matching network
Bandpass filter
Antenna
RF carrier oscillator
Carrier power amplifier
Buffer amplifier
Carrier driver
High level
36AM receiver Block Diagram
RF section
Bandpass Filter
Mixer/ converter section
Bandpass filter
IF section
Bandpass filter
AM detector
Bandpass filter
Audio section
37Receiver parameters
- Selectivity measure the ability of receiver to
accept a given band of frequencies and reject
others - Bandwidth improvement reducing bandwidth in
receiver is needed in order to reduce noise - Sensitivity threshold value-minimum RF signal
that can be detected by the receiver - Dynamic range input power range over which the
receiver is useful - Fidelity a measure of the ability of a
communication system to produce output signal
that is a replica of the original source
information
38Noncoherent Tuned Radio-Frequency Receiver
Antenna coupling network
RF amp.
RF amp.
RF amp.
- AM 535 1605 kHz
- Channel BW 10 kHz
- Difficult to tune
- Q remains constant ? filter bandwidth varies
Audio detector
Audio amplifier
Nonuniform selectivity
39Superheterodyne Receiver
RF-section
Mixer
Preselector
RF amplifier
oscillator
IF-section
Bandpass filter
IF amplifier
Audio detector
Audio amplifier
Fixed BPF at lower frequencies than RF
40What Heterodyning is
- To heterodyne means to mix to frequencies
together so as to produce a beat frequency,
namely the difference between the two. - Amplitude modulation is a heterodyne process the
information signal is mixed with the carrier to
produce the side-bands. - The side-bands occur at precisely the sum and
difference frequencies of the carrier and
information. - These are beat frequencies (normally the beat
frequency is associated with the lower side-band,
the difference between the two).
41What Superheterodyning is
- When you use the lower side-band (the difference
between the two frequencies), you are
superheterodyning. - Strictly speaking, the term superheterodyne
refers to creating a beat frequency that is lower
than the original signal. - Although we have used the example of amplitude
modulation side-bands as an example, we are not
talking about encoding information for
transmission. - What superheterodying does is to purposely mix in
another frequency in the receiver, so as to
reduce the signal frequency prior to processing.
Why and how this is done will be discussed below.
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43RF-section
- Preselector
- Broad-tuned bandpass filter with adjustable
center frequency that is tuned to the desired
frequency - Provide enough initial bandlimiting to prevent
unwanted radio frequency (image frequency) - Reduce noise bandwidth of the receiver and
initial step to reducing the whole bandwidth - RF amplifier
- Sets the signal threshold
- Advantages
- Greater gain, thus better sensitivity
- Improved image-frequency rejection
- Better signal to noise ratio
- Better selectivity
44RF-to-IF conversion
Receiver RF input (535 1605 kHz)
Channel 1
Channel 2
Channel 3
Preselector 535 - 565 kHz
565 kHz
535
545
555
550
540
560
Mixer
Oscillator 1005 kHz
470 kHz
440
450
460
445
455
465
high-side injection (fLO gt fRF)
Channel 1
Channel 3
Channel 2
IF filter 450 460 kHz
Channel 2
IF Filter output
450
460 kHz
455
45Envelope detection
46t1
t2
t3
t0
47Highest modulating frequency
The highest modulating signal frequency that can
be demodulated by a peak detector without
attenuation
RCtime constant (s)
for m70.7
48Single Side Band
- In conventional AM double-sideband system, the
carrier signal does not carry information the
information is contained in the sidebands. - Due to the nature of this system these are the
setbacks - Carrier power constitutes two-thirds or more of
the total transmitted power - Both sidebands contained the same information.
Transmitting both sidebands is redundant and thus
causes it to utilize twice as much bandwidth as
needed with single sideband system. - ?Conventional AM is both power and bandwidth
inefficient.
49AM Single Sideband Full Carrier (SSBFC)
- Carrier signal is transmitted at full power
- Only one of the sidebands is transmitted
- Require only half as much bandwidth as
conventional AM - However, this type of single sideband, the
information-carrying portion still utilize small
percentage from the total power transmitted.
50AM Single Sideband Suppressed Carrier (SSBSC)
- In this system, the carrier signal is totally
suppressed and one of the sideband removed - The sideband power makes up 100 of the total
transmitted power - As the results of SSBSC, the transmitted waveform
is not an envelope, it is simply a sine-wave
which frequency is either - fcfm or fc-fm
- depending on which sideband to be transmitted
51AM Single Sideband Reduced Carrier (SSBRC)
- The carrier amplitude is reduced to approximately
10 of its unmodulated amplitude. - One sideband is totally suppressed
- Sideband takes up to 96 of the total power
- Also known as
- reinserted carrier because carrier is suppressed
during modulation and reinserted at a reduced
amplitude - Exalted carrier because the carrier is elevated
in the receiver prior to demodulation
52AM Independent Sideband (ISB)
- A single carrier frequency is independently
modulated by two different information signals by
two different suppressed carrier modulators. - One modulator produced lower sideband and the
other one produced upper sideband. - The transmitted wave therefore consists of two
independent single sidebands which are
symmetrical about the carrier frequency. - Conserves both transmit power and bandwidth
53AM Vestigial Sideband (VSB)
- Carrier is transmitted with full power
- One complete sideband is also transmitted
- Only part of the second sideband is transmitted
- Lower modulating signal frequencies are
transmitted double sideband and the higher
modulating signals are transmitted single
sideband - Thus lower sideband experience 100 modulation
while the upper sideband cannot achieve more than
50 modulation
54Pc Vc2 /R
PT Pc1 (m2 /2)
Plsb (m2 Pc /4)
Pusb (m2 Pc /4)
DSBFC AM
USB
LSB
Pc Vc2 /R
SSBFC AM
PT Pc (m2 Pc /4)
Pusb (m2 Pc /4)
Plsb 0
USB
Pc 0
SSBSC AM
Pusb (m2 Pc /4) Pt
USB
Plsb 0
Pc (0.1Vc)2 /R
PT 0.01Pc m2 Pc /2
Plsb (m2 Pc /4)
Pusb (m2 Pc /4)
ISB AM
Ch A
Ch B
PT Pc m2 Pc /4 Plsb
Plsblt Pusb
Pusb (m2 Pc /4)
VSB AM
USB
LSB
55Mathematical Analysis
Constant modulating signal
Unmodulated carrier
- If the constant component is removed, then
- where
? upper side frequency signal (V) ? lower side
frequency signal (V)
56SSB Modulator
57Balanced Ring modulator
- Constructed with diodes and transformers
- Has 2 inputs carrier frequency and modulating
signal. Amplitude of carrier signal is grater
than modulating signal so that it controls the on
off of the four diode switches - D1 to D4 control whether the modulating signal is
passed from input transformer T1 to output
transformer T2 as is or with 180 phase shift.
T1
T2
58D1 on
T1
T2
Output signal modulating signal
Modulating signal input
-
D2 on
-
-
-
-
Carrier input
-
- When the polarity of carrier signal is as shown
above - D1 and D2 are forward biased ON
- D3 and D4 are reverse biased OFF
- ? The output signal at T2 is the modulating
signal without phase reversal
59T1
T2
-
D3on
-
Output signal modulating signal reversed
Modulating signal input
-
-
-
D4on
Carrier input
-
- When the polarity of the carrier is reversed
- D1 and D2 are reverse biased OFF
- D3 and D4 are forward biased ON
- ?Modulating signal undergoes 180 phase reversal
before reaching T2
60- Carrier current flows from its source to the
center taps of T1 and T2 where it splits and goes
in opposite directions through the upper and
lower halves of the transformer. - Thus their magnetic fields cancel in the
secondary windings of the transformer and the
carrier is suppressed - If the diodes are not perfectly matched or the
transformer are not exactly center tapped, the
circuit is not balanced and carrier is not
totally suppressed - Perfect balanced is impossible. Small amount of
carrier is always present? carrier leak - The amount of carrier suppression between 40dB
to 60dB
61DSBSC
62Single-Sideband Transmitter
- Filter method
- Phase-Shift Method
63SSB Transmitter Filter Method (3 Stages)
Balanced modulator
BPF1
?
Next slide
Carrier 100 kHz
Carrier 2 MHz
64SSB Transmitter Filter Method
17.9M
22.1M
17.895M
22.105M
2M
1.9M
2.1M
1.895M
2.105M
20M
BPF2
BPF3
Previous slide
Carrier 20 MHz
22.105M
22.1M
2.105M
2.1M
65Single conversion
- Need a multi-pole BFP filter with high quality
factor- difficult to construct - Tunable BPF filter in MHz range of frequencies
with passband of only 5MHz is not economic
66Single-Sideband Filter
- The quality factor (Q) of a single-sideband
filter can be obtained using the following
equation
- Q quality factor
- fc center of carrier frequency
- S dB level of unwanted sideband
- ?f frequency separation between the highest
lower sideband frequency and the lowest upper
sideband frequency
67Example
- Determine the quality factor (Q) necessary for a
single-sideband filter with a 1-MHz carrier
frequency, 80-dB unwanted sideband suppression
and the following frequency spectrum - Solution
Filter response
LSB
USB
0.997 MHz
1.003 MHz
1MHz ?f 200kHz
68Types of Filter
Surface acoustic wave filters
- Crystal filter
- Mechanical filter
69Single-Sideband Transmitter Phase-Shift Method
- Undesired sideband is cancelled at the modulator?
sharp filtering is unnecessary
70SSB Receiver
Noncoherent Beat Frequency Oscillator (BFO)
Receiver
71- RF local oscillator and beat frequency oscillator
are not synchronized with each other or the
oscillator in the transmitter - Output from IF amplifier is mixed (heterodyned)
with the output of BFO - The difference between IF and BFO signal is
information signal - Demodulation is done through several mixing and
filtering stages - Because the system is noncoherent, any different
between transmit and receive local oscillator
frequencies produces a frequency offset error in
the demodulated information signal
72Coherent BFO Receiver
73- LO and BFO frequencies are synchronized to the
carrier oscillator in the transmitter - Carrier recovery circuit a narrowband PLL that
tracks the pilot carrier in the composite SSBRC
received signal - The recovered signal is used to regenerate
coherent local oscillator frequencies in the
synthesizer - Synthesizer circuit produces a coherent RF local
oscillator and BFO frequency - Minor changes in the carrier frequency in the
transmitter are compensated for in the receiver,
thus eliminating offset error.
74SSB envelope detection
75Advantage Disadvantage of SSB
- ADVANTAGE OF SSB
- 1. SSB Amplitude Modulation is widely used by
military or radio amateurs in high-frequency
communication. It is because the bandwidth is the
same as bandwidth of - modulating signals.
- 2. Occupy one half of the spectrum space.
- 3. Efficient in terms of Power Usage
- 4. Less Noise on the signal
- DISADVANTAGE OF SSB
- 1. When no information or modulating signal
is present, - no RF signal is transmitted.
- 2. Most information signals transmitted by
SSB are not - pUre sine waves.
- 3. A voice signal will create a complex SSB
signal.
76Advantage Disadvantage of DSB
- Advantage of DSB
- Efficient in terms of Power Usage
- Modulation Efficiency is 100.
- Large Bandwidth
- Disadvantage of DSB
- Product Detector is required for demodulation of
DSB signal which is quite expensive. - Signal is rarely used because the signal is
difficult to recover at the receiver.
77AM Application
- The AM SSB is used in telephone systems and 2 way
radio and also in Military communication. - The AM DSB is used in FM and TV Broadcasting