CHAPTER 3 - Analog Modulation

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CHAPTER 3: Analog

Modulation
Topics Covered in Chapter 3
Part 1: Amplitude Modulation
1. Mathematical definition
2. Bandwidth and Modulation index
3. Power
4. AM modulator
5. AM demodulator

Part 2: Angle Modulation

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INTRODUCTION
There are 3 properties of an analog signal that can
be varied (modulated) by information signal
amplitude, frequency and phase
Amplitude modulation varies the amplitude of the
carrier signal in accordance with the amplitude of
the message signal.
Frequency and phase modulation are both forms of
angle modulation where the frequency or phase is
varied according to the message signal.
Both are often referred as frequency modulation
although there are actual distinctions between the
two because changing the frequency changes the
phase and vice versa.
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MODULATION
In radio communication, modulation means combining
signals, i.e. the message signal which we want to
transmit with radio frequency (carrier) signal.
Modulation is the process of modifying the
characteristic of one signal (carrier) in accordance with
some characteristic of another signal (message).
The information/message signal is usually known as
the modulating signal and the higher frequency signal
which is being modulated is called the carrier.
The carrier frequency is usually higher than the highest
frequency of the information signal to be transmitted.

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PART 1: AMPLITUDE
MODULATION
AMPLITUDE MODULATION
Amplitude modulation is the process of changing
the amplitude of the carrier frequency in
proportion with the instantaneous value of the
modulation signal.
Relatively inexpensive, low-quality form of
modulation that is used for commercial
broadcasting of both audio and video signal.
Also used in two-way mobile radio communications
i.e. citizen band (CB) radio.
AM modulators are nonlinear devices 2 input
and 1 output, modulating signal and carrier signal.

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Modulating signal will modulate the carrier signal
so that the information contains in the modulating
signal can be efficiently radiated by an antenna
through free space at radio frequency (RF).
Modulating signal (), may contains a single
frequency or multiple frequency such as human
voice.
There are several types of amplitude modulation,
most commonly used is amplitude modulation
double sideband full carrier (AM DSBFC) or simply
known as amplitude modulation (AM).
Other types of amplitude modulation are DSB-SC,
DSB-RC, SSB, VSB.
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Advantages of AM
simple
effective
inexpensive
AM is used in AM radio broadcast, TV, aircraft, CB radio, computer
modem.

Disadvantages of AM
wasted power in carrier (no info carried) not efficient
even when m=1, 2/3 of PT is still in PC.

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Information,

vm MODULATOR
v2 v1 sin 2f ct

Carrier Signal

Vc

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MATHEMATICAL REPRESENTATION OF AM
Let the carrier signal, (), and the modulating signal, be
() = sin 2 (2.1)
() = sin 2 (2.2)
Modulating signal uses the peak value of the carrier as a reference
point, i.e. modulating signal value adds to or subtract from the peak
value of the carrier.
= + ()
= + sin 2 (2.3)
This signal is known as the envelope of the modulated wave, .
The instantaneous value of the modulated wave is
= ( + 2 ) sin 2
= sin 2 + 2 sin 2
(2.4)

where cos( A B) cos( A B)


sin A sin B
2 2
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Thus

= sin 2 + cos 2( ) cos 2( + )
2 2

carrier LSB USB

modulated wave does not contain frequency


modulation
the effect of modulation is to translate modulating signal in
the frequency domain so that it is reflected symmetrically
about the carrier frequency

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AM SIGNAL WITH THE ENVELOPE

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AM FREQUENCY SPECTRUM & BANDWIDTH
AM modulators are non-linear device, non-linear mixing occurs
Output envelope is complex wave made up of dc voltage, the carrier
frequency and the sum (fm + fc) and difference (fc fm) frequencies
Sum and difference frequency are displaced from the carrier frequency
by an amount equal to the modulating signal frequency
Therefore, AM spectrum contains frequency component spaced fm Hz on
either side of the carrier
Figure 2.3 shows the frequency spectrum of AM DSBFC wave

fc-fm fC fc+fm fc-fm fc fc+f


m
2fm
Figure 2.3: Frequency spectrum for a. single frequency b. complex signal like music
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Bandwidth = Maximum freq. - minimum freq.
BW = (fc+fm) (fc fm)
= fc + fm fc + fm (2.6)
= 2fm
Several baseband signals may be transmitted simultaneously on
different carrier frequencies (multiplexing) provided the sidebands
do no overlap.
The information in the baseband (information) signal is duplicated in
the LSB and USB and the carrier conveys no information.

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MODULATION INDEX
Modulation index, is merely defined as a parameter, which
determines the amount of modulation.
For proper AM to occur

Modulation index,

=

Or in percentage ,

= 100%

By this definition, we could distinguished three different
types of amplitude modulation.
Under modulated AM for < 1
Ideal AM for = 1
Over modulated AM for > 1

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< 1 : under modulation
<
signal strength obtained at the receiver is not exactly the same as
the signal strength at the transmitter.
No distortion to the signal, just reduced signal strength.

Figure 2.4 (a) m < 1, under modulation.

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= 1 : ideal modulation
=
will produce greatest output at the receiver without distortion
maximum info signal amplitude is transmitted
more info signal power is transmitted producing stronger, more
intelligible signal
hard to achieve especially when the modulating signal amplitude
varies randomly over a wide range only the peak of the signal will
produce 100% modulation.

Figure 2.4(b) m = 1, ideal modulation.

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m > 1 : over modulation
Vm > Vc
cause distortion
negative peaks have been clipped off.
The original shape of the signal is destroyed.

Figure 2.4(c) m > 1, over modulated AM

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Modulation index can be calculated directly from the AM
wave. Figure 2.5(a) shows the measurement of modulation
index using the minimum and maximum value while Figure
2.5(b) using peak-to-peak value.
Vm Vmax Vc
m
15

10
Vm Vc Vc
Vmax Vmax Vc Vc Vmin
5 Vmin
Vc Vmax Vmin
Vm
Amplitude (V)

0
2 (2.9)
V Vmin
Vc max
-5

-10
2

-15
Figure 2.5(a) Measuring
0 0.5
time
1
x 10
1.5
-3 m using max and min
value
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15

10
Vmax Vmin
m
Vmax p p Vmax Vmin
5
Vmin p p Vmax p p Vmin p p
m
Amplitude (V)

0
Vmax p p Vmin p p

-5
(2.10)

-10

Figure 2.5(b)
Measuring m using
-15
0 0.5 1 1.5
time
x 10
-3
peak-to-peak value

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From equation
Vm V
v AM Vc sin 2f c t cos 2 ( f c f m )t m cos 2 ( f c f m )t
2 2
We know that = / , =
Thus

mVc mVc
vAM Vc sin 2 f ct cos 2 ( f c f m )t cos 2 ( f c f m )t (2.11)
2 2
Its Fourier transform then

= + +
2

+ + +
4

+ + + + +
4
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Example 2.1
A carrier signal with a peak voltage of 2.0V is
amplitude modulated with a 10kHz sine wave. The
modulation voltage has an effective value of 750mV.
Compute the following:
The percentage of modulation index, M
The instantaneous voltage of the positive and negative
envelope when the 10kHz sine has completed 68s of its
cycle.
Illustrate the resulting AM waveform

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Power
The term R correspond to the fact that antenna (which is a
load) will have its own impedance and dissipate power for a
resistor is 2
Vrms V2
P (2.21)
R 2R
In the previous discussion, we assume the impedance of the
antenna is unity (R = 1).
From the sideband voltage VLSB VUSB mVC
2
VC2 m 2VC2 m 2VC2
PT
2R 4 2R 4 2R
m2 m2
PT PC PC PC
4 4
m2
PT PC 1 (2.22)
2
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Upper and lower sidebands power are equal, therefore
2
Vm

PLSB PUSB 2
2R
2
mVc

2
2R
m 2 Vc 2 m 2Vc 2

4 2R 8R

If m=1
3 2
PT PC , PC PT
2 3
1 1
Psidebands PT , PLSB PUSB PT
3 6
for m < 1 , PLSB + PUSB are even less !!

In practice, carrier signal will be modulated by several signals


simultaneously. The total modulation index or effective
modulation index has to be calculated.
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Example 2.2
A 400 W carrier is modulated to a depth of 75%.
Calculate the total power in the modulated wave

Solution

m2 0.752
PT PC 1 400 1
2 2
512.5W

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Example 2.3
An AM broadcast stations peak carrier voltage of 2
kV has been amplitude modulated to an index of
75% with a 2 kHz test tone. The station broadcast
frequency is 810 kHz. Compute the following:
The lower and upper sidebands frequencies, fLSB and fUSB
The peak modulation voltage, Vm
The peak lower and upper sideband voltages, VLSB and VUSB
The maximum signal amplitude, Vmax

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Example 2.4
A spectrum analyzer with an input impedance of 50 is
used to measure the power spectrum of an AM signal at
the output of a preamplifier circuit. The AM signal has
been modulated with a sine wave. The effective power PC
is 745 mW, and each sideband, PUSB and PLSB is 125 mW.
Compute the following:
The total effective power, PT
The peak carrier voltage, VC
The modulation index, m, and the percentage of modulation
index M
The modulation voltage Vm
The lower and upper sideband voltages, VLSB and VUSB
Sketch the waveform that you would see with an
oscilloscope if it were placed in parallel with the spectrum
analyzer
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MODULATION BY SEVERAL SINE WAVES
In practice, modulation of a carrier by a several
sine waves simultaneously is the rule rather than
exception.
To calculate the resulting power
Let V1, V2 and V3 etc. be the amplitude of the information
signals, the resultant voltages, VT becomes
(2.24)

VT V12 V22 V32 .........


dividing both sides by VC
2 2 2 (2.25)
VT V1 V2 V3
..........
VC VC VC VC
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m2
PT PC 1
that is 2
m2
mT m m2 m3 ..........
2 2 2 R I C R 1
2 2
IT (2.27)
1
2
mT 2 m2
PT PC 1 (2.26) IT
1
2 IC 2
IT mT 2
or 1
The equation of the total IC 2
current and carrier current is
derived from the total power
equation :-

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Example 2.5
The antenna of an AM transmitter is 8 A when only
the carrier is sent, but it increases to 8.93 A when
the carrier is modulated by a single sine wave. Find
the percentage of modulation and the antenna
current when the percentage of modulation changes
to 80%.

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OTHER TYPES OF AMPLITUDE MODULATION
DOUBLE SIDEBAND SUPPRESSED CARRIER (DSBSC)

DOUBLE SIDEBAND REDUCED CARRIER (DSB RC)

SINGLE SIDEBAND (SSB)

VESTIGIAL SIDEBAND (VSB)

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Power Content of DSB SC Signals
We know
1 T2 2
P lim vDSBSC t dt
T T T 2

1 T2 2 2
lim Vc vm t cos 2 f c t dt
T T T 2

Vc2 1 T2 2
lim vm t 1 cos 4 f c t dt
2 T T 2
T

Vc2
Pm
2 (2.44)

where Pm indicates the power in the signal vm(t).


The last step follows from the fact that vm2(t) is a slowly varying
signal and when multiplied by cos (4fct), which is a high
frequency sinusoid, the result is a high frequency sinusoid with a
slow varying enveloped.
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Figure 2.32(a) A time-
domain display of a
DSB SC AM signal (b) A
frequency-domain
display of a DSB AM
signal
Advantages of DSBSC compared to AM
power conservation can be allocated to both sidebands
longer distance
easy to generate

Disadvantages of DSBSC compared to AM


Rarely used because the signal is difficult to recover at the
receiver requires carrier reinsertion complex circuitry
Take the same BW as in AM not efficient

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SSB
In DSB, info is transmitted twice, once in each
sideband
One sideband may be suppressed SSBSC / SSB
In SSB, when no info or modulating signal is
present, no RF signal is transmitted
In a standard AM transmitter, carrier is still
transmitted even though it may not be
modulated
Refer Figure 2.36 and 2.37

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Figure 2.36 SSB
signal with carrier
Figure 2.37 SSB
signal without
carrier
Example 2.9
For a 100W total available power in the sidebands, compare
the power in the sidebands when the modulation is standard
AM with M = 100%, vs a SC design where 90% of the carrier
power is suppressed. How many times greater is the sideband
power in the suppressed carrier case?

For m = 1, PT = PC(1 + m/2) = PC(3/2)


PC = 66.7W & PSB =100 66.7 =33.3W
DSB-SC PC = 66.7W x 0.9 = 60.0W (reduced)
New PSB =33.3W +60.0W = 93.3W
The power ratio = PSBnew/ PSBold = 2.8
In dB = 4.5 dB
Means in AM info transmitted only 33.3% but in DSB-SC is 93.3%.

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Example 2.10
A 500 W DSB-SC system with 100% modulation
suppresses 50% of the carrier and the suppressed
carrier power goes to the sidebands. How much
power is in the sidebands and how much is in the
carrier? By how many dB has the sideband power
increased?
With 100% modulation, final Pc = 500W and total Psb =
250W, if Pc is diverted to SB, the new Pc = 500 250 =
250W and the new Psb = 250 +250 = 500W. The
increase in power is 500/250 = 2 = 3dB.

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Advantages of SSB compared to AM
Power conservation
all the power previously devoted to the carrier and other
sideband can be channeled into the signal sideband producing
stronger signal, farther and more reliable at greater distance
BW conservation
spectrum space occupied by the SSB signal is only half of AM and
DSB allow more signal to be transmitted in the same
frequency range less interference between signals
Less fading
carrier and sidebands (on separate freq) may reach the RX
shifted in time and phase
they may reach the RX in such a way that they cancel out one
another rather than adding up to the desired AM wave
in SSB : fading does not occur
Noise Reduction
Because of the less BW less noise

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Disadvantages of SSB compared to AM

Complex Rx can use envelope detection technique


unless carrier is regenerated adds to cost,
complexity and size
Tuning difficulties
Requires more complex and precise tuning need of more
accurate, complex and expensive tuning circuit

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VESTIGIAL SIDEBAND (VSB)
Carrier and 1 complete sideband are transmitted,
but only small (vestige) part of the second
sideband is transmitted
Used in TV broadcasting
TV signal consists of the picture (video) signal and
the audio signal which have different carrier freq
Audio carrier is frequency modulated
Picture carrier is amplitude modulated
Picture info typically contains freq as high as 4.2
MHz 8.4 if fully DSB
excessive amount of BW wasteful because not all of it
is required to reliably transmit a TV signal
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Advantages of VSB compared to SSB
Design of sideband filter is simplified no need of sharp cut
off filter
Improved low-frequency response
Factors to be considered when choosing AM
BW allocation
Power
Signal-to-noise ratio
Complexity
Cost
Distance

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FIGURE 2.38 Single-banded systems: (a) conventional DSBFC AM;
(b) full-carrier single sideband; (c) suppressed-carrier single
sideband;
Tomasi
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FIGURE 2.38 Single-banded systems: (d) reduced-carrier
single sideband; (e) independent sideband; (f) vestigial
sideband
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AM MODULATOR CIRCUIT
Amplitude modulation voltage is produced by a
circuit that can multiply the carrier by the
modulating signal and then add the carrier.
Product of the carrier and modulating signal can be
generated by applying both signals to a nonlinear
component such as a diode.
Intermodulation products, third, fourth, and
higher-order harmonics, are produced by diodes
and transistors.
Tuned circuits filter out the modulating signal and
carrier harmonics, leaving only carrier and
sidebands.
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AM Circuit Block Diagram

Analog
multiplier Summer
Modulating
signal
VAM

Carrier
VCsin2fct

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There are two types of amplitude modulators.
They are low-level and high-level modulators.

Low-level modulators generate AM with small


power signals and must be amplified before
transmission.

High-level modulators produce AM at high power


level, usually in the final amplifier stage of a
transmitter.

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Low-Level Amplitude Modulators

1. Diode Modulator with Tuned Circuit Filter

R1
Modulating
Signal, fm
R2 Diode
Carrier, fc AM

i LC tank circuit
R3 C L Resonant at the carrier
frequency

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A simple diode modulator consists of
resistive mixing network, diode
rectifier and LC tuned circuit.
Carrier is applied to one input resistor
and modulating signal to the other
input resistor.
Mixed signal appear across R3.
Network causes signals to be linearly
mixed, that is algebraically added.
Diode removes the negative cycles
when forward biased which is then
applied to the tuned LC circuit.
LC resonates at carrier frequency,
causing oscillation, creating negative
half cycle for every positive cycle.

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2. Transistor Modulator
Transistor modulation consists of a resistive mixing
network, a transistor, and an LC tuned circuit.
The emitter-base junction of the transistor serves
as a diode and nonlinear device.
Modulation and amplification occur as base current
controls a larger collector current.
The LC tuned circuit oscillates (rings) to generate
the missing half cycle.

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Single transistor configured for AM by
modulating the base current.
The transistor is biased into a nonlinear
operating region instead of acting as a
linear amplifier, it combines signals that
are applied to its base.
The nonlinear mixing produces sum &
difference frequencies at carrier
frequency n (information signal
frequency), where n is 1, 2, 3
The LC circuit is tuned to resonate at the
carrier frequency & acts as a high
impedance at resonance, so frequencies
at the carrier frequency are available at
the output.
For frequencies further away from
resonance, the LC circuit appears as a low
impedance & these products are
effectively shorted out.
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High-Level Amplitude Modulator
In high-level modulation, the modulator varies the
voltage and power in the final RF amplifier stage
of the transmitter. The result is high efficiency in
the RF amplifier and overall high-quality
performance.
High-level modulators include:
Collector modulator
Series modulator

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Collector Modulator
The collector modulator is a
linear power amplifier.
Low level modulating signals are
amplified to a high-power level.
A modulating output signal is
coupled through a modulation
transformer to a class C
amplifier.
The secondary winding of the
modulation transformer is
connected in series with the
collector supply voltage of the
class C amplifier.

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Series Modulator
A series modulator produces high-level
modulation without a large and expensive
modulation transformer used in collector
modulators.
A series modulator replaces the modulation
transformer with a Q2 emitter follower
which is an audio power amplifier.
The modulating signal is applied to the
emitter follower.
The emitter follower is in series with the
collector voltage.
The collector voltage changes with
variations in the amplified audio
modulating signal.

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Circuitry for DSB-SC
One approach to produce DSB-SC signal is to
generate a regular AM signal & then filter out the
carrier. However, this is usually not a practical
approach.
The carrier signal is very close in frequency to the
sidebands, so the filter would have to be very exact &
stable with time & temperature.
It must be designed to work at one frequency.
The carrier is larger than the sidebands & reducing the
carrier by filtering might still leave the carrier too strong,
relative to these sidebands.

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Another approach is to use a circuit that only produces
sidebands (no carrier).
A preferred approach is using a balanced modulator.
For a perfect balanced modulator, the output is zero
when either input is zero.
This is in contrast to regular AM, where there is a carrier
signal even if the modulating signal is zero.

Balanced Modulator/Latice Modulator


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Single Sideband Circuits
Two methods of generating single sideband (SSB)
signals are:

Filter method

Phasing method

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Generating SSB Signals: The Filter
Method
The filter method is the simplest and most widely
used.
The modulating signal is applied to the audio amplifier.
The amplifiers output is fed to one input of a balanced
modulator.
A crystal oscillator provides the carrier signal which is
also applied to the balanced modulator.
The output of the balanced modulator is DSB.
An SSB signal is produced by passing the DSB signal
through a highly selective bandpass filter.

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SSB Transmitter: The Filter Method

Linear power
DSB SSB amplifier

Balanced signal Sideband signal


modulator filter

Microphone Audio
amplifier

Filter
response
Lower Upper curve
sidebands sidebands

Suppressed
carrier
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Single Side Band Generation - Phasing
Method
SSB generation at lower frequency using either: (a) one carrier &
one of two selectable filters, (b) one of two selectable carriers & a
single filter. (Use switch to select the desired sideband)

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The phase-shift method of SSB generation appears
complex but is very effective.

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The output of any balanced modulator is a DSB
signal with components that have been shifted in
frequency & also shifted in phase by 90.
The method is based on a simple fact: two signals
that differ in phase by 180 (opposites or "flipped
over") cancel each other & produce a zero result if
they are added together.

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The phase-shift method uses two identical balanced
modulators & two 90 phase shifters.
The output of the carrier oscillator goes to one
balanced modulator, where it is modulated by the
information-bearing signal.
The output of the carrier oscillator also goes to a 90
phase shifter, where it is modulated in the second
balanced modulator by the information-bearing signals,
also shifted by 90.
The outputs of the two balanced modulators are added
together in a summing circuit, & the result of this sum
is a perfect SSB signal, one that requires no filtering.
Advantage of this method is that filters for suppressing
unwanted frequency components are not needed.
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AM DEMODULATOR
Demodulators, or detectors, are circuits
that accept modulated signals and recover
the original modulating information
Demodulation of DSBFC AM
Diode Detector.
Transistor Detector

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Diode Detector
D1 C2
AM signal

R1 C1

On positive alternations of the AM signal, the


capacitor charges quickly to the peak value of
pulses passed by the diode.
When the pulse voltage drops to zero, the
capacitor discharges into the resistor.
The time constant of the capacitor and resistor is
long compared to the period of the carrier.

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The capacitor discharges only slightly when the
diode is not conducting.
The resulting waveform across the capacitor is a
close approximation to the original modulating
signal.
Because the diode detector recovers the envelope
of the AM (modulating) signal, the circuit is
sometimes called an envelope detector.
If the RC time constant in a diode detector is too
long, the capacitor discharge will be too slow to
follow faster changes in the modulating signal.
This is referred to as diagonal distortion.
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Figure 4.21 Envelope detection of a conventional AM signal

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Transistor Detector
AM input is applied to Q1 base
(common emitter)
C1 is the coupling capacitor block
DC from the input source
R1 and R2 establish base bias and R3 R1 R3 C2

establish collector bias


Transistor is biased-for-class B
Info signal
operation that allows positive pulses
on the output AM input Q1
C3
signal
C2 filter out carrier frequency C1

C3 removes DC component R2
Example waveform: Frenzel pg. 132

Figure 4.23 Transistor demodulator

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DSB and SSB Demodulation
To recover the intelligence in a DSB or SSB signal,
the carrier that was suppressed at the receiver
must be reinserted.
A product detector is a balanced modulator used in
a receiver to recover the modulating signal.
fc + fm + flo = 2fc + fm
Balanced fc + fm flo = fm Low-pass fm
modulator filter
fc + fm
USB SSB
signal
fc = flo

Balanced Modulator Used as a Product Detector


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RECEIVER PARAMETERS
Parameters used to evaluate the ability of a
receiver to successfully demodulate radio signal :-
Selectivity
Ability of a receiver to accept a given band of frequency and
reject all others.
i.e. using the bandwidth of the receiver at the 3dB points
not necessarily show rejection characteristic
Most common used two points; another at -60dB ratio of
the two called shape factor
B( 60 dB )
SF (2.40)
B( 3dB )

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SELECTIVITY
Refers to the ability of a receiver to select a signal of a
desired frequency while rejecting those on close
adjacent frequencies.
A receiver with good selectivity will isolate the desired
signal in the RF spectrum and eliminate all other
signals.
Obtained by using tuned circuits.
LC circuit tuned to resonate at a desired frequency.
The Q of these tuned circuits determines the
selectivity.
Q is the ratio of inductive reactance to resistance

fr
BW
Q
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0

-3dB

BW=fr/Q

BW=f2-f1

f1 fr f2
Sensitivity
The minimum RF signal that can be detected at the input
of a receiver and still produce a usable demodulated info
signal.
Also called receiver threshold
Depends on the noise power present at the input of the
receiver, the receivers noise figure, sensitivity of the AM
detector and the bandwidth improvement factor of the
receiver.
The best way to improve sensitivity is by reducing the
noise level reduce temperature, reduce bandwidth of
the receiver, or improving receiving noise figure

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Bandwidth Improvement Factor
One way of reducing the noise level is by reducing the
bandwidth of the signal
There is limitation for reducing the bandwidth to make sure
information is not lost
As RF bandwidth at the input of the receiver is higher than
the IF bandwidth at the output of the receiver, reducing the
RF bandwidth to IF bandwidth ratio effectively reducing the
noise figure of the receiver, thus reducing the noise
Bandwidth improvement (BI) expressed mathematically as

BRF
BI (2.41)
BIF
Noise figure improvement expressed as
NFimprovement = 10 log BI
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Example 2.11
High-Q tuned circuit is used to keep the BW narrow to ensure that only desired
signal is passed. Assumed that 10H coil with resistance of 20 is connected in
parallel with 101.4pF variable capacitor. The circuit resonates at what freq.?
What is the inductive reactance, XL?
What is the selectivity, Q of the circuit?
What is the bandwidth of the tuned circuit?
Find the upper and lower cutoff frequencies?

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Answers
1. 1 4. fr
fr 5MHz BW 318.47kHz
2 LC Q
2. 5. One half on each side of
X L 2 f r L 314 center freq. of 5MHz is
318.47/2 = 0.159 MHz.
3. XL
Q 15.7 Upper, f 2 5 0.159 5.159MHz
R
Lower, f1 5 0.159 4.841MHz

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AM RECEIVER
They are two types of AM receiver :-
Tuned RF Receiver (TRF)
Simplest, limited to single channel low frequency
applications.
High sensitivity
Disadvantages:
BW is inconsistent and varies with center frequency when
tuned over a wide range of input frequencies selectivity, Q
changes.
Instability due to the large number of RF amplifier all tuned
to the same center frequency oscillation
Gain is not uniform over a wide range of frequency.

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Tuned RF Receiver

FIGURE 2.25 Noncoherent tuned radio frequency receiver block diagram

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Superheterodyne Receiver
Heterodyne : to mix 2 frequencies together in a
nonlinear device or to translate one frequency to
another using nonlinear device.
RF amplifier
Provide initial gain and selectivity
To minimize radiation of the LO (local oscillator) through
the receiver antenna

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FIGURE 2.26 AM superheterodyne receiver block diagram
Converter / Mixer (Figure 2.27)
RF is down converted to IF, but shape of the envelope
remains the same info is conserved, BW is unchanged
Output of the mixer : infinite no. of harmonics and cross
products (IMD) including fRF , fLO , fLO + fRF , fLO - fRF
LO is designed so that its frequency is always above or
below the desired RF carrier by an amount equal to IF
center frequency. fi,fo
fo + f i
Mixer
fo fi or fi - fo Tuned circuit or
fi filter

fo
Figure 2.27(a): Mixer output

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fLO is usually higher than fRF because up conversion leads
to a smaller tuning range (smaller ratio of the maximum
to minimum tuning frequency) much easier to design
an OSC that is tunable over a smaller frequency ratio.
If mixer and LO are in a single stage, it is called
converter.
Common IF : 455 kHz
Adequate selectivity because it is difficult to design sharp
band bass filter if the center frequency is very high
Center frequency is fixed and factory-tuned effectively
suppress ACI because of its high selectivity

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Mathematically, the local oscillator frequency is
For high side injection

f lo f RF f IF

For low side injection


f lo f RF f IF

Where
f lo local oscillator frequency (hertz)
f RF radio frequency (hertz)
f IF intermediate frequency (hertz)
What is meant by the terms high and low side injection?
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IF amplifier
One or more stage(s)
Provide most gain and selectivity
IF is much lower than RF easier to design and good sensitivity
is easier to obtain with tuned circuit
Demodulator
to recover the original signal
eg : diode detector (Figure 4.22)
Audio amplifier
to amplify the detected audio signal to be passed to the user

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Image Frequency
An image frequency is any frequency other than the
selected radio frequency carrier that, if allowed to
enter a receiver and mix with the local oscillator, will
produce a cross product (sum or difference)
frequency that is equal to intermediate frequency
(IF)
2 fIF

fIF fIF

Frequency

IF RF LO Image

Figure 2.27(b) : Image frequency

Mathematically , for high side injection the image


frequency (fim) is

f im f lo f IF or f im f RF 2 f IF
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Example 2.12
Determine the image frequency for a standard broadcast band
receiver using 455-kHz IF and tuned to station at 620 kHz.

The first is determine the frequency of the LO


The LO frequency minus the desired stations frequency of 620 kHz should equal
the IF of 455 KHz
Hence,
fLO 620 kHz = 455 kHz
fLO = 620 KHz + 455 kHz
fLO = 1075 kHz
Now determine what other frequency, when mixed with 1075 kHz, yields an output
component at 455 kHz
X 1075 kHz = 455 kHz
X = 1075 kHz + 455 kHz
X = 1530 kHz
Thus, 1530 is the image frequency in this situation. To solve the problem
associated with image frequency, sometimes a technique known as double
conversion is employed
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Image Frequency Rejection Ratio (IFRR)

Numerical measure of the preselector ability to reject


the image frequency.

The IFRR, 1 Q 2 2
f image f RF
where the rejection ratio,
f RF f image
Q Quality factor of a tuned circuit
XL fr
where B bandwidth
R B
IFRR(dB) 20 log

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Example 2.13
From Example 2.12, calculate the image rejection
ratio in decibels, assuming that the input filter
consists of one tuned circuit with a Q of 40.

f image f RF 1530 620


2.0625
f RF f image 620 1530

1 Q 2 2 1 40 2 2.0625 2 82.5061

IFRR 20 log 20 log(82.5061) 38.33dB


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PART 2: ANGLE
MODULATION
ANGLE MODULATION
In angle modulation, the amplitude of the modulated
carrier is held constant and either the phase or the
time derivative of the phase of the carrier is varied
linearly with the message signal m(t).
Thus the general angle-modulated signal is given by (3.1)
= sin 2 + ()
In angle modulation, (t) is prescribed as being a
function of the modulating signal
Therefore, if vm(t) is the modulating signal, angle
modulation is expressed as
= ()
where
= sin 2
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MATHEMATICAL ANALYSIS
The difference between FM and PM is more easily
understood by defining four terms with reference
to equation 3.1
Instantaneous phase deviation
Instantaneous change in the phase of the carrier at a
given instant of time and indicates how much the phase
of the carrier is changing with respect to its reference
phase
instantaneous phase deviation (t ) rad
Instantaneous phase
Precise phase of the carrier at a given instant of time
instantaneous phase ct (t ) rad

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Instantaneous frequency deviation
Instantaneous change in the frequency of the carrier and is defined as
the first time derivative of the instantaneous phase deviation
Therefore, instantaneous phase deviation is the first integral of the
instantaneous frequency deviation

instantaneous frequency deviation '(t ) rad/s


'(t ) rad/s cycle
or Hz
2 rad/cycle s

Instantaneous frequency
the precise frequency of the carrier at any given instant of time and is
defined as the first time derivative of the instantaneous phase
d
instantaneous frequency i (t ) ct (t )
dt
c '(t ) rad/s
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Substituting 2fc for c gives

instantaneous frequency fi (t )
rad cycles
and i (t ) 2 f c '(t ) 2 f c '(t ) rad/s
cycle s

Therefore, phase modulation can be defined as angle modulation


in which the instantaneous phase deviation, (t), is proportional to
the amplitude of the modulating signal voltage and the
instantaneous frequency deviation is proportional to the slope of
first derivative of the modulating signal.
Frequency modulation is angle modulation in which the
instantaneous frequency deviation (t), is proportional to the
amplitude of the modulating signal, and the instantaneous phase
deviation is proportional to the integral of the modulating signal
voltage.
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DEVIATION SENSITIVITY
For modulating signal (), the phase and
frequency modulation are
phase modulation = =
frequency modulation = = /s
where and are constant and are the
deviation sensitivities of the phase and frequency
modulator respectively.
Deviation sensitivities are the output-versus-input
transfer function for the modulators, which gave
the relationship between what output parameter
changes in respect to specified changes in the
input signal.
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For phase modulator, PM is first integral of FM

rad
kp
V V
(t ) ' t dt
k f vm (t )dt
For frequency modulator,
k f vm (t )dt
rad/s
kf
V V

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PHASE MODULATION (PM)
Variation of produces Phase Modulation
Phase modulation implies that is proportional
to the modulating signal. Thus

= +

= + sin () (3.2)

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FREQUENCY MODULATION (FM)
Variation of / produces Frequency Modulation
Frequency modulation implies that /is
proportional to the modulating signal.
This yields
vFM (t ) Vc sin ct (t )
Vc sin c t '(t )dt

Vc sin c t k f vm (t )dt

Vc sin c t k f Vm sin m (t )dt

k f Vm (3.3)
Vc sin c t cos m (t )
m
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Exercise 3.1
Derive the PM and FM signal using both cosine wave signal.

v(t ) Vc cos ct (t )
vm (t ) Vm cos mt
for PM
for FM
vPM (t ) Vc cos ct k p vm (t )

vFM (t ) Vc cos ct k f vm (t )dt
Vc cos c t k pVm cos(mt ) V cos t k V cos( t )dt
c c f m m

V cos t k V cos( t )dt


c c f m m

kV
Vc cos c t f m sin(mt )
m
2f

f f

fc-f fc fc+f f

vm(t) = Vm cos 2fmt

-Vm 0 +Vm

Figure 3.1 Frequency deviation


Figure 3.2: Phase and Frequency modulation ; (a) carrier signal (b) modulating signal
(c) frequency modulated wave (d) phase modulated wave
PHASE DEVIATION & MODULATION INDEX
Equation 3.2 can be rewritten as
= sin + sin
where = (3.4)
represents the peak phase deviation in radians
for phase-modulated carrier, known as modulation
index.
One primary difference between PM and FM is how
the is defined
PM modulation index proportional to the amplitude of
the modulating signal, independent of its frequency
FM modulation index is directly proportional to the
amplitude of the modulating signal and inversely
proportional to the frequency of the modulating signal
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For phase modulation, the unit of

radians
p kp Vm volts radians
volt
p modulation index and peak phase deviation ( , radians)
k p deviation sensitivity (radians per volt)
Vm peak modulating signal amplitude (volts)

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For Frequency Modulation, equation 3.3 can be rewritten as

vFM (t ) Vc sin ct f cos m (t )

k f Vm (3.5)
where
f
m
also known as modulation index

radians
kf s V volts
volts
m

f unitless
m (radians s )
Deviation sensitivity, , can be expressed in Hertz
per volt rather than cycles per second per volt
allowing to be written in more practical form

hertz
kf Vm volts
f
volts
unitless
f m (hertz)

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FREQUENCY DEVIATION
The change in the carrier frequency is called the frequency
deviation, , typically given as the peak frequency shift in
hertz.
f c k f Vm (Hz) or k pVm (rad)
For example, a sample transmitter with an assigned rest
frequency of 100MHz deviated by a 25kHz, the carrier
changes frequency with modulation between the limits of
99.975MHz and 100.025MHz
The total frequency change, 25kHz x 2 is called the carrier
swing
Table 1 display the transmission band that use FM and the
legal frequency deviation limit for each category
Deviation limits are based on the quality of the intended
transmissions, wider deviation results in higher fidelity
The frequency deviation is a useful parameter for
determining the bandwidth of the FM-signals

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Since
= =

The equation 3.3 can again be rewritten as



= sin cos (3.6)

Depending on the value of the modulation index


, we may distinguish two cases of frequency
modulation - Narrow-Band FM and Wide-Band FM.

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Table 1: Specifications for transmission of FM signal
PERCENT MODULATION
Simply the ratio of the frequency deviation
actually produced to the maximum frequency
deviation allowed by law stated in percent form
f actual
% modulation
f max
For example if a given modulating signal produces
50kHz frequency deviation, and the law stated
that maximum frequency deviation allowed is
75kHz, then
50kHz
% modulation = 100 67%
75kHz
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Example 3.2
A 1 MHz carrier freq with a measured sensitivity of
3 kHz/V is modulated with a 2 V, 4 kHz sinusoid.
Determine
1. the max freq deviation of the carrier
2. the modulation index
3. the modulation index if the modulation voltage is
doubled
4. the modulation index for = 2 cos 2 8 103 V,
express the FM signal mathematically for a cosine
carrier & the cosine-modulating signal of part 4. Carrier
amplitude is 10V

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FM RADIO FREQUENCY
Commercial radio FM band, 88MHz 108MHz
Each station allotted to a frequency deviation of
75kHz (150 carrier swing) and 25kHz of guard
band added above and below the carrier frequency
swing
Total bandwidth is 200kHz
Therefore, maximum of 100 stations can be made
available

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NARROW-BAND FREQUENCY MODULATION
Bandwidth ranging from 10 to 30 kHz
Modulation indices are generally keep near unity so that
the FM bandwidth can be determined in a similar
manner as the AM system i.e. 2 .
This system is widely used in mobile radio systems for
police, fire and taxi services; cellular telephony,
amateur radio and so on.
Assume that a carrier signal of = cos is
being frequency modulated by = cos .
The resulting () is
= cos + sin (3.7)
If is small ( << 0.25)
cos sin 1
sin sin sin
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Since
cos + = cos cos sin sin()
therefore
= cos sin sin
but
1
sin sin = cos( ) cos( + )
2
then
1
= cos + cos 2 + cos 2
2

Vc
1 1
f Vc f Vc Figure 3.3 Amplitude spectrum
2 2
(single-sided plot)
f
fc - fm fc fc + fm

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WIDE-BAND FREQUENCY MODULATION
The general expression for a FM signal can be analyzed
to give the spectral components of a wide-band FM
signal.
In order to compute the spectrum of an angle-
modulated signal with a sinusoidal message signal, let
f c
(t ) sin(2 f mt ) Where (t) = Phase deviation
fm
The corresponding FM signal is given by (from 3.6)

vFM (t ) Vc cos(2 fct sin(2 f mt ))


It (the spectrum) cannot be evaluated in a closed form
but are tabulated in the table of Bessel functions of the
first kind of order n
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, f

Figure 3.4 Tabulated value for Bessel Function for the first kind of the nth order
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The first column gives the modulation , while the first row gives the
Bessel function.
The remaining columns indicate the amplitudes of the carrier and the
various pairs of sidebands.
Sidebands with relative magnitude of less than 0.01 have been
eliminated.
Some of the carrier and sideband amplitudes have negative signs. This
means that the signal represented by that amplitude is simply shifted
in phase 180 (phase inversion).
The spectrum of a FM signal varies considerably in bandwidth
depending upon the value of the modulation index. The higher the
modulation index, the wider the bandwidth of the FM signal.
With the increase in the modulation index, the carrier amplitude
decreases while the amplitude of the various sidebands increases. With
some values of modulation index, the carrier can disappear
completely.

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f

Figure 3.5 : Bessel Function


AMPLITUDE SPECTRUM

Figure 3.6 : Amplitude spectrum of different value of f

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TRANSMISSION BANDWIDTH OF FM SIGNALS
Theoretically, a FM signal contains an infinite number of
side frequencies so that the bandwidth required to
transmit such signal is infinite.
However, since the values of Jn(f) become negligible
for sufficiently large n, the bandwidth of an angle-
modulated signal can be defined by considering only
those terms that contain significant power.
In practice, the bandwidth of a FM signal can be
determined by knowing the modulation index and using
the Bessel function table.
By using Bessel function, minimum bandwidth for angle
modulated wave
BW = 2(n x fm) Hz
where n is the number of significant sideband
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Example 3.3
Calculate the bandwidth occupied by a FM signal with
a modulation index of 2 and a highest modulating
frequency of 2.5 kHz. Determine bandwidth with
table of Bessel functions.

Referring to the table, this produces 4 significant


pairs of sidebands.
BW 2 4 2.5
20kHz

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Carsons Rule
We may thus define an approximate rule for the transmission
bandwidth of an FM signal generated by a single of frequency fm
as follows:
BT BW 2f 2 f m 2f (1 1 )

or = 2 f m 1

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Example
Assuming a maximum frequency deviation of 5 kHz
and a maximum modulating frequency of 2.5 kHz, the
bandwidth would be
B.W . 2(2.5kHz 5kHz)
2 7.5kHz
15kHz

Comparing the bandwidth with that computed in


the preceding example, you can see that Carson's
rule gives a smaller bandwidth (use the formula
that contains ).

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Example 3.4
For an FM modulator with a modulation index f = 1,
a modulating signal
vm(t) = Vmsin(21000t) and unmodulated carrier
vc(t) = 10sin(2500kt), determine
1. Number of sets of significant sideband
2. Their amplitude (the sidebands)
3. Then draw the frequency spectrum showing their
relative amplitudes

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Example 3.5
For an FM modulator with a peak freq deviation f =
10kHz, a modulating signal freq fm= 10kHz, Vc =10V
and 500kHz carrier, determine
1. Actual minimum bandwidth from the Bessel
function table
2. Approximate minimum bandwidth using Carsons
rule
3. Plot the output freq spectrum for the Bessel
approximation

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DEVIATION RATIO (DR)
Minimum bandwidth is greatest when maximum
freq deviation is obtained with the maximum
modulating signal frequency.
Worst case modulation index (DR) and is equal to
the maximum peak frequency deviation divided by
the maximum modulating signal frequency
Worst case modulation index produces the widest
output frequency spectrum (i.e: widest
bandwidth)
Mathematically,
max peak freq deviation f max
DR
max mod signal freq f m(max)

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Example 3.6
Determine the deviation ratio and bandwidth for
the worst case (widest bandwidth) modulation
index for an FM broadcast band transmitter with a
maximum frequency deviation of 75kHz and a
maximum modulating signal frequency of 15kHz.
Determine the deviation ratio and maximum
bandwidth for an equal modulation index with only
half the peak frequency deviation and modulating
signal frequency.

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POWER IN ANGLE-MODULATED SIGNAL
The power in an angle-modulated signal is easily
computed as,
n
P 1 Vc2 J n2 ( )
2 n
Vc2

2

Thus the power contained in the FM signal is


independent of the message signal. This is an
important difference between FM and AM.

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Average power in unmodulated carrier
Vc 2
Pc W
2R
Total modulated wave power is
Pt P0 2( P1 P2 P3 ....Pn )
Vo
2
V12 V22 V32 Vn2
Pt 2 .... where Vn J n Vc
2R 2R 2R 2R 2R
J 02 Pc 2( J12 Pc J 22 Pc J 32 Pc ....J n2 Pc )
The total power in the carrier and the sidebands components
to unmodulated carrier power
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Example 3.7
An FM signal is given as vFM(t)=12cos[(6 x 106t) +
5sin(2 x 1250t)] V. Determine
a. freq of the carrier signal
b. freq of the modulating signal
c. modulation index
d. freq deviation
e. power dissipated in 10 ohm resistor.

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Example 3.8
Determine the unmodulated carrier power for the FM modulator given that =1,
Vc=10 V, R = 50 . Then, determine the total power in the angle-modulated wave.

Solution

not exactly equal because values in Bessel


table have been rounded off.

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Example 3.9

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Example 3.10
An FM signal with 5W carrier power is fluctuating at
the rate of 10000 times per second from 99.96 MHz
to 100.04 MHz. Find
a. carrier freq
b. carrier swing
c. freq deviation
d. modulation index
e. power spectrum

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Example 3.11
In an FM transmitter, the freq is changing between
100 MHz to 99.98 MHz, 4000 times per seconds. The
amplitude of the FM signal is 5 V, determine :-
1. carrier and modulating freq
2. carrier freq swing
3. amplitude spectrum
4. bandwidth by using Bessel Table and Carsons rule
5. average power at the transmitter if the modulator
carrier power is 5 W.

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Pre-emphasis (Tx) and De-emphasis (Rx)
FM signals has non-uniform distribution of noise. The noise at
higher-modulating-signal is higher in amplitude than noise at lower
frequencies.
Info signal with uniform amplitude will produce non-uniform SNR
after modulation. Higher-modulating-signal frequencies have lower
SNR than lower frequencies. See Figure 7-13.
Compensate this by boosting the amplitude of higher-freq
modulating signal before modulation process (pre-emphasis). At the
receiver, the high-freq signals are attenuated or de-emphasis after
demodulation. This may improve the SNR at the receiver side.

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Example
Given a direct FM frequency modulator (VCO) with a deviation sensitivity
K1 = 1kHz/V, a PLL FM demodulator with a transfer function Kd = 1V/kHz
and the following input signals
1 kHz at 4 Vp, 2 kHz at 2 Vp and 3 kHz at 1 Vp (INPUT SIGNALS)
1. Determine the freq deviations at the output of the VCO for the three
input signals and the demodulated voltages at the output of the PLL
demodulator (see fig. 7.17 (a))
2. For the following internally generated noise signals, determine the
SNR at the output of the demodulator. (see fig. 7.17 (a))
1 kHz at 0.1 Vp, 2 kHz at 0.25 Vp and 3 kHz at 0.5 Vp (NOISE, Nd)
3. Determine the frequency spectrum at the output of the pre-emphasis
network, the freq deviation at the modulator output, the demodulator
output voltages, the freq spectrums and SNR at the output of PLL
demodulator and at the output of de-emphasis network. (see fig. 7.17
(b))

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Fig. 7.17 (a) SNR without pre- Fig. 7.17 (b) SNR with pre-
emphasis & de-emphasis emphasis & de-emphasis
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FM SIGNAL GENERATION
1) Direct FM
In a direct FM system the instantaneous frequency
of the carrier is directly varied by the information
signal. To vary the frequency of the carrier is to
use an Oscillator whose resonant frequency is
determined by components that can be varied.
The oscillator frequency is thus changed by the
modulating signal amplitude.
f i f c k f vm (t )

Example of direct FM modulator is Varactor Diode.


The external modulating signal voltage adds to and
subtracts from DC bias developed by R1 and R2, which
changes the capacitance of diode VD1 which will vary the
frequency of oscillation by oscillator.
Positive alternation of modulating signal increase reverse
bias on VD1 and increases frequency of oscillation.
Negative alternation of modulating signal decrease the
oscillation frequency. Varactor Diode
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2) Indirect FM
Angle modulation includes frequency modulation FM
and phase modulation PM.
FM and PM are interrelated; one cannot change
without the other changing. The information signal
frequency also deviates the carrier frequency in PM.
Phase modulation produces frequency modulation.
Since the amount of phase shift is varying, the
effect is that, as if the frequency is changed.
Since FM is produced by PM , the later is referred to
as indirect FM.
The information signal is first integrated and then
used to phase modulate the carrier from a crystal-
controlled oscillator, which provides frequency
stability.

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In order to minimize the distortion in the phase
modulator, the modulation index is kept small, thereby
is resulting in a narrow-band FM-signal
vPM (t ) Vc cos(2 f ct (t ))
(t ) k pVm (t )
t
(t ) k f Vm (t )dt
0

The narrow-band FM signal is multiplied in frequency by


means of frequency multiplier so as to produce the
desired wide-band FM signal.
The frequency multiplier is used to perform narrow
band to wideband conversion.
The frequency deviation of this new waveform is M
times that of the old, while the rate at which the
instantaneous frequency varies has not changed
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Figure 3.9 BEB31803 ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATION SYSTEM
Dept of Communication Engineering, FKEE
FREQUENCY UP-CONVERSION
Heterodyning
A low freq modulation carrier can be either up- or down-
converted to a different location in the freq spectrum
without changing its modulation properties.

Multiplication
when a carrier freq is up-converted, the modulation
properties of a carrier can be increased at the same time
fm remains unchanged separation of the adjacent
sidebands remains unchanged

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Figure 3.10 Frequency up-conversion: (a) heterodyne method; (b)
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multiplication methodDept of Communication Engineering, FKEE
Example 3.12
Given that f = 3 kHz, =0.3 and fc=500 kHz,
determine the carrier freq and modulation properties
at :-
1. the output of the balanced modulator with a BPF tuned
to the sum freq & an RF carrier input freq of 99.5 MHz
2. the output of a times 10 freq multiplier

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FM DEMODULATION
Demodulation should provide an output signal
whose amplitude is dependent on the
instantaneous carrier frequency deviation and
whose frequency is dependent on the rate of the
carrier frequency change

df c df c
Vm and fm
dt dt

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Figure 3.11 Double-conversion FM receiver block diagram
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Slope detector
simplest form of tuned-circuit frequency discriminator
Single ended slope detector has the most nonlinear voltage-
versus-frequency characteristics seldom used
based on tuning the carrier frequency to the mid-point on a
response curved of the tuned circuit
Circuit consist of a tuned circuit and an AM detector (diode
detector)
From Figure 3.12, La and Ca is the tuned circuit that produces
output voltage that is proportional to the input frequency
Maximum voltage at the resonant frequency of the tank circuit
(f0), and its output decrease proportionally as the input
frequency deviates above or below f0.

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Figure 3.12: Slope detector (a) schematic diagram (b) voltage-versus-
frequency curve
the circuit is designed so that the IF center frequency (fc)
falls in the center of the most linear portion of the voltage-
versus-frequency curve, as in Figure 3.12(b)
when IF deviates above fc, output voltage increase and
when IF deviated below fc, output voltage decrease.
Therefore, the tuned circuit converts frequency variations
to amplitude variations (FM-to-AM conversion)
Di, Ci and Ri make up a simple peak detector that converts
the amplitude variations to an output voltage that varies at a
rate equal to that of the input frequency changes and whose
amplitude is proportional to the magnitude of the frequency
changes (operate as AM diode detector demodulator))
Disadvantages : gain is reduced, difficult to achieve a linear
slope response curve.

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2. Balanced slope detector

fa >
fc

fa < fc

Tuned circuit Balanced peak


detector

Figure 3.19: Balanced slope detector (a) schematic diagram (b) voltage-
versus-frequency response curve

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made up of single-ended slope detector connected in
parallel and fed 180o out of phase
the 2 tuned circuit perform the FM to AM conversions
At resonant freq, the resultant output voltage is 0 V.
As the IF deviates above the center freq, top tuned
circuit produces higher voltage than the lower tank
circuit (+Vout) and vice versa
Figure 3.19(b) shows the output versus frequency
response curve
diode detector recover the original signal
advantage : simple
disadvantages : poor linearity, difficult in tuning and
lack of provisions for limiting.
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PHASE LOCKED LOOP (PLL)
FM demodulation can be accomplished quite simply
with a phase-locked loop (PLL).
PLL FM demodulator is probably the simplest and
easiest to understand.
A PLL frequency demodulator requires no tuned
circuits and automatically compensates for
changes in the carrier frequency due to instability
in the transmit oscillator.
Figure 3.23(a) shows the simplified block diagram
for a PLL FM demodulator.

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Figure 3.23 (a) Block diagram for a PLL FM demodulator

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PLL has three operating states:
Free running
Capture
Lock
Free running state
No external input frequency / feedback loop is open
VCO oscillates at its natural frequency determined by external component
Capture state
There must be an external input signal and the feedback loop must be complete
PLL is in a process of acquiring frequency lock
Lock state
The VCO output frequency is locked onto (equal to) the frequency of the external
input signal
The VCO output frequency tracks (follows) changes in the frequency of the
external input signal

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If the IF amplitude is sufficiently limited prior to
reaching the PLL and the loop is properly compensated,
the PLL loop gain is constant and equal to KV.
after frequency lock had occurred the VCO would track
frequency changes in the input signal by maintaining a
phase error at the input of the phase comparator.
Therefore, if the PLL input is a deviated FM signal and
the VCO natural frequency is equal to the IF center
frequency, the correction voltage produced at the
output of the phase comparator and fed back to the
input of the VCO is proportional to the frequency
deviation and is, thus, the demodulated information
signal.
Therefore, the demodulated signal can be taken
directly from the output of the internal buffer and is
mathematically given as
Vout = f Kd Ka
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FM SUPERHETERODYNE RECEIVER
The FM Superheterodyne Receiver block diagram
(see Figure 3.28) has many similarities to that of
the AM Superheterodyne receiver studied earlier.
The only apparent differences are the use of the
presence of limiter-discriminator circuit in place of
envelope detector and the addition of a de-
emphasis network
The universally standard IF frequency for FM is
10.7 MHz, as compared to 455 kHz for AM.

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Figure 3.28

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The limiter-discriminator extracts the intelligence
from the high-frequency carrier and can also be called
the detector, as in AM receivers.
The de-emphasis network, following demodulation, is
required to bring back the emphasized higher frequency
components of the message signal back to the proper
amplitude relationship with the lower frequency
components.
Older FM receivers also included an automatic
frequency control (AFC) function. This is a circuit that
provides an automatic control over the local oscillator
circuit. It compensates for drift in LO frequency that
would otherwise cause a station to become detuned.
It was necessary because it had not yet been figured
out how to make an economical LC oscillator at 100
MHz with sufficient frequency stability. The AFC system
is not needed in new designs.
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FM & PM COMPARISON
FM PM

The maximum frequency deviation The maximum phase deviation ()


(f) depends upon amplitude of depends only upon the modulating
modulating voltage (Vm) and voltage (Vm).
modulating frequency (fm).

Frequency of the carrier (fc) is Phase of the carrier is modulated by


modulated by modulating signal modulating signal (fm).
(fm).
Modulation index is increased as Modulation index remain same if
modulation frequency is reduced modulating frequency is changed
and vice versa.

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FM & PM COMPARISON
m m
PM

FM and PM
FM

Vm fm

m vs Vm m vs fm
f

PM FM

Vm Vm

vs Vm f vs Vm

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Several advantages over AM
Noise reduction
Improve system fidelity
More efficient use of power
Disadvantages
Wider bandwidth
More complex circuitry

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