0% found this document useful (0 votes)
41 views37 pages

Lecture 3

Uploaded by

Kirubel Mulugeta
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
41 views37 pages

Lecture 3

Uploaded by

Kirubel Mulugeta
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 37

Lecture 3- Angle Modulation

By Tafari Lemma
Angle Modulation
▪ Angle modulation is either phase or frequency of the carrier
is varied according to the message signal
▪ The general form of an angle modulated wave is
s(t) = Ac cos 2 f c t +  (t) 
where fc = carrier freq, (t) is the time-varying phase and
varied by the message m(t)

▪ The instantaneous frequency of s(t) is

1 d  (t)
f i (t) = f c +
2 dt

2
Representation of FM and PM signals
❑ For phase modulation (PM), we have
 (t) = k p m(t) where kp = phase deviation
constant

❑ For frequency modulation (FM), we have


1 d where kf = frequency
fi (t) − f c = k f m(t) =  (t)
2 dt deviation constant

❑ The phase of FM is
 (t) = 2 k f  m( )d
t

3
Distinguishing Features of PM and FM

❑ No perfect regularity in spacing of zero crossing


◼ Zero crossings refer to the time instants at which a waveform
changes between negative and positive values

❑ Constant envelop, i.e. amplitude of s(t) is constant


❑ Relationship between PM and FM
m(t)  m(t)dt Phase FM wave
integrator modulator

AC cos 2f c t + k p  m(t)dt 
AC cos(2f c t)

Discuss the
properties of FM
d
m(t)
m(t) dt PM wave
differentiator Frequency
A cos2f t + 2k m(t)
modulator
C c f

AC cos(2f c t)
4
Example: Sinusoidal Modulation
Sinusoid
modulating wave
m(t)

FM wave

d
m(t)
dt

PM wave

5
Example: Square Modulation
Square
modulating wave
m(t)

FM wave

PM wave

6
FM by a Sinusoidal Signal

❑ Consider a sinusoidal modulating wave


m(t) = Am cos(2fmt)
❑ Instantaneous frequency of resulting FM wave is
fi (t) = fc + k f Am cos(2fmt) = fc + f cos(2fmt)

where f = k f Am is called the frequency deviation, proportional


to the amplitude of m(t), and independent of fm.
❑ Hence, the carrier phase is
f
 (t) = 2  ( f i ( ) − f c )d =
t
sin(2 f mt)
0 fm
=  sin(2 f mt)
Where  = f f m is called the modulation index
7
Example

❑ Problem: a sinusoidal modulating wave of amplitude 5V and


frequency 1kHz is applied to a frequency modulator. The frequency
sensitivity is 40Hz/V. The carrier frequency is 100kHz. Calculate (a) the
frequency deviation, and (b) the modulation index

❑ Solution:
◼ Frequency deviation f = k f Am = 40  5 = 200Hz

◼ Modulation index  = f = 200 = 0.2


f m 1000

8
Spectrum Analysis of Sinusoidal FM Wave
❑ The FM wave for sinusoidal modulation is
s(t) = Ac cos2f c t +  sin(2f m t)
= Ac cos sin(2f m t)cos(2f c t) − Ac sin sin(2f m t)sin(2f c t)

In-phase component
Quadrature-phase component
s I (t) = Ac cos sin(2 f m t) sQ (t) = Ac sin sin(2f mt)

❑ Hence, the complex envelop of FM wave is


~
s (t) = s I (t) + jsQ (t) = Ace j sin(2f mt )
❑ ~s (t) retains complete information about s(t)

  
s(t) = Re Ace j 2f ct +  sin(2f mt )  = Re ~
s (t)e j 2f ct 
9
❑~s (t) is periodic, can beexpanded in Fourier series as
s (t) =  cne j 2nf mt
~ ~
s (t) = Ace j sin( 2f t )m

n=−
where
cn = f m 
1/(2 f m )
~
s (t)e − j 2nf mt dt
−1/(2 f m )

e j sin(2 f m t )−2 nf m t 
1/(2 f m )
= f m Ac  dt
−1/(2 f m )

❑ Let x = 2fmt

  exp  j ( sin x − nx )dx
A
cn = c 
2 −

❑ n-th order Bessel function of the first kind Jn() is defined as


1 
J n ( ) =  exp  j ( sin x − nx )dx

2
❑ Hence,
cn = Ac J n (  )

10
❑ Substituting cn into ~
s (t) c(t) = Ac J n (
 )
s (t) = Ac  J n (  ) exp( j2nf mt )
~
n= 

❑ Hence, FM wave in time domain can be represented by


  
s(t) = Ac Re   J n (  ) exp  j2 ( f c + nf m )t 
 n=− 

= Ac J n ( ) cos 2 ( f c + nf m )t
n=−

❑ In frequency-domain, we have

S( f ) =
Ac
2c
J n ( ) ( f − f c − nf m ) +  ( f + f c + nf m )
n=−

11
▪ Property 1:Narrowband FM (for small ≤0.3 )
– Approximations
J 0 ( )  1 ? In what ways do a
conventinal AM wave and
J1 ()   2 a narrow band FM wave
J n ( )  0 , n  1 differ from each other
– Substituting above into s(t)
Ac
s(t)  Ac cos(2 f c t) + cos2 ( f c + f m )t 
2
−A c
cos2 ( f c − f m )t
2

J n ( ) → 0 as  → 
 J n (  ) , n even
J −n (  ) = 
− J n ( ) , n odd
10/4/2004 2009/ 12
❑ Property 2: Wideband FM (for large >1 )
◼ In theory, s(t) contains a carrier and an infinite number of side-
frequency components, with no approximations made
❑ Property 3: Constant average power
◼ The envelop of FM wave is constant, so the average power is
also constant, 2
P = Ac / 2

◼ The average power is also given by s(t) = Ac J n (  ) cos2 ( f c + nf m )
n=−

A2c A 2
P=
2
 J n2 ( ) = 2c
n


J 2
n ( ) = 1
n=−

13
Example
❑ Goal: to investigate how the amplitude Am, and frequency fm,
of a sinusoidal modulating wave affect the spectrum of FM wave
❑ Fixed fm and varying Am  frequency deviation f = kfAm and
modulation index  =f/fm are varied

1.0 1.0

=5
 =1
fc fc
2f 2f

◼ Increasing A m increases the number of harmonics in the


bandwidth
14
❑ Fixed Am and varying fm  f is fixed, but  is varied
1.0 1.0

 =5  =1

fc fc
2f 2f

◼ Increasing fm decreases the number of harmonics but


at the same time increases the spacing between the
harmonics.

15
Effective Bandwidth of FW Waves

❑ Theoretically, FM bandwidth = infinite

❑ In practice, for a single tone FM wave, when  is large, B is


only slightly greater than the total frequency excursion 2f.
when  is small, the spectrum is effectively limited to
[fc – fm , fc + fm]

❑ Carson’s Rule approximation for single-tone modulating wave


of frequency fm

B  2f + 2 f m = 2(1+  ) f m

16
❑ 99% bandwidth approximation
◼ The separation between the two frequencies beyond which
none of the side-frequencies is greater than 1% of the
unmodulated carrier amplitude
◼ i.e B  2nmax f m where nmax is the max n that satisfies

J n (  )  0.01

 0.1 0.3 0.5 1.0 2.0 5.0 10 20 30

2nmax 2 4 4 6 8 16 28 50 70

17
❑ A universal curve for evaluating the 99% bandwidth
◼ As  increases, the bandwidth occupied by the significant side-
frequencies drops toward that over which the carrier frequency
actually deviates, i.e. B become less affected by 

20

0.2 2

18
FM by an Arbitrary Message

❑ Consider an arbitrar m(t) with highest freq component W


❑ Define deviation ratio D = f / W, where f = k f max m(t)
D   and W  fm
❑ Carson’s rule applies as

B  2f + 2W = 2W (1+ D )

❑ Carson’s rule somewhat underestimate the FM bandwidth


requirement, while universal curve yields a somewhat
conservative result
❑ Assess FM bandwidth between the bounds given by
Carson’s rule and the universal curve
19
Example
❑ In north America, the maximum value of frequency
deviation f is fixed at 75kHz for commercial FM
broadcasting by ratio.
❑ If we take the modulation frequency W = 15kHz, which is
typically the maximum audio frequency of interest in FM
transmission, the corresponding value of the deviation ratio
is D = 75/15 = 5
❑ Using Carson’s rul , the approximate value of the
transmission bandwidth of the FM wave is
B = 2 (75+15) = 180kHz
❑ Using universal curve,
B = 3.2 f = 3.2 x 75 = 240kHz
20
Exercise
❑ Assuming that m(t) = 10sinc (104 t ) , determine the
transmission bandwidth of an FM modulated signal
with k f = 4000

21
Generation of FM waves
❑ Direct approach
◼ Design an oscillator whose frequency changes with the
input voltage => voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO)
❑ Indirect approach
◼ First generate a narrowband FM signal first and then
change it to a wideband single
◼ Due to the similarity of conventional AM signals, the
generation of a narrowband FM signal is
straightforward.

22
Generation of Narrow-band FM

❑ Consider a narrow band FM wave


s1 (t) = A1 cos2f1t + 1 (t)
t f1 = carrier frequency
1 (t) = 2k1  m( )d
0 k1 = frequency sensitivity

❑ Given 1(t) <<1 with  ≤ 0.3, we may use


cos1 (t) 1

sin1 (t)  11 (t)
❑ Correspondingly, we may approximate s1(t) as
s1 (t) = A1 cos(2  f1t )− A1 sin (2  f1t )  1 (t)
= A1 cos(2f1t )− 2k1 A1 sin(2f 1t ) m( )d
t

0
Narrow-band FW wave
23
▪ Narrow-band frequency modulator
m(t) Product -
integrator
Modulator
+
Narrow-band
+ FM wave 1 t
A1 sin(2f1t)

-900 phase Carrier wave


shifter A1 cos(2f1t)

▪ Next, pass s1(t) through a frequency multiplier, which


consists of a non-linear device and a bandpass filter.
Narrow-band Wideband FM
FM wave Wave
Memoryless Band-pass
nonlinear device filter

– The input-output relationship of the non-linear device is


modeled as
s2 (t) = a1s1 (t) + a2 s12 (t) +…+ an s1n (t)
– The BPF is used to Pass the FM wave centred at nf1 and with
deviation nf1 and suppress all other FM spectra
24
Example: frequency multiplier with n = 2

▪ Problem: Consider a square-law device based frequency multiplier


s (t) = a s (t) + a s 2 (t)
2 1 1 21
with
s1 (t) = A1 cos 2f1t + 2k1  m( )d 
 t

 0 
▪ Specify the midband freq. and bandwidth of BPF used in the freq.
multiplier for the resulting freq. deviation to be twice that at the input
of the nonlinear device
▪ Solution:
 t

s2 (t) = a1 A1 cos 2f 1t + 2k1  m( )d  + a2 A1 cos  2f1t + 2k1  m( )d 
2 2
t

 0   0 
  a2 A12 2a A12
= a1 A1 cos  2 f1t + 2k1  m( )d  + cos 4f1t + 4k1  m( )d 

t t
+
 0  2 2  0 
fc=2f1
Removed by BPF with BW > 2f = 4f1
25
❑ Thus, connecting the narrow-band frequency modulator
and the frequency multiplier, we may build the
wideband frequency modulator
s1 (t) = A1 cos 2f1t + 2k1  m( )d 
 t

 0 
Messag Wideband
signal Narrow-band FM signal
Frequency
Integrator phase
multiplier
modulator
Ac cos(2 f1t)
Crystal-controlled
oscillator

fc = nf1
k f = nk1
s(t) = Ac cos 2f ct + 2k f  m( )d 
 t

 0 
f = nf 1
26
Mixer
❑ fc = nf1 may not be the desired carrier frequency. The
modulator performs an up/down conversion to shift
the modulated signal to the desired center freq.
❑ This consists of a mixer and a BPF
v1(t) Band-pass v2(t)
s(t)
filter

cos(2flt)

27
Exercise: A typical FM transmitter

❑ Problem: Given the simplified block diagram of a typical FM


transmitter used to transmit audio signals containing frequencies in
the range 100Hz to 15kHz.
❑ Desired FM wave: fc = 100MHz, f = 75kHz.
❑ Set 1 = 0.2 in the narrowband phase modulation to limit harmonic
distortion.
❑ Specify the two-stage frequency multiplier factors n1 and n2

0.1MHz 9.5MHz

28
Demodulation of FM
Balanced Frequency Discriminator

Given FM wave s(t) = Ac cos 2f ct + 2k f  m( )d 


t

 0 
d
dt
 
s(t) = − Ac 2f ct + 2k f m(t) sin 2f ct + 2k f  m( )d

t

0


Hybrid-modulated wave with AM and FM

❑ Differentiator + envelop detector = FM demodulator


❑ Frequency discriminator: a “freq to amplitude” transform device
Slope circuit Envelop
Baseband
H1(f) detector +
FM signal
wave
-
Slope circuit Envelop
H2(f) detector

 j2a ( f − f c + B / 2 ), fc − B / 2  f  fc + B / 2
H1 ( f ) =  j2a( f + f c − B / 2 ), − f c − B / 2  f  − f c + B / 2 H 2 ( f ) = H 1 (− f )
 0,
 elsewhere
29
❑ Circuit diagram and frequency response

30
Think …
❑ Compared with amplitude modulation, angle
modulation requires a higher implementation
complexity and a higher bandwidth occupancy.

❑ What is the usefulness of angle modulation systems?

31
Application: FM Radio broadcasting

❑ As with standard AM radio, most FM radio receivers are


of super-heterodyne type
▪ Typical freq parameters
– RF carrier range = 88~108
Limiter MHz
– Midband of IF = 10.7MHz
discriminator – IF bandwidth = 200kHz
– Peak freq. deviation = 75KHz
Baseband
low-pass filter
loudspeaker
Audio amplifier
with de-emphasis

32
FM Radio Stereo Multiplexing
ml(t) +
❑ Stereo multiplexing is a form of FDM 
designed to transmit two separate +
mr(t) + + m(t)
signals via the same carrier. 
+

❑ Widely used in FM broadcasting to -
K
send two different elements of a
program (e.g. vocalist and Frequency
doubler
accompanist in an orchestra) so as to
cos(2f c t)
give a spatial dimension to its
perception by a listener at the m(t) = ml (t) + mr (t)
receiving end
+ ml (t) − mr (t)cos(4f ct)
▪ The sum signal is left unprocessed in its
baseband form + K cos(2fct)
▪ The difference signal and a 38-kHz
fc = 19kHz
subcarrier produce a DSBSC wave
▪ The 19-kHz pilot is included as a
reference for coherent detection
33
❑ FM-Stereo Receiver

Baseband ml(t)+mr(t) + 2ml(t)


LPF 
+
+
To two loudspeakers
m(t)
BPF centered Baseband
at 2fc=38kHz LPF - 
ml(t)-mr(t) 2mr(t)

Frequency
doubler

Narrow-band
filter tuned to
fc=19kHz

34
Comparison of Analog-Modulation
❑ Bandwidth efficiency
◼ SSB is the most bandwidth efficient, but cannot effectively
transmit DC
◼ VSB is a good compromise
◼ PM/FM are the least favorable systems
❑ Power efficiency
◼ FM provides high noise immunity
◼ Conventional AM is the least power efficient
❑ Ease of implementation (transmitter and receiver)
◼ The simplest receiver structure is conventional AM
◼ FM receivers are also easy to implement
◼ DSB-SC and SSB-SC requires coherent detector and hence is
much more complicated.

35
Applications
❑ SSB-SC:
◼ Voice transmission over microwave and satellite links
❑ VSB-SC
◼ Widely used in TV broadcasting
❑ FM
◼ High-fidelity radio broadcasting
❑ Conventional AM
◼ AM radio broadcasting
❑ DSB-SC
◼ Hardly used in analog signal transmission!

36
Thank You !!

37

You might also like