Receiver
Receiver
Receivers must provide the sensitivity and selectivity that permit full recovery of the original signal. Selectivity- Ability of a receiver to pick up weak signal Sensitivity-Ability of a receiver to select a signal of a desired frequency while rejecting those on closely adjacent frequencies
Sensitivity
A communication receivers sensitivity, or ability to pick up weak signals, is a function of overall gain, the factor by which an input signal is multiplied to produce the output signal. The higher the gain of a receiver, the better its sensitivity. The more gain that a receiver has, the smaller the input signal necessary to produce a desired level of output. High gain in receivers is obtained by using multiple amplification stages.
This is a fixed frequency receiver Its construction is simple. It has high sensitivity.
In the tuned radio frequency (TRF) receiver sensitivity is improved by adding a number of stages of RF amplification between the antenna and detector, followed by stages of audio amplification. The RF amplifier stages increase the amplitude /gain before it is applied to the detector. The recovered signal is amplified further by audio amplifiers, which provide sufficient gain to operate a loudspeaker.
Disadvantages of TRF
Instablity Insufficient adjacent-frequency rejection Bandwidth variation Difficult to operate at higher frequencies
Bandwidth variation
Consider a tuned circuit required to have a bandwidth of 10KHz at a frequency of 535KHz.The Q of this circuit must be Q=f/f= 535/10=53.5.At the other end of the broadcast band,i.e. at 1640KHz,the Q of the coil should in theory have increased by a factor of 164.But in practice it is difficult to make circuit for Q =164 due to various losses.Thus the quality factor at 1640khz is unlikely to be in excess of 120, so giving the bandwidth of f=1640/120=13.7khz and ensuring that the receiver will pick up adjacent stations as well as the one to which it is tuned.
Superheterodyne Receiver
The superheterodyne receiver is a receiver which uses the principle of frequency mixing or heterodyning to convert the received signal to a lower "intermediate" frequency, that can be more conveniently processed than the original radio carrier frequency
Block Diagram
Antenna Converter (Multiplier) b(t)
RF Stage
a(t) (radio frequency) RF Amplifier & RF BPF
IF Stage
d(t) (intermediate frequency) IF Amplifier & IF BPF e(t)
Envelope Detector
f(t) Diode, Capacitor, Resistor, & DC blocker
Audio Stage
Power amplifier
X
c(t)
g(t)
Local Oscillator
Ganged RF BPF and Oscillator cos[(c+IF)t]
RF Amplifier
The antenna picks up the weak radio signal and feeds it to the RF amplifier provide some initial gain and selectivity and are sometimes called preselectors. Pick up desired station by tuning filter to right frequency band. RF amplifier is a wideband RF amplifier tunable from approximately 540khz to 1650khz(standard commercial AM band)
Local Oscillator
The frequency of the local oscillator used is fLO = fc + fIF (up-conversion) or fLO = fc - fIF (down-conversion) A constant frequency difference is maintained between the local oscilattor and the RF circuits normally through capacitance tuning ,in which all the capacitors are ganged together and operated in unison by one knob.
Mixing Principles
Mixers accept two inputs: The signal to be translated to another frequency is applied to one input, and the sine wave from a local oscillator is applied to the other input. Like an amplitude modulator, a mixer essentially performs a mathematical multiplication of its two input signals. The oscillator produces the carrier, and other is the input signal. The output contains not only the carrier signal but also sidebands formed when the local oscillator and input signal are mixed.
If the receiver is tuned to 640khz. The local oscillator will generate a frequency of 1095khz(640khz+455khz) The mixer will mix the 1095khz and 640khz.This produces the following signals at the output. a) 1095khz b) 640khz c) 445 khz difference frequency d) 1735khz sum frequency
If the receiver is tuned to 550khz the local oscillator (because of mechanical linking) will generate a frequency of 1005khz(always 455khz above the station carrier frequency).
IF Amplifiers The primary objective in the design of an IF stage is to obtain good selectivity. Rejection of adjacent unwanted frequencies
IF Amplifiers
The output of the mixer is an IF signal containing the same modulation that appeared on the input RF signal. The signal is amplified by one or more IF amplifier stages, and most of the gain is obtained in these stages. Selective tuned circuits provide fixed selectivity. Since the intermediate frequency is usually lower than the input frequency, IF amplifiers are easier to design and good selectivity is easier to obtain.
Demodulators
The highly amplified IF signal is finally applied to the demodulator, which recovers the original modulating information. The demodulator may be a diode detector (for AM), a quadrature detector (for FM), or a product detector (for SSB). The output of the demodulator is then usually fed to an audio amplifier.
Radio AM
Radio FM
Carrier range RF
88 108 MHz
IF
0.455 kHz
10.7 MHz
Bandwidth IF
10 kHz
200 kHz