Module 2 Pcs
Module 2 Pcs
Module 2
Amplitude Modulation Fundamentals
In the modulation process, the baseband voice, video, or digital signal modifies another,
higher-frequency signal called the carrier, which is usually a sine wave.
AM Concepts
In AM, the information signal varies the amplitude of the carrier sine wave. “The
instantaneous value of the carrier amplitude changes in accordance with the amplitude
and frequency variations of the modulating signal”.
Fig. 3-1 shows a single frequency sine wave intelligence signal modulating a higher-frequency
carrier.
The carrier frequency remains constant during the modulation process, but its amplitude varies
in accordance with the modulating signal.
This imaginary line on the carrier waveform is known as the envelope.
Using trigonometric functions, we can express the sine wave carrier with the simple expression
- represents the instantaneous value of the carrier sine wave voltage at some specific time
in the cycle
Vc - peak value of the constant unmodulated carrier sine wave as measured between zero and
the maximum amplitude of either the positive-going or the negative-going alternations
fc - frequency of the carrier sine wave; and
t - a particular point in time during the carrier cycle
In general, the amplitude of the modulating signal should be less than the amplitude of the
carrier. When the amplitude of the modulating signal is greater than the amplitude of the carrier,
distortion will occur, causing incorrect information to be transmitted
------1
The instantaneous value of either the top or the bottom voltage envelope υ1 can be computed
by using the equation
------ 2
This shows that the instantaneous value of the modulating signal algebraically adds to the peak
value of the carrier. Thus, we can write the instantaneous value of the complete modulated
wave by substituting for the peak value of carrier voltage as follows:
-------- 3
Now substituting the previously derived expression for v1 and expanding, we get the following:
Where
The AM wave is the product of the carrier and modulating signals. The circuit used for
producing AM is called a modulator. Its two inputs, the carrier and the modulating signal, and
the resulting outputs are shown in Fig. 3-3. Amplitude modulators compute the product of the
carrier and modulating signals. Circuits that compute the product of two analog signals are also
known as analog multipliers, mixers, converters, product detectors, and phase detectors. A
circuit that changes a lower-frequency baseband or intelligence signal to a higher-frequency
signal is usually called a modulator. A circuit used to recover the original intelligence signal
from an AM wave is known as a detector or demodulator.
These are the peak values of the signals, and the carrier voltage is the unmodulated value.
Multiplying the modulation index by 100 gives the percentage of modulation.
Overmodulation and Distortion: The modulation index should be a number between 0 and
1. If the amplitude of the modulating voltage is higher than the carrier voltage, m will be greater
than 1, causing distortion of the modulated waveform.
Simple distortion is illustrated in Fig. 3-4. Here a sine wave information signal is modulating
a sine wave carrier, but the modulating voltage is much greater than the carrier voltage,
resulting in a condition called overmodulation. Distortion caused by overmodulation also
produces adjacent channel interference. Distortion produces a nonsinusoidal information
signal.
The peak value of the carrier signal Vc is the average of the Vmax and Vmin values:
AM Power
The AM signal is really a composite of several signal voltages, namely, the carrier and the two
sidebands, and each of these signals produces power in the antenna. The total transmitted power
PT is simply the sum of the carrier power Pc and the power in the two sidebands P USB and PLSB:
We have,
where the first term is the carrier, the second term is the lower sideband, and the third term is
the upper sideband.
The rms carrier and sideband voltages are then
The power in the carrier and sidebands can be calculated by using the power formula P = V 2
/R, where P is the output power, V is the rms output voltage, and R is the resistive part of the
load impedance,
Therefore,
The total power in an AM signal wrt the carrier power and the percentage of modulation is
When the antenna impedance is known, the output power is easily calculated by using the
formula PT = IT 2 R
where Here Ic is the unmodulated carrier current in the load, and m is the
modulation index, then,
Single-Sideband Modulation:
In amplitude modulation, two-thirds of the transmitted power is in the carrier, which itself
conveys no information. The real information is contained within the sidebands. One way to
improve the efficiency of amplitude modulation is to suppress the carrier and eliminate one
sideband. The result is a single-sideband (SSB) signal.
DSB Signals : The first step in generating an SSB signal is to suppress the carrier, leaving the
upper and lower sidebands. This type of signal is referred to as a double-sideband suppressed
carrier (DSSC or DSB) signal. The benefit, of course, is that no power is wasted on the carrier.
Double-sideband suppressed carrier modulation is simply a special case of AM with no carrier.
A typical DSB signal is shown in Fig. This signal, the algebraic sum of the two sinusoidal
sidebands, is the signal produced when a carrier is modulated by a single-tone sine wave
information signal. The carrier is suppressed, and the time-domain DSB signal is a sine wave
at the carrier frequency, varying in amplitude as shown. Note that the envelope of this
waveform is not the same as that of the modulating signal, as it is in a pure AM signal with
carrier. A unique characteristic of the DSB signal is the phase transitions that occur at the
lower-amplitude portions of the wave. A frequency-domain display of a DSB signal as shown,
the spectrum space occupied by a DSB signal is the same as that for a conventional AM signal.
SSB Signals
In DSB transmission, since the sidebands are the sum and difference of the carrier and
modulating signals, the information is contained in both sidebands. As it turns out, there is no
reason to transmit both sidebands in order to convey the information. One sideband can be
suppressed; the remaining sideband is called a single- sideband suppressed carrier (SSSC or
SSB) signal.
SSB signals offer four major benefits.
1. The primary benefit of an SSB signal is that the spectrum space it occupies is only one-
half that of AM and DSB signals.
2. SSB transmitters can be made smaller and lighter than an equivalent AM or DSB
transmitter because less circuitry and power are used.
3. Because SSB signals occupy a narrower bandwidth, the amount of noise in the signal is
reduced.
4. There is less selective fading of an SSB signal over long distances.
Disadvantages of DSB and SSB: The main disadvantage of DSB and SSB signals is that they
are harder to recover, or demodulate, at the receiver. Demodulation depends upon the carrier
being present. If the carrier is not present, then it must be regenerated at the receiver and
reinserted into the signal. To faithfully recover the intelligence signal, the reinserted carrier
must have the same phase and frequency as those of the original carrier.
To solve this problem, a low-level carrier signal is sometimes transmitted along with the two
sidebands in DSB or a single sideband in SSB. Because the carrier has a low power level, the
essential benefits of SSB are retained, but a weak carrier is received so that it can be amplified
and reinserted to recover the original information. Such a low-level carrier is referred to as a
pilot carrier.
In SSB, the transmitter output is expressed in terms of peak envelope power (PEP), the
maximum power produced on voice amplitude peaks.
The average power is typically only one-fourth to one-third of the PEP value with typical
human speech:
Typical SSB transmitters are designed to handle only the average power level on a continuous
basis, not the PEP.
Amplitude Modulators
Amplitude modulators are generally one of two types: low level or high level. Low-level
modulators generate AM with small signals and thus must be amplified considerably if they
are to be transmitted. High-level modulators produce AM at high power levels, usually in the
final amplifier stage of a transmitter.
Low-Level AM:
Diode Modulator: The practical implementation shown in Fig., Consists of a resistive mixing
network, a diode rectifier, and an LC tuned circuit.
The carrier (Fig. b) is applied to one input resistor and the modulating signal (Fig. a) to
the other. The mixed signals appear across R3.
This network causes the two signals to be linearly mixed, i.e., algebraically added.
If both the carrier and the modulating signal are sine waves, the waveform resulting
at the junction of the two resistors will be like that shown in Fig. c, where the carrier
wave is riding on the modulating signal. This signal is not AM. Modulation is a
multiplication process, not an addition process.
The composite waveform is applied to a diode rectifier. The diode is connected so
that it is forward-biased by the positive-going half-cycles of the input wave. During
the negative portions of the wave, the diode is cut off and no signal passes. The
current through the diode is a series of positive-going pulses whose amplitude varies
in proportion to the amplitude of the modulating signal [see Fig. (d)].
These positive-going pulses are applied to the parallel-tuned circuit made up of L and
C, which are resonant at the carrier frequency. Each time the diode conducts, a pulse of
current flows through the tuned circuit. The coil and capacitor repeatedly exchange
energy, causing an oscillation, or “ringing,” at the resonant frequency. The oscillation
of the tuned circuit creates one negative half-cycle for every positive input pulse.
High amplitude positive pulses cause the tuned circuit to produce high- amplitude
negative pulses. Low-amplitude positive pulses produce corresponding low-amplitude
negative pulses. The resulting waveform across the tuned circuit is an AM signal, as
Fig. 4-8(e) illustrates.
The Q of the tuned circuit should be high enough to eliminate the harmonics and
produce a clean sine wave and to filter out the modulating signal, and low enough that
its bandwidth accommodates the sidebands generated.
Transistor Modulator. An improved version of the circuit just described is shown in Fig.
4-9. Because it uses a transistor instead of the diode, the circuit has gain. The emitter-base
junction is a diode and a nonlinear device. Modulation occurs as described previously, except
that the base current controls a larger collector current, and therefore the circuit amplifies.
Rectification occurs because of the emitter-base junction. This causes larger half-sine pulses
of current in the tuned circuit. The tuned circuit oscillates (rings) to generate the missing half-
cycle. The output is a classic AM wave.
High-Level AM
In high-level AM, 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.
Collector Modulator: Here the output stage of the transmitter is a high-power class C
amplifier. Class C amplifiers conduct for only a portion of the positive half-cycle of their input
signal. The collector current pulses cause the tuned circuit to oscillate (ring) at the desired
output frequency. The tuned circuit, therefore, reproduces the negative portion of the carrier
signal
RKT-Dept. of ECE, DBIT
BEC404- Principles of Communication Systems
The modulator is a linear power amplifier that takes the low-level modulating signal and
amplifies it to a high-power level.
The modulating output signal is coupled through modulation transformer T1 to the class
C amplifier. The secondary winding of the modulation transformer is connected in series
with the collector supply voltage VCC of the class C amplifier.
With a zero-modulation input signal, there is zero-modulation voltage across the
secondary of T1, the collector supply voltage is applied directly to the class C amplifier,
and the output carrier is a steady sine wave.
When the modulating signal occurs, the ac voltage of the modulating signal across the
secondary of the modulation transformer is added to and subtracted from the dc collector
supply voltage. This varying supply voltage is then applied to the class C amplifier,
causing the amplitude of the current pulses through transistor Q1 to vary. As a result, the
amplitude of the carrier sine wave varies in accordance with the modulated signal. When
the modulation signal goes positive, it adds to the collector supply voltage, thereby
increasing its value and causing higher current pulses and a higher-amplitude carrier.
When the modulating signal goes negative, it subtracts from the collector supply voltage,
decreasing it.
Amplitude Demodulators
Demodulators, or detectors, are circuits that accept modulated signals and recover the original
modulating information.
Diode Detectors(Envelope detector): The simplest and most widely used amplitude
demodulator is the diode detector.
As shown, the AM signal is usually transformer-coupled and applied to a basic half wave
rectifier circuit consisting of D1 and R1.
The diode conducts when the positive half-cycles of the AM signals occur. During the
negative half-cycles, the diode is reverse-biased and no current flows through it. As a
result, the voltage across R1 is a series of positive pulses whose amplitude varies with the
modulating signal.
A capacitor C1 is connected across resistor R1, effectively filtering out the carrier and
thus recovering the original modulating signal.
RKT-Dept. of ECE, DBIT
BEC404- Principles of Communication Systems
Choosing RC:
Distortion of the original signal can occur if the time constant of the load resistor R1
and the shunt filter capacitor C1 is too long or too short.
If the time constant is too long, the capacitor discharge will be too slow to follow the
faster changes in the modulating signal. This is referred to as diagonal distortion.
If the time constant is too short, the capacitor will discharge too fast and the carrier
will not be sufficiently filtered out. The dc component in the output is removed with
a series coupling or blocking capacitor, C2 in Fig. 4-15, which is connected to an
amplifier.
Balanced Modulators:
A balanced modulator is a circuit that generates a DSB signal, suppressing the carrier and
leaving only the sum and difference frequencies at the output. The output of a balanced
modulator can be further processed by filters or phase-shifting circuitry to eliminate one of the
sidebands, resulting in an SSB signal.
Lattice Modulators
One of the most popular and widely used balanced modulators is the diode ring or lattice
modulator in Fig. consisting of an input transformer T1, an output transformer T2, and four
diodes connected in a bridge circuit.
Working:
The carrier signal is applied to the center taps of the input and output transformers, and the
modulating signal is applied to the input transformer T1. The output appears across the
secondary of the output transformer T2.
The carrier sine wave, which is usually considerably higher in frequency and amplitude
than the modulating signal, is used as a source of forward and reverse bias for the diodes.
The carrier turns the diodes off and on at a high rate of speed, and the diodes act as switches
that connect the modulating signal at the secondary of T1 to the primary of T2.
Transmitter-Multiplexers
Each signal to be transmitted feeds a modulator circuit.
The carrier for each modulator (fc) is on a different frequency. The carrier frequencies are
usually equally spaced from one another over a specific frequency range. These carriers
are referred to as subcarriers.
The FDM process divides up the bandwidth of the single channel into smaller, equally
spaced channels, each capable of carrying information in sidebands.
The modulator outputs containing the sideband information are added algebraically in a
linear mixer; no modulation or generation of sidebands takes place.
The resulting output signal is a composite of all the modulated subcarriers. This signal can
be used to modulate a radio transmitter or can itself be transmitted over the single
communication channel. Alternatively, the composite signal can become one input to
another multiplexed system.
Receiver-Demultiplexers
The receiving portion of an FDM system is shown in Fig. below.
A receiver picks up the signal and demodulates it, recovering the composite signal.
This is sent to a group of bandpass filters, each centered on one of the carrier frequencies.
Each filter passes only its channel and rejects all others.
A channel demodulator then recovers each original input signal