Angle Mod
Angle Mod
Angle Mod
EE442 Lecture 8
Spring 2017
1
Amplitude, Frequency and Phase Modulation
2
Why Use a Carrier Signal?
3
Illustrating AM, PM and FM Signals
Carrier signal
Carrier Wave
m(t)
AM [Chapter 4]
FM
(t ) A cos(C t 0 )
(t )
C t 0
d (t )
Slope: i (t ) C
dt t t
i
0
time t
5
Concept of Instantaneous Frequency
(t ) A cos( (t ))
Angle
Modulation (t) is generalized angle
(t ) A cos(C t 0 )
(t )
C t 0
(t )
ti time t
6
Angle Modulation Gives PM and FM
d (t )
t
i (t )
dt t t
and (t ) ( )d
i
i
Angle
Modulation
Phase Frequency
Modulation Modulation
7
Comparing Frequency Modulation to Phase Modulation
8
Phase Modulation (PM)
(t ) C t 0 kpm(t ) Generally we let 0 0.
Equation (5.3b)
Let 0 0 PM (t ) A cos(C t kpm(t )) Lathi & Ding;
Page 254
9
Frequency Modulation (FM)
But in frequency modulation the instantaneous angular frequency
i varies linearly with the modulating signal m(t),
i C k f m(t )
t t
(t ) (
C k f m( )) d C t k f m( ) d
Then
Equation (5.5)
t
FM (t ) A cos C t k f m( ) d Lathi & Ding;
Page 254
10
Summary
d (t )
Definition: Instantaneous frequency is i (t )
dt
dm(t )
Frequency i C kp i C k f m(t )
dt
11
A Pictorial Way to View the Generation of FM and PM
t
H(j) = 1/j
m( ) d FM (t )
m(t )
Phase
Modulator
Frequency Modulator
H(j) = j .m(t )
.
PM (t )
m(t ) d Frequency
dt Modulator
Phase Modulator
12
Equations for FM Wave with Single Tone Modulation
Carrier signal AC cos(C t )
Carrier frequency C 2 fC
Modulating wave m(t ) Am cos(mt ) A single tone frequency
Modulating frequency m 2 f m (radians/sec)
Deviation sensitivity kf
m mmin
Frequency deviation f k f Am k f max
2 2
f
Modulation Index
fm
Instantaneous frequency f i fC k f Am cos(mt ) fC f cos(mt )
t
Remember FM (t ) AC cos C t k f m( )d , generally
k f Am
Modulated wave FM (t ) AC cos C t sin(mt )
f m
or FM (t ) AC cos C t sin(mt )
Handout 13
Generalized Angle Modulation
The first block can be any linear time-invariant (LTI) operator – it need only
be invertible so that we can recover m(t). In general, we have
t
GAM (t ) A cos C t m( )h t d
14
Average Power of a FM or PM Wave
The amplitude A is constant in a phase modulated or a frequency
modulated signal. RF power does not depend upon the frequency
or the phase of the waveform.
A2
Average Power (always)
2
15
Comparison of FM (or PM) to AM
16
Phasor Interpretation of AM DSB with Carrier
C rotates faster than m
us cos(Ct)
C
cos(mt)
ls
m = |us| = |ls|
Spectrum: DSB AM
C - m C C + m
lower upper
sideband sideband
17
Phasor Interpretation of AM DSB with Carrier (continued)
18
Example 5.1 in Lathi and Ding (pp. 256-257)
Sketch FM and PM waveforms for the modulating signal m(t). The constants
kf and kp are 2 105 and 10, respectively. Carrier frequency fc = 100 MHz.
.
m(t)
FM PM
kf kp .
f i fC m(t ) 1 10 8 1 10 5 m(t ); f i fC m(t ) 1 10 8 5 m(t );
2 2
. .
mmin 1 and mmax 1 m min 20, 000 and m max 20, 000
f i min 108 105 ( 1) 99.9 MHz, f i min 108 5(20, 000) 99.9 MHz,
f i max 108 105 ( 1) 100.1 MHz f i max 108 5(20, 000) 100.1 MHz
19
Example 5.2 in Lathi and Ding (pp. 257-259)
Sketch FM and PM waveforms for the modulating signal m(t). The constants
kf and kp are 2 105 and /2, respectively. Carrier frequency fc = 100 MHz.
FM
kf
f i fC m(t ) 1 108 1 10 5 m(t )
2
kp . 1.
f i fC m(t ) 1 108 m(t )
2 4
PM
This is carrier PM by a digital signal
– it is Phase Shift Keying (PSK)
because digital data is represented
by phase of the carrier wave.
PM (t ) A cos C t kp m(t ) A cos C t
m(t ) Lathi & Ding;
2
Page 258
PM (t ) A sin(C t ) when m(t ) 1
PM (t ) A sin(C t ) when m(t ) 1
21
Case I – Narrowband FM (NBFM)
There are two approximations for FM:
t
f f
NBFM: FM (t ) A cos C t k f m( ) d
fm B
t
If k f m( ) d
1, we have NBFM.
t 1
Let k f
m( ) d k f sin(mt ),
= 0.2
Then bandwidth BFM 2 f m
22
Narrowband FM (NBFM) Equation
f f
Start with design equation for tone frequency fm :
fm B
FM
NB
(t ) AC cos 2 fC t sin(2 fmt )
FM
NB
(t ) AC cos 2 fC t cos sin(2 fmt ) AC sin 2 fC t sin sin(2 fmt )
Note: cos sin(2 fmt ) 1, and sin sin(2 fmt) sin(2 fmt)
FM
NB
(t ) AC cos 2 fC t sin 2 fC t sin(2 fmt )
1
FM
NB
(t ) AC cos 2 fC t AC cos 2 ( fC fm )t cos 2 ( fC fm )t NBFM
2
Result from AM modulation with tone frequency:
1
AM (t ) AC cos 2 fC t AC cos 2 ( fC fm )t cos 2 ( fC fm )t AM
2
The difference is the sign (i.e., phase) of the difference frequency term.
Conclusion: The NBFM bandwidth is comparable to that of AM.
Bandwidth: BT 2 fm
23
Case II – Wideband FM (WBFM)
WBPM requires >> 1 radian
For wideband FM we have a nonlinear process, with single tone
modulation:
FM
WB
(t ) Re AC exp j 2 fC t j sin(2 f mt )
We need to expand the exponential into a Fourier series so that
we can analyze FM
WB
(t ).
f f
WB
FM (t ) AC
n
J n ( ) cos 2 ( fC nf m )t
fm
B
where the coefficients J n ( ) are Bessel functions.
Spectral analysis from tone modulation of WBFM: Lathi & Ding; pp. 264-270
We will not cover this section in ES 442 but rather focus upon a physical
Interpretation of the spectrum spread.
24
FM (or PM) Requires Much More bandwidth Than AM
A A
t f
fC
A Carrier Signal (frequency fc ) A
t f
fm
A Message Signal (frequency fm) A
AM f
t
A WBFM
A Amplitude Modulated Signal
t f
= 1.0 2.0 8 8 fm
5.0 16 16 fm
10.0 28 28 fm
=5
Single tone modulation
f
= 10
fm
BT or BW
26
Spectra of an FM Signal
Single-tone
A = 0.2 A
modulation
f
= 1.0
fm
f increasing, f is constant,
f m is constant =5 f m is decreasing
= 10
27
Measured Spectra of an FM Radio Signal
Voice modulation
200 kHz
noise
28
Selecting an FM Station
Broadcast FM Radio covers from 88 MHz to 108 MHz
100 stations – 200 kHz spacing between FM stations
29
Specifications for Commercial FM Transmissions
30
FM Bandwidth and the Modulation Index
Lathi & Ding – Chapter 5 – see pages 261 to 263
f f
Modulation index
fm B
31
Phasor Construction of an FM Signal
We are constrained by
constant amplitude for
C
both FM and PM signals.
C
32
Sidebands Constructed From Phasors in FM Modulation
Animation showing how phase modulation works in the phasor picture -- phase
modulation with a sinusoidal modulation waveform and a modulation depth of π/4
radians. The blue line segments represent the phasors at the carrier and the
harmonics of the modulation frequency.
33
Direct Generation of FM Signal Using a VCO
VDD
m(t)
LC Tank Circuit
Voltage
FM
NB
(t )
Control
m(t)
Varactor
1
diodes osc
L1C eq
34
Indirect Generation of an FM Signal Using Multiplication
m(t ) (t )
NB
FM
WB
FM (t )
Frequency
NBFM Multiplier
35
Armstrong Indirect FM Transmitter Example
Lathi & Ding;
pp. 275-277 fC 2 12.8 MHz
(t )
NB
FM fC f2 1.6 kHz
NBFM X64
fC 1 200 kHz generation Multiplier
f1 25Hz FM
NB
(t )
fC 3 1.9 MHz
FM
WB
(t ) f3 1.6 kHz
X48
PA Multiplier BPF
fC 4 91.2 MHz The mixer
does not
f4 76.8 kHz
change f
f LO 10.9 MHz
Crystal Oscillator
Note: These numbers are related
to an FM broadcast radio station.
36
Generation of Narrowband Frequency Modulation (NBFM)
t
FM (t ) A cos C t k f m( ) d
NBFM requires << 1 radian
DSB-SC
modulator
m (t) NBFM
kf
Asin(ct)
-/2 Carrier
37
Generation of Narrowband Phase Modulation (NBPM)
m (t) NBPM
kp
Asin(ct)
-/2
Acos(ct)
38
Advantages of FM
Advantages of frequency modulation
1. Resilient to noise: The main advantage of frequency modulation is a reduction in
noise. As most noise is amplitude based, this can be removed by running the
received signal through a limiter so that only frequency variations remain.
2. Resilient to signal strength variations: In the same way that amplitude noise can
be removed, so too can signal variations due to channel degradation because it does
not suffer from amplitude variations as the signal level varies. This makes FM ideal
for use in mobile applications where signal levels constantly vary.
3. Does not require linear amplifiers in the transmitter: As only frequency changes
contain the information carried, amplifiers in the transmitter need not be linear.
4. Enables greater efficiency : The use of non-linear amplifiers (e.g., class C and class
D/E amplifiers) means that transmitter efficiency levels can be higher. This results
from linear amplifiers being inherently inefficient.
39
Disadvantages of FM
Disadvantages of frequency modulation
1. Requires more complicated demodulator: One of the disadvantages is that
the demodulator is a more complicated, and hence more expensive than the very
simple diode detectors used in AM.
40
Practical Frequency Demodulators
Frequency discriminators can be built using various ways:
• FM slope detector
• Balanced discriminator
• Quadrature demodulators
41
FM Slope Detector Performs FM to AM Conversion
Envelope
Detector
FM (t )
42
Balanced Discriminator (Foster-Seeley Discriminator)
Tuned Envelope
Circuit Detector Centered around fc
• • f
FM (t )
•
Transfer Characteristics
43
Quadrature Demodulator – Block Diagram
FM (t )
Phase m(t )
Low-Pass
Phase Comparator
Filter
Shifting Circuit
Circuit
Signal delay t0 times
carrier frequency fC Phase Detector
= 90 degrees (or /2).
44
Using XOR Gate for Phase Frequency Detector
A B Output
0 0 0
0 1 1
1 0 1
XOR 1 1 0
45
Quadrature Demodulator – Implementation
FM (t ) m(t )
FM (t )
Phase shifter
(or delay time)
46
Phase-Locked Loops
Oscillator
(VCO)
eo (t )
2B cos C t o (t )
47
Zero-Crossing Detectors
48
Zero-Crossing Detector Illustration
https://www.slideshare.net/avocado1111/angle-modulation-35636989
49
Example
f
FM (t )
50
Solution to Example
Start with the basic FM equation:
FM (t ) AC cos 2 fC t sin(2 f mt )
Compare this to
FM (t ) 10 cos 2 (106 )t 8sin(2 (10 3 )t )
51
Pre-Emphasis and De-Emphasis in FM
R1
AWG Noise R1
C
R2
C
52
Typical Pre-Emphasis and De-Emphasis Filters
Transmitter Receiver
Pre-emphasis Filter De-emphasis Filter
R1 Lathi & Ding;
Chapter 5,
pp. 286-289
R1
R2 C
C
-6 dB/octave
+6 dB/octave
1 1 log( ) 1 log( )
R1C R1 R2 C R1C
53
Analog and Digital FM Cellular Telephones
1G analog cellular telephone (1983) – AMPS (Advanced Mobile Phone Service)
First use of cellular concept
Used 30 kHz channel spacing (but voice BW was B = 3 KHz)
Peak frequency deviation f = 12 kHz, and
BT = 2(f + B) = 2(12 kHz + 3 kHz) = 30 kHz
Two channels (30 kHz each); one for uplink and one for downlink
Used FM for voice and FSK for data communication
No protection from eavesdroppers
Successor to AMPS was GSM (Global System for Mobile) in early 1990s
GSM is 2G cellular telephone
Still used by nearly 50% of world’s population
GSM was a digital communication system
Modulating signal is a bit stream representing voice signal
Used Gaussian Minimum Shift Keying (GMSK) – later in EE 442
Channel bandwidth is 200 kHz (simultaneously shared by 32 users
This is 4.8 times improvement over AMPS
54
Digital Carrier Modulation – ASK, FSK and PSK
Amplitude
Shift Keying
Frequency
Shift Keying
Phase
Shift Keying
Digital Signals
55
Questions?
56