0% found this document useful (0 votes)
40 views51 pages

Module 4 - Amplitude Modulation Theory and Calculations

Uploaded by

teodoro kubaron
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)
40 views51 pages

Module 4 - Amplitude Modulation Theory and Calculations

Uploaded by

teodoro kubaron
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/ 51

Principles of

Communications
Module 4
Amplitude Modulation
Theory and Calculations
• Basic Principles of AM
• Modulation Index and Percentage of Modulation
• AM Power, Voltage, and Current
Basic Principles of AM
• In the modulation process, the voice, video, or digital
signal modifies another signal called the carrier.
• In amplitude modulation (AM) the information signal
varies the amplitude of the carrier sine wave.
• Carrier amplitude changes in accordance with the
amplitude and frequency variations of the modulating
signal.
• An imaginary line called the envelope connects the
positive and negative peaks of the carrier waveform.
Amplitude modulation. (a) The modulating or information signal.
Amplitude modulation. (b) The modulated carrier.
For a sine wave carrier,

vc = Vc sin2πfct
Where:

vc = the instantaneous value of the carrier sine wave


Vc = the peak value of the constant unmodulated
carrier sine wave
fc = the frequency of the carrier sine wave
t = particular point in time during the cycle
For a sine wave modulating signal,

vm = Vm sin2πfmt
Where:

vm = the instantaneous value of the information signal


Vm = the peak value of the information signal
fm = the frequency of the modulating signal
t = particular point in time during the cycle
• In AM, it is particularly important that:
V m < Vc

• Distortion occurs when the amplitude of the modulating


signal is greater than the amplitude of the carrier.
• A modulator is a circuit used to produce AM.
• 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 or
phase detectors.
• A circuit that changes lower-frequency baseband or
intelligence signal to a higher-frequency signal is called a
modulator.
• A circuit that changes higher-frequency signal to a lower-
frequency signal is generally referred to as a mixer.
• A circuit used to recover the original intelligence signal
from an AM wave is known as a detector or
demodulator.
Amplitude modulator showing input and output signals.
• Side frequencies, or sidebands are generated as part of
the modulation process
• Sidebands occur in the frequency spectrum directly above
and below the carrier frequency.
• Single-frequency sine-wave modulation generates two
sidebands.
• Complex wave (e.g. voice or video) modulation generates a
range of sidebands.
• The upper sideband (fUSB) and the lower sideband (fLSB) are
calculated:
fUSB = fc + fm and fLSB = fc − fm
The AM wave is the algebraic
sum of the carrier and upper and
lower sideband sine waves. (a)
Intelligence or modulating signal.
(b) Lower sideband. (c ) Carrier.
(d ) Upper sideband. (e )
Composite AM wave.
• On an oscilloscope, AM signal is the amplitude variations
of the carrier with respect to time.
• A plot of signal amplitude versus frequency is referred to
as frequency-domain display.
• A spectrum analyzer is used to display the frequency
domain as a signal.
• Bandwidth is the difference between the upper and lower
sideband frequencies.

BW = fUSB−fLSB
The relationship between the time
and frequency domains.
Example 1:

A standard AM broadcast station is allowed to transmit


modulating frequencies up to 5 kHz. If the AM station is
transmitting on a frequency of 980 kHz, what are sideband
frequencies and total bandwidth?

ANS. fUSB = 985 kHz


fLSB = 975 kHz
BW = 10 kHz
• When complex signals such as pulses or rectangular
waves modulate a carrier, a broad spectrum of
sidebands is produced.
• A modulating square wave will produce sidebands
based on the fundamental sine wave as well as its
odd harmonics.
Composite wave with fundamental frequency plus third and fifth harmonics
A square wave is made up of
fundamental sine wave and an
infinite number of odd harmonics
Pulse Modulation
• Amplitude modulation by square waves or rectangular
pulses is referred to as amplitude shift keying
(ASK).
• ASK is used in some types of data communications.
Frequency spectrum of an
AM signal modulated by a
square wave.
Amplitude modulation of a sine wave carrier by a pulse or rectangular wave. (a) Fifty percent modulation. (b) One
hundred percent modulation.
Modulation Index and
Percentage of Modulation
The modulation index (m) :
m = Vm / Vc

• This index is also known as the modulating factor or


coefficient, or the degree of modulation.
• Multiplying the modulation index by 100 gives the
percentage of modulation.
• Using oscilloscope voltage values:
Vmax − Vmin
Vm =
2

• The amount, or depth, of AM is then expressed as the


percentage of modulation (100 × m) rather than as a fraction.
AM wave showing peaks
(Vmax) and troughs (Vmin).
• The peak value of the carrier signal Vc, is
Vmax + Vmin
Vc =
2

• The modulation index is


Example 2:
Suppose that an AM waveform has Vmax = 18 Vp
and Vmin = 2 Vp. Determine:
a. Peak amplitude of the unmodulated carrier
b. Peak change in the amplitude of the envelope
c. Coefficient of modulation
d. Percent modulation
Ans. a. 10 V c. 0.8
b. 8 V d. 80%
Example 3:

The maximum peak-to-peak value of an AM wave is 45 V.


The peak-to-peak value of the modulating signal is 20 V.
What is the percentage of modulation?

Ans. 80%
• The modulation index should be a number between 0 and
1.
• If the amplitude of the modulating voltage is higher than
the carrier voltage, it will cause distortion.
• If the distortion is great enough, the intelligence signal
becomes unintelligible.
• Distortion of voice transmissions: garbled, harsh, or
unnatural sounds in the speaker.
• Distortion of video signals: a scrambled and inaccurate
picture on a TV screen.
• Automatic circuits called compression circuits amplifies
lower-level signals and suppresses higher-level signals.
Distortion of the envelope
caused by overmodulation
AM Power, Voltage, and
Current
• In radio transmission, the AM signal is amplified by a
power amplifier.
• A radio antenna has a characteristic impedance that is
ideally almost pure resistance.
• The AM signal is a composite of the carrier and
sideband signal voltages.
• Each signal produces power in the antenna.
• Total transmitted power (PT) is the sum of carrier power
(Pc ) and power of the two sidebands (PUSB and PLSB).
• When carrier power and percentage of modulation is
known:
• When the percentage of modulation is less than the
optimum 100, there is much less power in the
sidebands.
• Output power can be calculated by using the formula
Where:
PT = (IT ) 2R IT = measured RF current
R = antenna impedance

• And for IT
Where:
IT = IC√(1+m2/2) IC = unmodulated carrier current in the load
m = modulation index
• The greater the percentage of modulation, the higher
the sideband power and the higher the total power
transmitted.
• Power in each sideband is calculated

PSB = PLSB = PUSB = Pcm2 / 4

• Maximum power appears in the sidebands when the


carrier is 100 percent modulated.
• An unmodulated carrier can be described
mathematically as,

Where:
vc(t) = time-varying voltage waveform for the carrier
Vc = peak carrier amplitude (volts)
fc = carrier frequency (hertz)
• For the instantaneous amplitude of the modulated
wave,

• If mVc is substituted for Vm,


• For the total AM voltage,
Where:
VT = VC√(1+m2/2) VC = unmodulated carrier voltage
m = modulation index
Example 4
An AM transmitter has a carrier power of 30W. The
percentage of modulation is 85 percent. Calculate (a) the
total power and (b) the power in one sideband.

ANS.
a. PT = 40.8 W
b. PSB(one) = PSB/2 = 10.8/2 = 5.4 W
Example 5

An antenna has an impedance of 40Ω. An unmodulated AM


signal produces a current of 4.8 A. The modulation is 90
percent. Calculate (a) the carrier power, (b) the total power,
and (c) the sidebands power.
Example 5 (Answers)

a. PC = 921.6 W
b. PT = 1,295 W
c. PSB(both) = 373.4 W
Example 6

Calculate the power in one sideband of an AM signal whose


carrier power is 50 W. The unmodulated current is 2A while
the modulated current is 2.4 A.

Ans. 11 W
Example 7

Calculate the amplitude and resulting side frequency if a


carrier wave of frequency 10 MHz with a peak value of 10 V
is amplitude modulated by a 5 kHz sine wave of amplitude 6
V.

Ans. VSB = 3Vp; fLSB = 9.995 MHz; fUSB = 10.005 MHz


Example 8

The output voltage of an AM transmitter is 40 V when


sinusoidally modulated to a depth of 100%. Calculate the
voltage at each side frequency when the modulation depth is
reduced to 50%.

Ans. Vc = 32.65 V; Vside = 8.16 V


Principles of Electronic Communication Systems (4th
Edition)
By: Louis E. Frenzel Jr.

Electronic Communications Systems: Fundamentals


through Advanced (5th Ed.)
By: Wayne Tomasi

You might also like