Pulse Amplitude Modulation
Pulse Amplitude Modulation
COMMUNICATIONELECTRONICS
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Today communication is the heart of the technology. Communication is achieved over a transmitter and
a receiver through signals. These signals carry the information through modulation. Pulse Amplitude
Modulation is one of the kinds of modulation techniques used in signal transmission. Pulse amplitude
modulation is the simplest form of modulation. It is Analog to digital conversion method where the
message information is encoded in the amplitude of the series of signal pulses.
Pulse amplitude modulation is the basic form of pulse modulation. In this modulation, the signal is
sampled at regular intervals and each sample is made proportional to the amplitude of the modulating
signal. Before we study in detail about PAM lets know the concepts of modulation.
What is Modulation?
Modulation is a process of changing the characteristics of a carrier signal like amplitude, frequency and
width, etc. It is the process of adding information to the carrier signal. A carrier signal is a steady
waveform with constant amplitude and frequency.
Modulation
Modulation is normally applied to electromagnetic signals like radio laser and optical signals. The Audio,
video, images and text data are added to the carrier signal for transmission over telecommunication.
Types of Modulation
Continuous-wave Modulation
Pulse Modulation
Continuous-wave modulation and Pulse modulation are further categorized as shown below.
Types_of_Modulations
Continuous-wave Modulation
In continuous wave modulation signal is used as a carrier signal which modulates the message signal.
There are three parameters that can be altered to achieve modulation namely, frequency, amplitude
and phase. Thus, there are three types of modulations.
Amplitude Modulation
Frequency Modulation
Phase Modulation
Pulse Modulation
Pulse modulation is a technique in which the signal is transmitted with the information by pulses. This is
divided into Analog Pulse Modulation and Digital Pulse Modulation.
Delta Modulation
Pulse amplitude modulation is a technique in which the amplitude of each pulse is controlled by the
instantaneous amplitude of the modulation signal. It is a modulation system in which the signal is
sampled at regular intervals and each sample is made proportional to the amplitude of the signal at the
instant of sampling. This technique transmits the data by encoding in the amplitude of a series of signal
pulses.
There are two types of sampling techniques for transmitting a signal using PAM. They are:
Flat Top PAM
Natural PAM
Flat Top PAM: The amplitude of each pulse is directly proportional to modulating signal amplitude at the
time of pulse occurrence. The amplitude of the signal cannot be changed with respect to the analog
signal to be sampled. The tops of the amplitude remain flat.
Natural PAM: The amplitude of each pulse is directly proportional to modulating signal amplitude at the
time of pulse occurrence. Then follows the amplitude of the pulse for the rest of the half cycle.
Natural PAM
A PAM is generated from a pure sine wave modulating signal and a square wave generator which
produces the carrier pulse and a PAM modulator circuit.
A sine wave generator is used which is based on Wien Bridge Oscillator circuit. This can produce
distortion less sine wave at the output. The circuit is designed such that the amplitude and the
frequency of the oscillator can be adjusted using a potentiometer.
Sine Wave Generator
The frequency can be varied by varying the potentiometer R2 and the amplitude of the adjusted using
the potentiometer R. The frequency of the sine wave generated is given by
F = 1/(2π√R1R2C1C2)
The square wave is generated using op-amp based astable circuit. The op-amp is used to reduce the
complexity of generating the square wave. The ON time and the OFF time of the pulse can be made
identical and the frequency can be adjusted without changing them.
Square Wave Generator
The time period of the pulses generated depends on the value of the resistance R and the capacitance C.
The period of the op-amp astable circuit is given by
T = 2.2RC
Types of PAM
Single polarity PAM is a situation where a suitable fixed DC bias is added to the signal to ensure that all
the pulses are positive.
Double polarity PAM is a situation where the pulses are both positive and negative.
Demodulation of PAM
For demodulation of PAM signal, the PAM signal is fed to the low pass filter. The low pass filter
eliminates the high-frequency ripples and generates the demodulated signal. This signal is then applied
to the inverting amplifier to amplify its signal level to have the demodulated output with almost equal
amplitude with the modulating signal.
Applications of PAM
It is used in Photo-biology.
It is used as an electronic driver for LED lighting.
Advantages
PAM can generate other pulse modulation signals and can carry the message at the same time.
Disadvantages
Pulse amplitude signal varies so power required for transmission will be more.
This article is all about the pulse amplitude modulation. Furthermore, for any help on Electronic projects
or doubts regarding this article, you can contact us by commenting in the comment section given below.