Digital Modulation Basics: 29/01/2003 Property of R. Struza K 1
Digital Modulation Basics: 29/01/2003 Property of R. Struza K 1
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Property of R. Struza
Outline
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Baseband
Modulation
Radio
Channel
Carrier
Synchronization/Detection/
Decision
Data out
Data in
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Modulation
Modulation - process (or result of the process) of
translation the baseband message signal to
bandpass (modulated carrier) signal at frequencies
that are very high compared to the baseband
frequencies.
Demodulation is the process of extracting the
baseband message back the modulated carrier.
An information-bearing signal is non-deterministic,
i.e. it changes in an unpredictable manner.
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Why Carrier?
Effective radiation of EM waves requires
antenna dimensions comparable with the
wavelength:
Antenna for 3 kHz would be ~100 km long
Antenna for 3 GHz carrier is 10 cm long
Property of R. Struza
Modulation Process
f f a1 , a2 , a3 ,...an , t (= carrier)
a1 , a2 , a3 ,...an (= modulation parameters)
t (= time)
Property of R. Struza
Continuous Carrier
Carrier: A sin[t +]
A = const
= const
= const
Amplitude modulation (AM)
A = A(t) carries information
= const
= const
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Acos(t)
Acos(t)
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f1
f0
f0
f1
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s0
s0
s1
s1
where s0 =-Acos(ct) and s1 =Acos(ct)
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Differential Modulation
In the transmitter, each symbol is modulated
relative to the previous symbol and modulating
signal, for instance in BPSK 0 = no change,
1 = +1800
In the receiver, the current symbol is demodulated
using the previous symbol as a reference. The
previous symbol serves as an estimate of the
channel. A no-change condition causes the
modulated signal to remain at the same 0 or 1 state
of the previous symbol.
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DPSK
Differential modulation is theoretically 3dB poorer
than coherent. This is because the differential
system has 2 sources of error: a corrupted symbol,
and a corrupted reference (the previous symbol)
DPSK = Differential phase-shift keying: In the
transmitter, each symbol is modulated relative to
(a) the phase of the immediately preceding signal
element and (b) the data being transmitted.
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Pulse Carrier
Carrier:
A train of identical
pulses regularly
spaced in time
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Coherent Detection
An estimate of the channel phase and attenuation
is recovered. It is then possible to reproduce the
transmitted signal and demodulate.
Requires a replica carrier wave of the same
frequency and phase at the receiver.
The received signal and replica carrier are crosscorrelated using information contained in their
amplitudes and phases.
Also known as synchronous detection
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Coherent Detection 2
Carrier recovery methods include
Pilot Tone (such as Transparent Tone in Band)
Less power in the information bearing signal, High peak-tomean power ratio
Applicable to
Phase Shift Keying (PSK)
Frequency Shift Keying (FSK)
Amplitude Shift Keying (ASK)
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Non-Coherent Detection
Requires no reference wave; does not
exploit phase reference information
(envelope detection)
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Geometric Representation
Digital modulation involves choosing a particular
signal si(t) form a finite set S of possible signals.
For binary modulation schemes a binary
information bit is mapped directly to a signal and S
contains only 2 signals, representing 0 and 1.
For M-ary keying S contains more than 2 signals
and each represents more than a single bit of
information. With a signal set of size M, it is
possible to transmit up to log2M bits per signal.
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Geometric Representation 2
Any element of set S can be represented as a point
in a vector space whose coordinates are basis
signals j(t) such that
t t dt 0, i j; (= are orthogonal)
i
t
i
dt 1; ( normalization)
Then
si t sij j t
j 1
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2 Eb
2 Eb
S BPSK s1 t
cos 2 f ct , s2 t
cos 2 f ct ;
Tb
Tb
Eb energy per bit; Tb bit period
For this signal set, there is a single basic signal
1 t
S BPSK
; 0 t Tb
2
cos 2 f ct ; 0 t Tb
Tb
Eb 1 t , Eb 1 t
-Eb
Eb
Constellation diagram
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Constellation diagram
= graphical representation of the complex
envelope of each possible symbol state
The x-axis represents the in-phase component
and the y-axis the quadrature component of the
complex envelope
The distance between signals on a constellation
diagram relates to how different the modulation
waveforms are and how easily a receiver can
differentiate between them.
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QPSK
Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (QPSK) can
be interpreted as two independent BPSK
systems (one on the I-channel and one on
Q), and thus the same performance but twice
the bandwidth efficiency
Large envelope variations occur due to
abrupt phase transitions, thus requiring
linear amplification
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Q
I
Carrier phases
{0, /2, , 3/2}
Carrier phases
{/4, 3/4, 5/4, 7/4}
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Magnitude
Eye Diagram
Time (symbols)
Eye pattern is an oscilloscope display in which digital data signal from a receiver is
repetitively superimposed on itself many times (sampled and applied to the vertical input,
while the data rate is used to trigger the horizontal sweep).
It is so called because the pattern looks like a series of eyes between a pair of rails.
If the eye is not open at the sample point, errors will occur due to signal corruption.
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Types of QPSK
Q
Conventional QPSK
Offset QPSK
/4 QPSK
Conventional QPSK has transitions through zero (i.e. 180 0 phase transition). Highly linear
amplifiers required.
In Offset QPSK, the phase transitions are limited to 90 0, the transitions on the I and Q
channels are staggered.
In /4 QPSK the set of constellation points are toggled each symbol, so transitions
through zero cannot occur. This scheme produces the lowest envelope variations.
All QPSK schemes require linear power amplifiers
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16 QAM
16 PSK
16 APSK
Amplitude and phase shift keying can be combined to transmit several bits per
symbol.
Often referred to as linear as they require linear amplification.
More bandwidth-efficient, but more susceptible to noise.
For M=4, 16QAM has the largest distance between points, but requires very
linear amplification. 16PSK has less stringent linearity requirements, but has
less spacing between constellation points, and is therefore more affected by
noise.
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Distortions
Perfect channel
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White noise
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Phase jitter
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GMSK
Gaussian Minimum Shift Keying (GMSK) is a form of
continuous-phase FSK in which the phase change is
changed between symbols to provide a constant envelope.
Consequently it is a popular alternative to QPSK
The RF bandwidth is controlled by the Gaussian low-pass
filter bandwidth. The degree of filtering is expressed by
multiplying the filter 3dB bandwidth (B) by the bit period
of the transmission (T), i.e. by BT
GMSK allows efficient class C non-linear amplifiers to be
used
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Modulation Spectra
Nyquist Minimum
Bandwidth
Adjacent
Channel
Frequency
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Bandwidth Efficiency
fb
E f
log 2 1 b b
W
W
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16 PSK
16 QAM
8 PSK
4 PSK
4 QAM
BFSK
BPSK
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Bandwidth
efficiency C/B
Log2(C/B)
Error-free Eb/No
4
4
3
2
2
1
1
2
2
1.6
1
1
0
0
18dB
15dB
14.5dB
10dB
10dB
13dB
10.5dB
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Modulation Summary
Phase Shift Keying (PSK) is often used as it
provides efficient use of RF spectrum. /4 QPSK
(Quadrature PSK) reduces the envelope variation of
the signal.
High level M-array schemes (such as 64-QAM) are
very bandwidth-efficient but more susceptible to
noise and require linear amplification
Constant envelope schemes (such as GMSK) allow
for non-linear power-efficient amplifiers
Coherent reception provides better performance but
requires a more complex receiver
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References
Campbell AT. Untangling the Wireless Web
Radio Channel Issues, Lecture Notes E6951,
comet.columbia.edu/~campbell
Fitton M. Principles of Digital Modulation,
Lecture Notes ICTP 2002
Proakis J. Digital Communications, McGraw &
Hill Int.
Rappaport TS. Wireless Communications, Prentice
Hall PTR
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