Signal Encoding Techniques
Signal Encoding Techniques
Techniques
Lecture Learning Outcomes
Be able to understand, appreciate and
differentiate the different signal encoding
criteria available.
Class Contents
Signal Encoding Criteria
SNR or Eb/N0
Data Rate (R)
Bandwidth (B)
Signal Encoding Criteria
Amplitude Shift-Keying
Frequency Shift-Keying
Phase Shift-Keying
A cos( 2 f c t ) binary 1
s(t )
0 binary 0
Frequency Shift-Keying (FSK)
Also known as Binary FSK (BFSK)
A cos(2 f1 t ) binary 1
s(t )
A cos(2 f 2 t ) binary 0
Multilevel FSK (MFSK)
Signal more bandwidth efficient, but more susceptible to error.
A cos2 f c t 4 11
A cos2 f t 3 4
01
s(t ) c
A cos2 f c t 3 4 00
A cos2 f c t 4 10
Quadrature Phase Shift-Keying (QPSK)
Further, each angle taken can have more than one amplitude.
Example:
a standard 9600 bps modem uses 12 phase angles, four of which have
two amplitude values for a total of 16 different signal elements
Multilevel Phase Shift-Keying (QPSK)
Where cos(2..f.t) is the carrier frequency and x(t) is the input signal,
both normalized to unity amplitude.
na 2
Pt Pc 1
2
The ideal would be that most of the signal power is used to transmit
information (that is na as big as possible), however, na must remain
below 1 to avoid loss of information.
Angle Modulation
Frequency modulation (FM) and phase modulation (PM) are special cases
for angle modulation
Modulated Signal:
s(t ) AC cos(2 f c t ) (t )
(t ) n p m(t )
where n p is the phase modulation index
Angle Modulation (AM)
For frequency modulation (FM), the time derivative of the phase
is proportional to the modulating signal:
d (t )
' (t ) n f m(t )
dt
where n f is the frequency modulation index
Bandwidth Comparison:
AM: BT=2.B
Angle modulation includes a term of the form cos(t), which is non linear
And will produce a wide range of frequencies.
Bandwidth for Angle Modulation
BT 2 1 B
n p Am for PM
f n f Am
B 2 B for FM
Once data have been digitalized, the 3 most common things that
happens next are:
The digital signal can be transmitted using NRZ-L. In this
case the process has gone from analogue data to a
digital signal.
Delta Modulation
Pulse Code Modulation
It is based on the sampling theorem which states:
The samples taken from the analogue signal are analogue samples
called pulse amplitude modulation (PAM), to convert them to digital;
each of these samples should be assigned a binary code.
Pulse Code Modulation
A 8 D 8
B 15 E 6
C 12 F 6
Sample Quantization
Level Assigned
Pulse Code Modulation
Using 16 levels in the sampling process, a digital binary signal coded
in 4 bits is needed to represent all the possible sample levels.
The resulting PCM bit stream for the above example is:
100011111100100001100110
Pulse Code Modulation
• Typically, the PCM scheme is refined using a technique known as
nonlinear encoding, which means that the quantization levels are not
equally spaced.
• The main problem with equal spacing is that the mean absolute error
for each sample is the same, regardless of signal level. Consequently,
lower amplitude values are relatively more distorted.