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ISI

1. The document discusses intersymbol interference (ISI) that can occur when transmitting non-bandlimited signals over bandlimited channels. 2. ISI occurs when pulses spread in a way that interferes with adjacent pulses at the sampling point, distorting the received signal. 3. The Nyquist criteria provides conditions to avoid ISI: pulses must have amplitude of 1 at sample points and 0 elsewhere, and the pulse area over one symbol period must be zero. Meeting these ensures correct detection despite pulse spreading.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
107 views22 pages

ISI

1. The document discusses intersymbol interference (ISI) that can occur when transmitting non-bandlimited signals over bandlimited channels. 2. ISI occurs when pulses spread in a way that interferes with adjacent pulses at the sampling point, distorting the received signal. 3. The Nyquist criteria provides conditions to avoid ISI: pulses must have amplitude of 1 at sample points and 0 elsewhere, and the pulse area over one symbol period must be zero. Meeting these ensures correct detection despite pulse spreading.

Uploaded by

Muhammad Riaz
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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EE4723 : Digital Communications II

Lecture 5:

Inter Symbol Interference (ISI)

Nyquist Criteria for ISI


Pulse Shaping

03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 1


Baseband Communication System
 We have been considering the following baseband system

 The transmitted signal is created by the line coder according



to
s (t )   an g (t  nTb )
n  

where an is the symbol mapping and g(t) is the pulse shape


Problems with Line Codes
 One big problem with the line codes is that they are not bandlimited
 The absolute bandwidth is infinite
 The power outside the 1st null bandwidth is not negligible. That
is, the power in the sidelobes can be quite high
03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 2
Intersymbol Interference (ISI)
 If the transmission channel is bandlimited, then high frequency
components will be cut off
– High frequency components correspond to sharp transition in pulses
– Hence, the pulse will spread out
– If the pulse spreads out into the adjacent symbol period, then
intersymbol interference (ISI) has occurred
Intersymbol Interference (ISI)
 Intersymbol interference (ISI) occurs when a pulse spreads out in such a
way that it interferes with adjacent pulses at the sample instant
 Causes
– Channel induced distortion which spreads or disperses the pulses
– Multipath effects (echo)

03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 3


Pulse spreading

– Due to improper filtering (@ Tx and/or Rx), the received pulses overlap one
another thus making detection difficult
 Example of ISI
– Assume polar NRZ line code

03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 4


Inter Symbol Interference

– Input data stream and bit superposition

 The channel output is the sum of the contributions from each


bit
03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 5
ISI
Note:
 ISI can occur whenever a non-bandlimited line code is used
over a bandlimited channel
 ISI can occur only at the sampling instants
 Overlapping pulses will not cause ISI if they have zero
amplitude at the time the signal is sampled

03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 6


ISI Baseband Communication System Model

where hT (t )  Impulse response of the transmitter


hC (t )  Impulse response of the channel
hR (t )  Impulse response of the receiver

s (t )   an hT (t  nT ),
n  

r (t )  a
n  
n gT (t  nT )  n(t ), where g (t )  hT (t ) * hC (t ), Ts  1 / f s

y (t )   a h (t  nT )  n (t )
n  
n e e where he (t )  hT (t ) * hC (t ) * hR (t ),
ne (t )  n(t ) * hC (t ) * hR (t )

03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 7


ISI Baseband Communication System Model
 Note that he(t) is the equivalent impulse response of the receiving filter

 To recover the information sequence {an}, the output y(t) is sampled at t =


kT, k = 0, 1, 2, …
– Input data stream and bit superposition
 The sampled sequence is

y (kT )   a h (kT  nT )  n (kT )
n e e
n   AWGN term
or equivalently  
yk  ah
n  
n k n  nk  h0 ak  a h
n   , n  k
n k n  nk

Desired symbol scaled by Effect of other symbols at the


gain parameters h0 sampling instants t=kT
where hk  he (kT ), nk  ne (kT ), k  0,1,2,..
– h0 is an arbitrary constant
03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 8
Signal Design for Bandlimited Channel
Zero ISI

y (kT )  h0 ak   a h (kT  nT )  n (kT )
n   , n  k
n e e

 To remove ISI, it is necessary and sufficient to make the term

h (kT  nT )  0, for n  k and h  0


e 0

 Nyquist three criteria


– Pulse amplitudes can be detected correctly despite pulse
spreading or overlapping, if there is no ISI at the decision-
making instants
• 1: At sampling points, no ISI
• 2: At threshold, no ISI
• 3: Areas within symbol period is zero, then no ISI

03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 9


1st Nyquist Criterion: Time domain
p(t): impulse response of a transmission system (infinite length)
Suppose 1/T is the sample rate
The necessary and sufficient condition for p(t) to satisfy is

1,  n  0 
p nT   
0,  n  0 

03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 10


1st Nyquist Criterion: Time domain
 Pulse shape that satisfy this criteria is Sinc(.) function, e.g.,
t
he (t )  sin c   sin c(2 Bt )
T 
 The smallest value of T for which transmission with zero ISI is
possible is 1
T
2B
 Problems with Sinc(.) function
– But there are problems with Sinc(.) pulse shape function
• It is not possible to create Sinc pulses due to
– Infinite time duration
– Sharp transition band in the frequency domain
– Sinc(.) pulse shape can cause ISI in the presence of timing
errors
• If the received signal is not sampled at exactly the bit instant,
then ISI will occur
03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 11
1st Nyquist Criterion: Time domain

p(t)
1
 shaping function

0 no ISI !
t
1
T
2 fN t0 2t0

Equally spaced zeros,


-1 1
interval T
2 fn

03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 12


1st Nyquist Criterion: Frequency domain

 P f  m T   T
m  

f
0 fa  2 f N 4 fN
(limited bandwidth)
03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 13
Sample rate vs. bandwidth
 W is the bandwidth of P(f)
 When 1/T > 2W, no function to satisfy Nyquist
condition.

P(f)

03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 14


Sample rate vs. bandwidth
 When 1/T = 2W, rectangular function satisfy Nyquist
condition
sin t T  t  T ,  f  W 
p t    sinc  P f    ,
t T  0,  otherwise
1

0.8

0.6

0.4
Spectra

0.2

-0.2

-0.4
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
Subcarrier Number k

03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 15


Sample rate vs. bandwidth
 When 1/T < 2W, numbers of choices to satisfy Nyquist condition

 A typical one is the raised cosine function

03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 16


Rolloff and bandwidth
 Bandwidth occupied beyond 1/2T is called the excess bandwidth (EB)
 EB is usually expressed as a %tage of the Nyquist frequency, e.g.,
– r = 1/2 ===> excess bandwidth is 50 %
– r = 1 ===> excess bandwidth is 100 %
 RC filter is used to realized Nyquist filter since the transition band can be
changed using the roll-off factor
 The sharpness of the filter is controlled by the parameter 
 When  = 0 this corresponds to an ideal rectangular pulse
 Bandwidth B occupied by a RC filtered signal is increased from its minimum
value
1
Bmin 
 So the bandwidth becomes: 2Ts
B  Bmin 1  r 
03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 17
Rolloff and bandwidth
 Benefits of large roll off factor
– Simpler filter – fewer stages (taps) hence easier to
implement with less processing delay
– Less signal overshoot, resulting in lower peak to mean
excursions of the transmitted signal
– Less sensitivity to symbol timing accuracy – wider eye
opening
 r = 0 corresponds to Sinc(.) function

03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 18


Raised Cosine Pulse
 The following pulse shape satisfies Nyquist’s method for zero ISI
 rt   rt   rt 
sin   cos  cos 
p (t )   T   T   sin c 
t  T 
 
rt 4r t  T  1  4r t
2 2 2 2

1
T T 2
T 2

 The Fourier Transform of this pulse shape is


 1 r
 T, 0 | f |
2T
  T  1  r  1 r 1 r
P( f )  T / 21  cos  | f |   , | f |
  r  2T  2T 2T
 0, 1 r
 | f |
2T
 where ris the roll-off factor that determines the bandwidth

03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 19


Raised cosine shaping
 Tradeoff: higher r, higher bandwidth, but smoother in
time.
P(ω)  W
r=0
r = 0.25
r = 0.50
r = 0.75
r = 1.00
2w
p(t) W ω

π
π 
 W
0 W

0 t
03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 20
2nd Nyquist Criterion: Example

03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 21


3rd Nyquist Criterion
 Within each symbol period, the integration of signal
(area) is proportional to the integration of the transmit
signal (area)

03/23/20 The University of Lahore, Islamabad Communication Systems II 22

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