Chapter 3 Angle Modulation
Chapter 3 Angle Modulation
ANGLE MODULATION
ANGLE MODULATION
● classified into two types such as
◦ Frequency modulation (FM)
◦ Phase modulation (PM)
◦ Altering the frequency (FM) / phase (PM) of a
carrier signal to encode the massage
signal.
● Used for :
◦ Commercial radio broadcasting
◦ Television sound transmission
◦ Two way mobile radio
◦ Cellular radio
◦ Microwave and satellite communication system 2
Advantages FM/PM over AM:
➢ Freedom from interference: all natural and
external consist of
noise amplitude receiver
variations, thus
distinguish usually
between cannot of noise
amplitude
or desired signal. AM is noisy than FM.
➢Operate in very high frequency
band (VHF): 88MHz-108MHz
➢Can transmit musical programs with higher
degree of fidelity.
3
Principles of FM
● A sine wave carrier can be modified for
the purpose of transmitting
information from one place to another
by varying its frequency. This is known
as frequency modulation (FM).
● In FM, the carrier amplitude remains
constant and the carrier frequency
is changed by the modulating
signal.
4
Principles of FM
● As the amplitude of the information
signal varies, the carrier
frequency shifts proportionately.
● As the modulating signal amplitude
increases, the carrier frequency
increases.
● With no modulation the carrier is
at its
normal center or resting
frequency 5
Principles of FM
● Frequency deviation (∆f / fd) is the
amount of change in carrier frequency
produced by the modulating signal.
● The frequency deviation rate is how
many times per second the carrier
frequency deviates above or below its
center frequency.
● The frequency of the modulating
signal determines the frequency
deviation rate.
Principles of FM
Carrier
Modulating
Signal
FM
signal
7
Frequency-shift keying (FSK)
● When the modulating signal has
only two amplitudes.
● For example, when modulating
signal is a binary 0- the carrier
frequency is the centre frequency
level when modulating signal is
a binary 1- the carrier frequency
change to a higher frequency level.
8
Principles of
PM
● When the amount of phase shift of a
constant-frequency carrier is varied in
accordance with a modulating signal, the
resulting output is a phase-modulation
(PM) signal.
● Phase modulators produce a phase
shift which is a time separation
between two sine waves of the same
frequency.
● The greater the amplitude of the
modulating signal, the greater the phase
shift.
Principles of
●
PM
The maximum frequency deviation produced by a
phase modulator occurs during the time that the
modulating signal is changing at its most rapid rate.
A frequency shift occurs in PM only when the modulating signal amplitude varies.
Principles of
PMKeying
Phase-Shift
◦ The process of phase modulating a carrier
with binary data is called phase-shift
keying (PSK) or binary phase-shift
keying (BPSK).
● Mathematical analysis:
● Let message signal:
m t Vm cos mt
● And carrier signal:
c t Vc cos[ ct
]
13
Mathematical analysis of FM
● During the process of frequency modulations
frequency of carrier signal is changed in accordance
the
with the instantaneous amplitude of message signal.
Therefore the frequency of carrier after modulation is
cos 14
Mathematical analysis of FM
●Thus, we get the FM wave as:
K1Vm
vFM (t) Vccos1 VC cos(Ct sin m t)
m
vFM (t) VC cos(Ct m f sinm t)
●Where modulation index for FM is
given by
K V
mf m
1
m
15
Mathematical analysis of FM
f K1 Vm ;
m f f
fm
● K1 – deviation sensitivities Hz/V
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Example 1 (FM)
● Determine peak frequency
deviation
the (∆f) and modulation index
(m) for an FM modulator with a
deviation sensitivity K1 = 5 kHz/V
and a modulating signal,
v m (t) 2
cos(22000t)
f ●K 1 V m ; Δf = 5k x 2 = 10 k Hz
m Δf 10k
f ● f m f 2k 5
m 17
Mathematical analysis of
PM
● The process by which changing the phase of carrier
signal in accordance with the instantaneous of
message signal. The amplitude remains constant
after the modulation process.
● Mathematical analysis:
Let message signal:
m
t
18
Vm
Mathematical analysis of
PM
●
Where = phase angle of carrier signal. It is changed in
accordance with the amplitude of the message signal;
● i.e.
KVm (t) KVm cosmt
● After phase modulation the instantaneous voltage will
be
20
mp KVm
mp 2.5x2 5rad
21
Modulation Index and Sidebands
Modulation Index
◦ The ratio of the frequency deviation to the
modulating frequency is known as the
modulation index (mf).
◦ In most communication systems using FM,
maximum limits are put on both the frequency
deviation and the modulating frequency.
◦ In standard FM broadcasting, the maximum
permitted frequency deviation is 75 kHz and the
maximum permitted modulating frequency is
15 kHz.
◦ The modulation index for standard FM
broadcasting is therefore 5.
Modulation Index and Sidebands
Bessel Functions
◦ The equation that expresses the phase
angle in terms of the sine wave modulating
signal is solved with a complex
mathematical process known as Bessel
functions.
n
cos( m cos ) ⎛⎜
n
n
J (m) cos ⎝ ⎟
⎞2 ⎠
n
n
m(t) VC J n (m) cos⎛⎜⎝ c t n m t
n ⎞2 ⎠
25
⎟
FM&PM (Bessel function)
● Each pair of side band is preceded by J coefficients.
The order of the coefficient is denoted by subscript m.
The Bessel function can be written as
26
FM&PM (Bessel function)
Bessel Functions
◦ The symbol ! means factorial. This tells you to
multiply all integers from 1 through the number
to which the symbol is attached. (e.g. 5! Means
1 × 2 × 3 × 4 × 5 = 120)
◦ Narrowband FM (NBFM) is any FM system in
which the modulation index is less than
π/2 = 1.57, or
mf < π /2.
◦ NBFM is widely used in communication. It
conserves spectrum space at the expense of
the signal-to-noise ratio.
FM&PM (Bessel function)
2
8
Bessel Functions of the First Kind, Jn(m)
for some value of modulation index
29
Representation of frequency spectrum
30
Example 3
31
Solution for Example 3
32
● Draw the frequency
spectrum showing their relative
amplitudes.
33
Comparison NBFM&WBFM
WBFM NBFM
Bandwidth 15 x NBFM 2 fm
2(δ*fm (max))
Noise More suppressed Less suppressed
Application Entertainment & Mobile communication
Broadcasting
34
FM Bandwidth
● Theoretically, the generation and transmission of FM
requires infinite bandwidth. Practically, FM system have
finite bandwidth and they perform well.
● The value of modulation index determine the number of
sidebands that have the significant relative amplitudes.
● If n is thenumber of sideband pairs, and line
frequency spectrum are spaced by fm, thus, of
bandwidth is: the
● For n≥1
B fm 2nfm
35
FM Bandwidth
36
Example 4
● For an FM modulator with a peak frequency
deviation, Δf = 10 kHz, a modulating-signal
frequency fm = 10 kHz,
Vc = 10 V and a 500 kHz carrier, determine
37
Solution for Example 4
38
39
Angle Modulation
Part 2
■Power distribution of FM
■Generation & Demodulation of
FM
■Noise in FM
■Application of FM
40
FM Power Distribution
● As seen in Bessel function table, it shows that
as the sideband relative amplitude increases,
the carrier amplitude,J0 decreases.
41
FM Power Distribution
● In effect, in FM, the total power that is originally in
the carrier is redistributed between all components
of the spectrum, in an amount determined by the
modulation index, mf, and the corresponding Bessel
functions.
● At certain value of modulation index, the carrier
component goes to zero, where in this condition,
the power is carried by the sidebands only.
42
Average Power
43
Example
● Foran FM modulator with a modulation
index m = 1, a modulating signal
vm(t) = Vmsin(2π1000t)
and an unmodulated carrier
vc(t) = 10sin(2π500kt)
Determine the unmodulated carrier
power for the FM modulator given with
a load resistance, RL = 50Ω. Determine
also the total power in the angle-
modulated wave.
44
Solution for Example 6
Pc 10 2
2(50)
1W
45
Exercise
● For an FM modulator with modulation index,
m = 2, modulating signal,
vm(t) = Vmcos(2π2000t)
and an unmodulated carrier,
vc(t) = 10 cos(2π800kt)
Assume, RL=50Ω
46
Solution
● Vm = 1 V, Vc = 10 V, fm = 2 kHz, fc = 800 kHz,
RL = 50 Ω
a) m = 2; n = 4
b) V0 = 10 (0.22) = 2.2 V
V1 = 10 (0.58) = 5.8 V
V2 = 10 (0.35) = 3.5 V
V3 = 10 (0.13) = 1.3 V
V4 = 10 (0.03) = 0.3 V
d) BW = 2n fm
= 2 x 4 x 2k
=16 kHz
48
Generation of FM
● Two major FM generation:
i) Direct method:
i) straight forward, requires a Voltage-Controlled
Oscillator (VCO) whose oscillation frequency has
linear dependence on applied voltage.
ii) Advantage: large frequency deviation
iii) Disadvantage: the carrier frequency tends to drift
and must be stabilized.
iv) Common methods:
i) FM Reactance modulators
ii) Varactor diode modulators
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50
51
Indirect FM generation:
● NBFM followed by frequency multiplier
● Use nonlinear circuit to get multiplier
● Can use mixer to change the carrier
frequency
● Combination of mixer and multiplier
provides flexibilities
52
Generation of FM (cont’d)
ii) Indirect method:
i. Frequency-up conversion.
ii. Two ways:
a. Heterodyne method
b. Multiplication method
iii. One most popular indirect method is the
Armstrong modulator
53
\
54
55
84.00 MHz
57
84.00 MHz
59
Wideband Armstrong Modulator
60
f= 400kHz X 81 = 32.4 MHz
Δf =14.47 Hz X 81 = 1.172 kHz
61
FM Detection/Demodulation
● FM demodulation
◦ is a process of getting back or regenerate the
original modulating signal from the
modulated FM signal.
◦ It can be achieved by converting the
frequency deviation of FM signal to the
variation of equivalent voltage.
◦ The demodulator will produce an output where
its instantaneous amplitude is proportional to
the instantaneous frequency of the input FM
signal.
62
FM detection
● To detect an FM signal, it is necessary to have
a circuit whose output voltage varies linearly
with the frequency of the input signal.
63
PLL Demodulator
V0(t)
fvco
Vc(t)
VCO
64
PLL Demodulator
Vc (t) fc f0 k1vm
(t)
● If VCO can be tuned so that fc=f0, then
Vc (t) k1vm (t)
● Where Vc(t) is also taken as the output voltage,
which therefore is the demodulated output
67
Noise in FM
● Noise is interference generated by
lightning, motors, automotive ignition
systems, and power line switching that
produces transient signals.
● Noise is typically narrow spikes of
voltage with high frequencies.
● Noise (voltage spikes) add to a
signal
and interfere with it.
● Some noise completely obliterates
signal information. 68
Noise in FM
● InAM systems, noise easily distorts
the transmitted signal however, in FM
systems any added noise must create
a frequency deviation in order to be
perceptible.
69
Noise in FM(Cont’d)
● The maximum frequency deviation due to random noise
occurs when the noise is at right angles to the resultant
signal. In the worst case the signal frequency has been
deviated by:
δ = θfm
72
Figure 5-11: An FM signal with noise.
Noise-Suppression Effects
of FM
Preemphasis
◦ Noise can interfere with an FM signal and
particularly with the high-frequency
components of the modulating signal.
◦ Noise is primarily sharp spikes of energy
and contains a lot of harmonics and other
high-frequency components.
◦ To overcome high-frequency noise, a
technique known as preemphasis is used.
◦ A simple high-pass filter can serve as a
transmitter’s pre-emphasis circuit.
◦ Pre-emphasis provides more amplification
of only high-frequency components. 73
Noise-Suppression Effects
of FM
Preemphasis circuit.
74
Noise-Suppression Effects
of FM
De emphasis
◦ A simple low-pass filter can operate as a
deemphasis circuit in a receiver.
◦ A deemphasis circuit returns the frequency
response to its normal flat level.
◦ The combined effect of preemphasis and
deemphasis is to increase the signal-to-
noise ratio for the high-frequency
components during transmission so that
they will be stronger and not masked
by noise.
75
Noise-Suppression Effects
of FM
Deemphasis circuit.
76
Application of FM
●A n a r r o w b a n d form is use
communications
d in commercial
for v o iand
c e amateur radio
settings. In two-way radio, narrowband narrow-fm
(N-FM) is used to conserve bandwidth. In addition,
it is used to send signals into space.
77
Frequency Modulation Versus
Amplitude Modulation
80
Summary of angle modulation
-what you need to be familiar with
81
Summary (cont’d)
82
Summary (cont’d)
● Bandwidth:
a) Actual minimum bandwidth from
Bessel table:
B 2(n fm )
b) Approximate minimum bandwidth
using Carson’s rule:
B 2(f fm )
83
Exercise 1
● Determine the deviation ratio and
worst-case bandwidth for an FM signal
with a maximum frequency deviation
25 kHz and maximum modulating
signal 12.5 kHz.
DR 12.5k
25k
2
BW = 2n fm = 2 x 4 x 12.5k
= 100 kHz
84
Exercise 2
●For an FM modulator with 40-kHz
frequency deviation and a modulating-
signal frequency 10 kHz, determine the
bandwidth using both Carson’s rule
and Bessel table.
40k
● m f 10k 4 ; n = 7
●Carson’s rule:
BW = 2 (40k + 10 k)
= 100 kHz
●Bessel table:
BW = 2 n fm 85
= 2 x 7 x 10 k = 140 kHz
Exercise 3
● Foran FM modulator with an
unmodulated carrier amplitude 20 V, a
modulation index, m = 1, and a load
resistance of 10-ohm, determine the
power in the modulated carrier and
each side frequency, and sketch the
power spectrum for the modulated
wave.
86
Solution for Exercise 3
(20 x0.77) 2
P0 11.858W
2(10)
2
3.872W
P1 P 1 (20 x0.44)
2(10)
2
0.242W
P 2 P 2 (20 x0.11)
2(10)
2
0.008W
P3 P 3 (20 x0.02)
2(10)
87
Exercise 4
● A frequency modulated signal (FM)
has the following expression:
v (t) 38 cos(400 10 6 t m
s if nm 1 0 1 0 3 t ) f
BW = 2 (75k + 5 k)
= 160 kHz 88
ENDOF ANGLE
MODULATION
89