Lecture 2: Transceivers and Signal...

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Amin ArbabianJan M. Rabaey

Lecture 2:Transceivers and Signal Modulation

EE142 – Fall 2010Introduction

Aug. 30th, 2010

2

Administrative Stuff

HW 1 posted, due September 7th, 5pm– Not as long as it looks, but start early!

Lab sessions have started Siva’s OH (481 Cory Hall)- This week only:

– Tuesday 10-11 am– Wednesday 2:30-3:30pm

My OH: Tu 1-2pm, Th 2:30-3:30pm, 550 Cory Hall– Or by appointment (arbabian@eecs)

Lecture notes available before each lecture– Will also have in-class notes uploaded after

lectures– Most lecture material from Professor Niknejad

3

Propagation of EM Waves (HW1)

4

Modulation

Involves two waveforms:– Modulating signal– Carrier wave (or just carrier)

Alters the carrier wave with properties of the modulating waveform. The carrier carries the information. Reversible (Demodulation) Generally a CW carrier is modulated (also

have pulse modulation)

5

Why Modulate?

Ease of radiation– Antenna size

Overcome HW limitations– Fractional BW

Frequency assignment Multiplexing Reduced noise and interference

– Trade BW for SNR (e.g. early FM)

6

AM Modulation- Can’t get simpler than this!

In AM modulation

is the Envelope of the signal Spectrum of the signal

7

Time-Domain Waveform

Modulation Index:

Carrier added to the signal (1+x(t)), is this efficient? What are the benefits?

Overmodulated SignalFrom Clarke, Hess

8

Demodulation

Envelope Detector:

From Clarke, Hess

RC too large: Failure-to-Follow distortion

What if RC is too small?

9

Other Amplitude Modulation Schemes

DSB Modulation: Removing the carrier tone:

– Improves the power efficiency on transmitter SSB: Removing one of the side-bands

– Improving the Spectral Efficiency– Poor low frequency response

VSB: One sideband plus a trace of the other– For practical transmission of signals with

significant low frequency content (e.g. video)

10

Phase/Frequency Modulation (“Exponential Modulation”)

“Linear” modulation schemes:– Modulated spectrum

translation of signal spectrum

In exponential modulation these will change. We have also an opportunity to trade BW for signal to noise ratio (Quality).

AM

FM

PM

11

12

FM/PM Modulation

FM Modulation≡ .

2

2

PM Modulation≡ ∆.

∆.

From: Communication Systems by Carlson

13

Special Case: Narrowband FM Approximation

From: Communication Systems by Carlson

14

Simple FM Transmitter/Receiver

15

Using Digital Signaling

On-Off Keying (OOK)

Binary-Shift Keying (BPSK)

Frequency-Shift Keying (FSK)

16

A Modern Receiver

Digitize Signals

17

A Superheterodyne Transmitter

18

Received Signal Strength

19

Impedance Matching

If we have a source with certain ‘internal’ impedance, what are the conditions for extracting the maximum power?

What is the maximum “available” power from the source? Do we always need to match the

impedances?

20

Receiver Selectivity: Filtering

21

Filtering in Receivers

22

Transmitter Spectrum

23

Frequency Synthesis

24

Key EE142 TOPICS

Linear Time Invariant Circuits Noise Distortion Linear Time Varying Circuits Oscillator Power Amplifiers

25

Wideband and High-Frequency Amplifiers:Linear Time-Invariant Circuits (LTI)

26

Noise

27

Distortion

28

Linear-Time Varying Circuits (LTV)

29

Oscillators

30

Power Amplifiers