Digital Modulation - ASK
Digital Modulation - ASK
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Presentation Content
Link Budget Analysis: Digital Modulation, Part 1
1. Sources of Communication Data.
2. Metrics for Choice of Modulation.
A. Power Efficiency.
B. Bandwidth Efficiency.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
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Speech/Voice/Telephone.
Music/Sound.
Moving and static images.
And also: temperature, speed, time...
Computer files/Keyboards/Monitors/Printers.
E-mail sent over the internet.
Digital storage devices (Compact Discs, DVDs, etc)
JPEG/MPEG files.
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E
Power Efficiency : p b
N0
BER
3. There are cases when bandwidth is available but transmit power is limited.
A. In these cases as M goes up, the bandwidth increases but the required
power levels to meet a specified BER remains stable.
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Rb
, bits/second/Hz
BT
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1) May need to waste more signal power: Eb/No to get a better data rate: Rb.
2) May need to use less signal power (to save on battery life) at the expense of
a lower data rate.
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2. Nonlinear Modulation:
A. The amplitude of the modulated transmitted signal: s(t), does not vary
linearly with the modulating digital signal: m(t). Power efficient but bandwidth
inefficient. Examples: FSK, MSK, GMSK, constant envelope modulation.
B. Information encoded in carrier signals frequency.
C. Continuous phase (CPFSK) modulation is a special case of FM.
D. Bandwidth determined by Carsons rule(1) (pulse shaping).
E. More robust to channel and power amplifiers nonlinearities.
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ASK: Amplitude Shift Keying : Message signal changes the carriers amplitude.
FSK: Frequency Shift Keying: Message signal changes the carriers frequency.
PSK: Phase Shift Keying
: Message signal changes the carriers phase.
QAM: Quadrature Amplitude Modulation. A combination of ASK and PSK.
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A (t ) cos(2f t (t ))
Time-varying
Amplitude
Time-varying
Frequency
Time-varying
Phase
Digital-to-Analog
Modulation Techniques
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Digital
Signal
Tb
0
Time
Carrier
Signal
Time
ASK
Signal
Time
FSK
Signal
Time
PSK
Signal
Time
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C. 128-QAM
D. 265-QAM
E. etc. . . .
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5. BPSK, QPSK, OFDM: IEEE802.11 at 2.4 GHz & 5 GHz (ISM band).
6. GFSK: Bluetooth at 2.4 GHz (Industrial-Scientific-Medical band).
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Description
Use
Comments
AM, FM, PM
Amplitude Modulation
Frequency Modulation
and Phase Modulation
PAL, NTSC
QPSK, BPSK,
FSK
VSB
Good performance in
multi-path conditions.
QAM
Quadrature Amplitude
Modulation
S-CDMA
Synchronous Code
Division Multiple Access
Good performance in
poor signal-to-noise.
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2. Circuit complexity:
A. Analog signals must be converted to digital pulses prior to transmission
and converted back to their original analog form at the receiver: Additional
encoding/decoding circuitry needed.
3. Synchronization:
A. Requires precise time synchronization between the clocks in the
transmitter and in the receiver.
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si(t )
A (t ) cos(2f t (t ))
where digital data bits are encoded in discrete time-varying amplitude Ai(t) (= ASK),
discrete time-varying phase: i(t) (= PSK), or discrete time-varying frequency: i =
2(fc - fi )t (= FSK), which remain constant over a data bit time interval: Tb .
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Channel
bits
Passband
Analog In:
Audio
Video
A/D
Anti-alias
lowpass filter
Data
Source
Nyquist
sampling
Source Encoder
Channel
Encoder
FEC
ARQ
Block
Convolution
Bandpass
Modulator
ASK
FSK
PSK
Binary
Mary
Pulse
shaping
filter
ISI
Baseband
Digital input
Multiple
Access
FDMA
TDMA
CDMA
Tx
Analog
Waveforms Communications
Transmit
Digital
output
Channel:
Receive
User
Audio
Video
D/A
Low pass
filter
Path Loss
Noise
Distortion
Interference
Baseband
Source Decoder
Analog Out:
Transmit
Channel
Bandpass
Filter
Quantization
noise
Channel
bits
Channel
Decoder
Rx
Regenerate
Demodulator
& Detect
FEC
Matched filter
Envelope
Decision threshold Coherent
ARQ
Timing recovery
Block
Carrier recovery
Source Convolution
bits
Multiple
Access
Receive
Channel
Bandpass
Filter
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BER: An Introduction
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Bit Error Rate is a major indicator of the health of the communication system.
As data is transmitted some of the bits may not be received correctly.
The more bits that are incorrect, the more the signal will be affected.
Its important to know what portion of the bits are in error.
Need to know how much margin the system has before failure.
Good signal: BER < 10-10 .
Threshold for visible degradation: BER ~ 10-6 .
Example:
A. A 256QAM channel transmits at a symbol rate of 5M symbols per second.
B. Bit rate = 8 bits per symbol X 5M symbol per second = 40M bits per second.
C. Error Incident = Bit rate X BER = Errors Per Second.
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Bit Rate
Observations
Telephone
twisted pair
33.6-56 kbps
Ethernet
twisted pair
Cable modem
ADSL twisted
pair
2-11 Mbps
28 GHz radio
1.5-45 Mbps
5 km multi-point radio
Optical fiber
2.5-10 Gbps
1 wavelength
Optical fiber
>1600 Gbps
Many wavelengths
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Bandwidth
Bit Rates
3 kHz
33 kbps
Copper pair
1 MHz
1-6 Mbps
30 Mbps/ channel
54 Mbps / channel
Many TeraHertz
40 Gbps / wavelength
Coaxial cable
5 GHz radio (IEEE 802.11)
Optical fiber
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Binary Data
BASK
signal
Binary Data
4-ASK
signal
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Tb
2Tb
3Tb
4Tb
5Tb
Digital signal
Message
m(t)
Time
C(t)
Time
ASK
signal
SASK(t)
May-2013
Time
Tb
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1
Pg f f o Pg f f o
4
Eb sin(( f fo) / Rb )
8Rb ( f fo) / Rb
2fb = 2Rb
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B. Probability of symbol error for coherently detected Multi - Level ASK modulation:
2(M 1 ) 2 E g
Pse, MASK
Q
No
M
erfc
2
(M 2 1 )N
M
(M
1
)N
M
o
o
(M 2 1 )
where: Es ( log 2 M)Eb
Eg Average energy/symbol.
3
C. Probability of bit error (BER) for M - ary ASK :
, where: k log 2 M
log 2 M
k
D. Binary ASK (M 2) bit error probability :
Pbe, MASK
Pbe,BASK
Es
Q Eb 1 erfc Eb
Q
N 2
2N
o
o
No
s1
3 Eg
01
11
s3
s2
Eg
Eg
10
s4
3 Eg
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1 (t )
( 3 log 2 M)Eb
2(M 1 ) 2 E g 2(M 1 ) ( 6 log 2 M)Eb (M 1 )
erfc
2
(M 2 1 )N
(M 2 1 )
where: Es ( log 2 M)Eb
Eg Average energy/symbol and k log 2 M ,bits / symbol.
3
Pbe, MASK
M
4
16
64
256
Pbe,4 ASK
Pbe,16 ASK
Pbe,64 ASK
Pbe,256 ASK
6 Eb
3
erfc
8
15 N o
12 Eb
15
erfc
64
255 N o
M
8
18 Eb
63
erfc
384
4 ,095 N o
32
24 Eb
255
erfc
2048
65 ,535 N o
128
512
k
3
Pbe,8 ASK
Pbe,32 ASK
Pbe,128ASK
Pbe,512ASK
9 Eb
7
erfc
24
63 N o
15 Eb
31
erfc
160
1,023 N o
127
erfc
896
21Eb
16 ,383 N o
27 Eb
511
erfc
4608
262 ,143 N o
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erfc
2
2
M
M
(M 1 )N o
(M 1 )N o
(M 2 1 )
where: Es ( log 2 M)Eb
Eg Average energy/symbol and k log 2 M, bits/symbol.
3
k,bits/ symbol =
1
2
3
4
5
Probability of bit error (BER)
M signal
Eb/No, dB
levels =
2
4
Eb/No Probability of Bit
8
Error:
16
32
Pbe,MASK
1.000
0.07865
0.13916
0.17295
0.17789
0.1674
1.585
0.03751
0.09756
0.14612
0.16391
0.1607
2.512
0.0125
0.05862
0.11576
0.14691
0.1523
3.981
0.00239
0.02787
0.08347
0.12667
0.1419
6.310
1.91E-04
0.00925
0.05232
0.10334
0.1292
10
10.000
3.87E-06
0.00175
0.02653
0.07781
0.114
12
15.849
9.01E-09
1.39E-04
0.00972
0.05202
0.096
14
25.119
6.81E-13
2.76E-06
0.00215
0.0291
0.0757
16
39.811
0.0E+00
6.25E-09
2.17E-04
0.0124
0.0542
18
63.096
0.0E+00
4.52E-13
6.35E-06
0.00347
0.0337
20
100.00
0.0E+00
0.0E+00
2.63E-08
5.05E-04
0.0168
22
158.49
0.0E+00
0.0E+00
4.97E-12
2.63E-05
0.006
24
251.19
0.0E+00
0.0E+00
0.0E+00
2.72E-07
0.0013
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log 2 M
k
where: k log 2 M , bits/symbol
Pbe, MASK
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1.E+00
1.E-01
( 3 log 2 M)Eb
(M 1 )
erfc
2
M
(M 1 )N o
1.E-02
k = 2 bits/symbol
k = 3 bits/symbol
1.E-03
M = 32
k=5
k = 4 bits/symbol
k = 5 bits/symbol
M = 16
k=4
1.E-04
M=8
k=3
1.E-05
Pse,MASK Pse,MASK
P
be, MASK
1.E-06
log 2 M
k
where: k log 2 M , bits/symbol.
1.E-07
10
12
14
Eb/No, dB
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20
22
24
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Eb/No = Signal energy per bit over Noise density per bit
May-2013
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31
Refer to background material in Atlanta RFs presentation titled: Link Budget Getting Started ,
which can be downloaded from our website: www.AtlantaRF.com.
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Atlanta RF
Thank You!
Contact Atlanta RF by e-mail at:
Atlanta RF Services : [email protected]
Atlanta RF Software : [email protected]
Atlanta RF Designs : [email protected]
Bob Garvey
Chief Engineer
Atlanta RF, LLC
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