A Reactance Modulator
A Reactance Modulator
A Reactance Modulator
Author: J.B. Hoag
A reactance modulator changes the frequency of the tank circuit of the oscillator by
changing its reactance. This is accomplished by a combination of a resistor, a condenser,
and a vacuum tube (the modulator) connected across the tank circuit of the oscillator as in
Fig. 33 A, and so adjusted as to act as a variable inductance or capacitance.
Fig. 33 A. Principle
of a reactance
modulator
The net result is to change the resonant frequency of the LC circuit by amounts proportional
to the instantaneous a.f. voltages applied to the grid of the modulator tube, without
changing the resistance of the LC circuit or the amplitude of the oscillations. A modulator
circuit is shown in Fig. 33 B.
Fig 33 B. A
reactance modulator
The voltages supplied to both the modulator and oscillator must be carefully stabilized to
prevent undesired frequency changes. The speech amplifier (Fig. 33 A) does not have to
deliver any power and need supply only a small output voltage, say 10 or 15 volts. A
pentode and triode, R-C coupled, will be sufficient even with a sensitive microphone and a
high-powered oscillator. The frequency change of LC per volt change on the a.f. grid of the
modulator tube will be greater when C1,Fig. 33 B, is made smaller. The blocking
condenser C2 has a comparatively high value, and hence offers but small reactance to r.f.
currents.
In Fig. 33 B, the radio-frequency voltages which are developed across the
tank in the oscillator circuit also appear across the RC1 circuit and across the
parallel 6L7 modulator tube. Now look up the phase-shifting circuit of Fig. 19
H. The resistance r has been replaced by the internal resistance of the
modulator tube of Fig. 33 B. The voltage drop across C1 is 90 out of phase
with the tank voltage. It is applied to the control grid of the 6L7 whose r.f.
plate current responds in the same phase. Thus this current is made to lag
90 behind the tank voltage. The r.f. plate current flows through the tank
circuit and, combined with the current therein, is equivalent to a new
current whose phase differs from the normal value just as though an
additional reactance (not resistance) had been connected in
Fig. 19 H. An RC
with L and C. This, of course, changes the frequency of the LCcircuit and
phase shifter
hence of the transmitter. When a.f. is fed into the modulator tube, it causes proportionate
changes in the r.f. plate current and hence in the equivalent reactance of the LC circuit.
Armstrong FM transmitter
{Indirect method (phase shift) of modulation}
The part of the Armstrong FM transmitter (Armstrong phase modulator) which is expressed in dotted
lines describes the principle of operation of an Armstrong phase modulator. It should be noted, first
that the output signal from the carrier oscillator is supplied to circuits that perform the task of
modulating the carrier signal. The oscillator does not change frequency, as is the case of direct FM.
These points out the major advantage of phase modulation (PM), or indirect FM, over direct FM. That
is the phase modulator is crystal controlled for frequency.
The crystal-controlled carrier oscillator signal is directed to two circuits in parallel. This signal (usually
a sine wave) is established as the reference past carrier signal and is assigned a value 0.
The balanced modulator is an amplitude modulator used to form an envelope of double side-bands and
to suppress the carrier signal (DSSC). This requires two input signals, the carrier signal and the
modulating message signal. The output of the modulator is connected to the adder circuit; here the
90 phase-delayed carriers signal will be added back to replace the suppressed carrier. The act of
delaying the carrier phase by 90 does not change the carrier frequency or its wave-shape. This signal
identified as the 90 carrier signal.
The adder has two input signals, the zero referenced double side-band AM envelope and the 900
carrier signal A vector diagram of the adder output shows the effects o adding, the two input signals.
The 90 carrier is labeled E and the vector sum of the two side-bands (Eu and E c denoted Esh. is
shown 90 from Ec.
As the two side-band vectors counter-rotate. Their resultant (E sb) will always be 90 from Ec but will
change amplitude and polarity from +Esb to -Esb. The vector addition of Esb and Ec in Figure (b) will
form the hypotenuse of the triangle that changes shard through 0 as the side-band amplitude of
Esb changes, from + Esb to - Esb. The hypotenuse represents the output voltages, (E o) of the adder. As
the angle changes from +, through 0, to , the length of the hypotenuse (E o) changes, and since
this is the output of the adder, an undesirable amount of amplitude modulation appears at the adder
output.
The amount of AM that is acceptable in the PM signal is a matter of how much can be controlled (or
eliminated) in later circuits.
Assuming 10% to be the AM limit then,
Emax = Eo
Emin = Ec = 1
So
(% of modulation)(Eo + 1) = (Eo 1)
Eo (% of modulation) + (% of modulation) = Eo -1
Eo Eo (% of modulation) = 1 + (% of modulation)
Eo (1 - % of modulation) = 1 + % of modulation.
For 10% AM
So
Eo = 1.222 x Ec
Knowing Eo and Ec, we can find the angle as
Cos = 1/1.222
Or
= 34.1o phase shift.
= 0.6125 rad.
The carrier frequency change at the adder output is a function of the output phase shift and is found
by.
fc = fs (in hertz)
When is the phase change in radians and f s is the lowest audio modulating frequency. In most FM
radio bands, the lowest audio frequency is 50Hz. Therefore, the carrier frequency change at the adder
output is 0.6125 x 50Hz = 30Hz since 10% AM represents the upper limit of carrier voltage change,
then 30Hz is the maximum deviation from the modulator for PM.
The 90 phase shift network does not change the signal frequency because the components and
resulting phase change are constant with time. However, the phase of the adder output voltage is in a
continual state of change brought about by the cyclical variations of the message signal, and during
the time of a phase change, there will also be a frequency change.
In figure. (c). during time (a), the signal has a frequency f 1, and is at the zero reference phase. During
time (c), the signal has a frequency f1 but has changed phase to . During time (b) when the phase is
in the process of changing, from 0 to . the frequency is less than f 1.
Slope detector
The slope detection is a method of FM-demodulation which converts the received FM
signal to AM and demodulates with an envelope detector.
Principle
Any circuit that outputs the time derivative of the input can perform FM to AM
conversion. In an FM signal the frequency is low, when the amplitude of the message
signal is low and vice versa. Utilizing the property that a differentiation corresponds
to a filter having the transfer function
. The amplitude plot of this filter is
shown in figure O.1. A plot of the signal before and after differentiation is shown in
figure jtkr04: fig: slope02a and jtkr04: fig: slope02b. Obviously differentiation does
not eliminate the frequencies around the carrier wave.
Differentiating the FM-signal and taking the absolute value produces a DC-offset and
the amplitude varying input signal. This is shown in figure jtkr04:fig:slope02c. The
DC offset and the frequency contents near the carrier that is still present, is removed
by band pass filtering. The result is shown in figure jtkr04:fig:slope02d. The absolute
value and low pass filtering corresponds to the envelope of the AM signal.
Mathematical description
In the following a mathematical description of the slope detector is made. The original
FM signal, see figure O.2a, is given on the form:
(O.2)
where:
[V]
[rad/s]
[V]
[rad/V]
[Hz/V]
is omitted.
(O.3)
(O.4)
(O.5)
(O.6)
(O.7)
As a final step this new signal is bandpass filtered. This approach will only work if
highest frequency of the wanted signal significantly lower than the carrier frequncy
[Carlson, 1986, pages 259-261], see figure O.2 d. This yields
(O.8)
where:
is a constant.
[-]
and
(O.9
)
and
The two signals at hand are: the envelope of the modulated signal
passed through
through
. When these two are subtracted the offset amplitude
cancels out and a frequency response of figure O.4b is achieved.
Note that the resulting slope is twice as steep as either one of the
slopes,
or
. The rule for the applicability of this method is the
same as for the frequency discriminator.
[Haykin, 2001, pages 121-124,725-730]
The Foster Seeley is a common type of FM detector circuit used mainly within radio sets constructed
using discrete components.
The Foster Seeley circuit is characterised by the transformer, choke and diodes used within the
circuit that forms the basis of its operation.
Invented in 1936 by Dudley E. Foster and Stuart William Seeley, it was widely used until the 1970s
when ICs using other techniques that were more easily integrated became more widely available.
centre
balance
destroyed,
conducts
other.
This
voltage
resistors
the
other,
voltage
at
frequency
the
condition
is
and one diode
more than the
results
in
the
across one of the
being larger than
and a resulting
the
output
corresponding to
modulation on the
signal.
the
incoming
The choke is
required in the
circuit to ensure that no RF signals appear at the output. The capacitors C1 and C2 provide a similar
filtering function.
Both the ratio and Foster-Seeley detectors are expensive to manufacture. Wound components like
coils are not easy to produce to the required specification and therefore they are comparatively
costly. Accordingly these circuits are rarely used in modern equipment.
ADVANTAGES
Simple
to
components.
of
construct
DISADVANTAGES
and
discrete
performance
using
As a result of its advantages and disadvantages the Foster Seeley detector or discriminator is not
widely used these days. Its main use was within radios constructed using discrete components.
Linearity: The linearity of the PLL FM demodulator is governed by the voltage to frequency
characteristic of the VCO within the PLL. As the frequency deviation of the incoming signal
normally only swings over a small portion of the PLL bandwidth, and the characteristic of the
VCO can be made relatively linear, the distortion levels from phase locked loop
demodulators are normally very low. Distortion levels are typically a tenth of a percentage.
Manufacturing costs:
technology. Only a few external components are required, and in some instances it may not
be necessary to use an inductor as part of the resonant circuit for the VCO. These facts
make the PLL FM demodulator particularly attractive for modern applications.
Summary
The PLL FM demodulator is one of the more widely used forms of FM demodulator or detector these
days. Its suitability for being combined into an integrated circuit and the small number of external
components makes PLL FM demodulation ICs an ideal candidate for many circuits these days.
- the Ratio detector or discriminator was widely used for FM demodulation before the
introduction of integrated circuit demodulators and it is still found in many radios today.
FM DEMODULATION TUTORIAL INCLUDES
FM demodulation overview
FM slope detector
Ratio detector
Foster Seeley detector
FM PLL demodulator
Quadrature detector
Ratio detector or discriminator was widely used for FM demodulation within radio sets using discrete
components. It was capable of providing a good level of performance.
In recent years the Ratio detector has been less widely used. The main reason for this is that it
requires the use of wound inductors and these are expensive to manufacture. Other types of FM
demodulator have overtaken them, mainly as a result of the fact that the other FM demodulator
configurations lend themselves more easily to being incorporated into integrated circuits.
ADVANTAGES
Simple
to
components
construct
of
DISADVANTAGES
using
discrete
performance
and
As a result of its advantages and disadvantages the ratio detector is not widely used these days.
Techniques that do not require the use of a transformer with its associated costs and those that can
be more easily incorporated within an IC tend to be used.