digital transmission & analog transmission
DESCRIPTION
Digital Transmission & Analog Transmission. 1. DIGITAL-TO-DIGITAL CONVERSION. Digital Data -> Digital Signal Three techniques: line coding ( always needed ) block coding (working with NRZ-I) Scrambling (working with AMI). Figure 4.1 Line coding and decoding. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Digital Transmission&
Analog Transmission
4.# 2
1. DIGITAL-TO-DIGITAL CONVERSION1. DIGITAL-TO-DIGITAL CONVERSION
Digital Data -> Digital SignalDigital Data -> Digital SignalThree techniques: Three techniques: 1.1. line coding (line coding (always neededalways needed))2.2. block coding (working with NRZ-I)block coding (working with NRZ-I)3.3. Scrambling (working with AMI)Scrambling (working with AMI)
Figure 4.1 Line coding and decoding
Figure 4.2 Signal element versus data element
r = number of data elements / number of signal elements
Data Rate Vs. Signal Rate•Data rate: the number of data elements (bits) sent in 1s (bps). It’s also called the bit rate•Signal rate: the number of signal elements sent in 1s (baud). It’s also called the pulse rate, the modulation rate, or the baud rate.
We wish to: 1. increase the data rate (increase the speed of
transmission) 2. decrease the signal rate (decrease the bandwidth
requirement) 3. Worst case, best case, and average case of r4. S = c * N / r baud
Baseline wanderingBaseline: running average of the
received signal power
DC ComponentsConstant digital signal creates low
frequencies
Self-synchronizationReceiver Setting the clock matching the
sender’s
Figure 4.4 Line coding schemes
Figure 4.5 Unipolar NRZ scheme
Figure 4.6 Polar NRZ-L and NRZ-I schemes
Figure 4.7 Polar RZ scheme
Figure 4.8 Polar biphase: Manchester and differential Manchester schemes
• High=0, Low=1
• No change at begin=0, Change at begin=1
• H-to-L=0, L-to-H=1
• Change at begin=0, No change at begin=1
Figure 4.9 Bipolar schemes: AMI (Alternate Mark Inversion) and pseudoternary
Multilevel Schemes
• In mBnL schemes, a pattern of m data elements is encoded as a pattern of n signal elements in which 2m ≤ Ln
• m: the length of the binary pattern• B: binary data• n: the length of the signal pattern• L: number of levels in the signaling
Figure 4.10 Multilevel: 2B1Q scheme
Figure 4.13 Multitransition: MLT-3 scheme
Table 4.1 Summary of line coding schemes
Polar
Block Coding
• Redundancy is needed to ensure synchronization and to provide error detecting
• Block coding is normally referred to as mB/nB coding
• it replaces each m-bit group with an n-bit group
• m < n
Figure 4.15 Using block coding 4B/5B with NRZ-I line coding scheme
Figure 4.14 Block coding concept
Table 4.2 4B/5B mapping codes
Scrambling
• It modifies the bipolar AMI encoding (no DC component, but having the problem of synchronization)
• It does not increase the number of bits• It provides synchronization• It uses some specific form of bits to
replace a sequence of 0s
Figure 4.19 Two cases of B8ZS scrambling technique
B8ZS substitutes eight consecutive zeros with 000VB0VB
Figure 4.20 Different situations in HDB3 scrambling technique
HDB3 substitutes four consecutive zeros with 000V or B00V depending
on the number of nonzero pulses after the last substitution.
2. ANALOG-TO-DIGITAL CONVERSION2. ANALOG-TO-DIGITAL CONVERSION
The tendency today is to change an analog signal to The tendency today is to change an analog signal to digital data. digital data.
1.1. pulse code modulationpulse code modulation2.2. delta modulation.delta modulation.
Figure 4.21 Components of PCM encoder
According to the Nyquist theorem, the sampling rate must be at least 2 times the highest frequency contained in the signal.
What can we get from this:
1. we can sample a signal only if the signal is
band-limited
2. the sampling rate must be at least 2 times the
highest frequency, not the bandwidth
Figure 4.26 Quantization and encoding of a sampled signal
Contribution of the quantization error to SNRdb SNRdb= 6.02nb + 1.76 dB
nb: bits per sample (related to the number of level L)
The minimum bandwidth of the digital signal is nb times greater than the bandwidth of the analog signal.
Bmin= nb x Banalog
DM (delta modulation) finds the change from the previous sampleNext bit is 1, if amplitude of the analog signal is largerNext bit is 0, if amplitude of the analog signal is smaller
3. TRANSMISSION MODES3. TRANSMISSION MODES
1. The transmission of binary data across a link can 1. The transmission of binary data across a link can be accomplished in either parallel or serial mode. be accomplished in either parallel or serial mode. 2. In parallel mode, multiple bits are sent with each 2. In parallel mode, multiple bits are sent with each clock tick. clock tick. 3. In serial mode, 1 bit is sent with each clock tick. 3. In serial mode, 1 bit is sent with each clock tick. 4. there are three subclasses of serial transmission: 4. there are three subclasses of serial transmission: asynchronous, synchronous, and isochronous.asynchronous, synchronous, and isochronous.
Figure 4.31 Data transmission and modes
4. DIGITAL-TO-ANALOG CONVERSION4. DIGITAL-TO-ANALOG CONVERSION
Digital-to-analogDigital-to-analog conversion is the process of conversion is the process of changing one of the characteristics of an analog changing one of the characteristics of an analog signal based on the information in digital data. signal based on the information in digital data.
Figure 5.1 Digital-to-analog conversion
Figure 5.2 Types of digital-to-analog conversion
1.Data element vs. signal elementWhat is a signal element here?
2. Bit rate is the number of bits per second.
2. Baud rate is the number of signal elements per second. 3. In the analog transmission of digital data, the baud rate is less than or equal to the bit rate.
S = N x 1/r baud r = log2L
Figure 5.3 Binary amplitude shift keying
B = (1+d) x S = (1+d) x N x 1/r
Figure 5.4 Implementation of binary ASK
Figure 5.6 Binary frequency shift keying
Figure 5.9 Binary phase shift keying
Figure 5.12 Concept of a constellation diagram
Figure 5.13 Three constellation diagrams
QAM – Quadrature Amplitude Modulation
• Modulation technique used in the cable/video networking world
• Instead of a single signal change representing only 1 bps – multiple bits can be represented buy a single signal change
• Combination of phase shifting and amplitude shifting (8 phases, 2 amplitudes)
Figure 5.14 Constellation diagrams for some QAMs
5. ANALOG AND DIGITAL5. ANALOG AND DIGITAL
Analog-to-analog conversion is the representation of Analog-to-analog conversion is the representation of analog information by an analog signal. analog information by an analog signal.
Modulation is needed if the medium is bandpass in Modulation is needed if the medium is bandpass in nature or if only a bandpass channel is available to nature or if only a bandpass channel is available to us.us.
Example: radio stations Example: radio stations
Figure 5.15 Types of analog-to-analog modulation
Figure 5.16 Amplitude modulation
The total bandwidth required for AM can be determined from the bandwidth of the audio signal: BAM = 2B.
Figure 5.17 AM band allocation
Figure 5.18 Frequency modulation
Figure 5.19 FM band allocation
The total bandwidth required for FM can be determined from the bandwidth
of the audio signal: BFM = 2(1 + β)B. β has a common value of 4
Figure 5.20 Phase modulation
The total bandwidth required for PM can be determined from the bandwidth and maximum amplitude of the modulating signal:BPM = 2(1 + β)B.