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COMMUNICATION SYSTEM EECB353 Chapter 2 Part IV AMPLITUDE MODULATION Dept of Electrical Engineering Universiti Tenaga Nasional
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COMMUNICATION SYSTEM EECB353 Chapter 2 Part IV AMPLITUDE MODULATION

Feb 23, 2016

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COMMUNICATION SYSTEM EECB353 Chapter 2 Part IV AMPLITUDE MODULATION. Dept of Electrical Engineering Universiti Tenaga Nasional. Superhetrodyne Receiver. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: COMMUNICATION SYSTEM EECB353 Chapter 2 Part IV AMPLITUDE MODULATION

COMMUNICATION SYSTEM EECB353Chapter 2 Part IV

AMPLITUDE MODULATION

Dept of Electrical EngineeringUniversiti Tenaga Nasional

Page 2: COMMUNICATION SYSTEM EECB353 Chapter 2 Part IV AMPLITUDE MODULATION

Superhetrodyne Receiver Superhetrodyn receivers convert all incoming

signals to a lower frequency, known as the intermediate frequency (IF), at which a single set of amplifiers is used to provide a fixed level of selectivity and sensitivity.

The key circuit is the mixer – act as a simple amplitude modulator to produce sum and difference frequencies.

Heterodyne means to mix two frequencies together in a nonlinear device or to translate one frequency to another using nonlinear mixing.

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Superhetrodyne Receiver

AM Non-Coherent Superhetrodyne Receiver Block Diagram

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Superhetrodyne Receiver

fLO should always be at a freq 455kHz above the incoming carrier freq., fc

When the freq of LO is tuned above RF : High side injection fLO = fRF + fIF

When the freq of LO is tuned below RF : Low side injection fLO = fRF - fIF

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Superhetrodyne Receiver

RF Section Consist of pre-selector and RF amplifier Pre-selector is a broad-tuned BPF with an adjustable

centre frequency that is tuned to the desired carrier frequency. Main purpose of the pre-selector is by selectivity, it accepts only the desired frequency or prevent unwanted radio frequency (Image Frequency) from entering the receiver and all others are rejected.

RF Amplifier – to amplify the signal before entering the mixer

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Superhetrodyne Receiver Mixer/Converter Section

This section includes a radio frequency oscillator stage (LO) and a mixer/converter stage (the first detector) which is a nonlinear device used to convert RF’s to IF’s (RF to IF frequency translation). IF signal in commercial AM broadcast are between 450kHz and 460kHz. The most common IF used is 455kHz.

Reason to translate RF ->IF is to obtain adequate selectivity. - RF signal are down converted

to IF.-Shape of the envelope remains the same, although the carrier and SBs freq are translated from RF->IF, the original info contained in the envelope remain unchanged.

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Superhetrodyne Receiver Mixer/Converter Section

LO is always maintained at a frequency which is higher, by a fixed amount, than the incoming RF signals.

The mixer in the receiver combines the signal from the RF amplifier and the frequency input from the local oscillator to produce three frequencies:

A ‘difference’ frequency of local oscillator frequency - RF signal frequency.

A ‘sum’ frequency equal to local oscillator frequency + RF signal frequency.

A component at the local oscillator frequency. Mixing two signals to produce such components is called a

‘heterodyne’ process.

Page 8: COMMUNICATION SYSTEM EECB353 Chapter 2 Part IV AMPLITUDE MODULATION

Frequency Conversion

Concept of a mixer.

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Frequency Conversion Process

Consider a situation shown above. The AM signal into the mixer is a 1000kHz carrier that has been modulated by a 1kHz sinewave, thus producing side freqs at 999 kHz and 1001 kHz.

Difference component: 1455-(999,1000,1001)kHz

Sum component: 1455+(999,1000,1001)kHz

All original inputs

Page 10: COMMUNICATION SYSTEM EECB353 Chapter 2 Part IV AMPLITUDE MODULATION

Frequency Conversion Process The IF amplifier has a tuned circuit that accepts

components only near 455kHz, in this case 454kHz, 455kHz and 456kHz.

Since the mixer maintains the same amplitude proportion that existed with the original AM signal input at 999kHz, 1000kHz and 1001kHz, the signal now passing through the IF amplifiers is a replica of the original AM signal. The only difference is that now its carrier freq is 455kHz.

A frequency conversion has occurred that has translated the carrier from 1000kHz to 455kHz – a frequency intermediate to the original carrier and intelligence frequencies.

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Mixer Output

460kHz455kHz450kHz

545kHz550kHz555kHz

1005kHz

1550kHz1555kHz1560kHz

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Superhetrodyne Receiver How LO tracks the RF amplifier so that the difference

between the two frequencies is maintained at a constant value?

Example – the radio is tuned to received a broadcast station which transmit at 800kHz.

The LO will be running at 1255khz. The difference frequency is 1255kHz – 800kHz = 455kHz.

A Superhetrodyne Receiver Tuned to 800kHz

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Superhetrodyne Receiver Similarly if the radio is tuned to received a station transmitted at

700kHz The LO will be running at 1155kHz and the difference is still

maintained at the required 455kHz. This frequency difference therefore remain constant regardless

of the frequency to which the radio is actually tuned and is called the intermediate frequency (IF).

When the freq of LO is tuned above RF : High side injection fLO = fRF + fIF

When the freq of LO is tuned below RF : Low side injection fLO = fRF - fIF

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Example 1

AM superhetrodyne receiver using high-side injection, with LO freq of 1355kHz. Determine the IF carrier, upper side freq and lower side freq for an RF wave that is made up of a carrier and upper and lower side freq of 900kHz, 905kHz and 895kHz respectively.

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Image Frequency Previously, for a 700kHz broadcast station, the LO of

1155kHz giving the difference (IF) frequency of the required 455kHz.

What happen if we were to receive another station broadcasting on a frequency of 1610kHz?

This would also mix the LO freq of 1155kHz to produce the IF freq of 455kHz. i.e this station also received the same time as one at 700kHz.

Station 1: Frequency 700kHz, LO 1155kHz, IF = 455kHz Station 2: Frequency 1610kHz, LO 1155kHz, IF = 455kHz

An Image Frequency is an unwanted frequency that can also combine with the LO output to create the IF frequency.

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Image Frequency (fim) An image freq is any freq other than the selected radio freq

carrier that if allowed to enter a receiver and mix with the LO, will produce a cross-product freq that is equal to the IF.

An image freq is equivalent to a second RF that will produce an IF that will interfere with the IF from the desired RF.

Once an image freq has been mixed down to IF, it cannot be filtered out or suppressed. For RF to produce a cross product equal to the IF, it must be displaced from the LO freq by a value equal to the IF:

For high-side injection:Giving:

IFLOim fff

LOIFRF fff

IFRFim fff 2

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Image Frequency (fim)Figure : Relative Frequency Spectrum for the RF, IF, LO and Image Frequencies for a superhetrodyne receiver using High-side Injection

Example 2- Determine the image frequency for a standard broadcast AM receiver tuned to a station at 1320kHz.

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Example 3

For a citizen band receiver using high side injection with an RF carrier of 27 MHz and IF center frequency of 455 kHz, determine :i- Local oscillator frequencyii- Image frequency

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Superhetrodyne Receiver IF Section

Consists of a series of IF amplifiers and BPFs These stages contain most of the amplification in the

receiver as well as the filtering that enables signals on one frequency to be separated from those on the next.

Most of the receiver gain and selectivity is achieved in the IF section.

Detector Section Convert the IF signals back to the original source

information. Audio Amplifier Section

Comprises several cascaded audio amplifiers and one of more speakers.

The number of amplifiers used depends on the audio signal power desired.

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Automatic Gain Control Circuit (AGC) The AGC circuit is used to prevent very strong signals from

overloading the receiver. It can also reduce the effect of fluctuations in the received signal strength.

The AGC circuit makes use of the mean DC voltage level present at the output of the diode detector.

If the signal strength increase, the mean DC voltage level also increase.

If the mean DC voltage level exceeds a predetermined threshold value, a voltage is applied to the RF and IF amplifiers in such a way as to decrease their gain to prevent overload.

As soon as the incoming signal strength decreases, the mean DC voltage level is reduced below the threshold, the RF and IF amplifiers return to their normal operation.

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Automatic Gain Control Circuit (AGC)

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Exercise – Midterm Sem II 07/08 A radio station transmits using AM at a carrier frequency of 600 kHz. The AM band frequencies are allocated with a separation of 9 kHz. The AM signal is received by means of a superhetrodyne receiver with an intermediate frequency of 455 kHz. Calculate:              i.  The highest possible modulating frequency.             ii.  The local oscillator frequency.             iii. The image frequency.           iv. Draw the block diagram of the receiver used at the station and list all the frequency components before and after the heterodyning process.