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DIFFERENTIAL ENCODING
Chapter 3: DIFFERENTIAL ENCODING Differential Encoding Eye Patterns Regenerative Receiver Bit Synchronizer Binary to Mary Conversion Huseyin Bilgekul Eeng360 Communication Systems I Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Eastern Mediterranean University
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Differential Coding System
Differential encoding removes the problem of Unintentional Signal Inversion. Polarity of the differentially encoded signal may be inverted without affecting the decoded signal. Modulo-2 addition Exclusive OR I1 I2 Out 1
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Example of Differential Coding
Encoding Input sequence dn Encoded sequence en Reference digit Decoding (with correct channel polarity) Receiver sequence (Correct polarity) Decoded sequence Decoding (with inverted channel polarity) Received sequence (Inverted polarity) Decoded sequence Decoded sequence is same whether there is inversion or not.
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Eye patterns The effects of channel filtering and channel noise can be seen by observing the received line code on an oscilloscope. Received Line Code Information from Eye Pattern Timing error Eye opening Sensitivity Slope of the open eye Noise Margin height of the eye opening
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Regenerative Repeater
Regenerate a noise-free digital signal. Amplify and clean-up the signal periodically Produces a high level o/p if sample value>VT Increases the amplitude Produces a sample value Minimize the effect of channel noise & ISI Generates a clocking signal
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Bit Synchronizer for NRZ Signals
Bit Synchronization Synchronization signals are clock-type signals necessary within a receiver for detection of data from the corrupted input signal. Digital communication need 3 types of synchronization signals. Bit Synchronization. Frame Synchronization. Carrier Synchronization. Bit Synchronizer for NRZ Signals
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Square-law Bit Synchronizer for NRZ Signals
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Binary-to-multilevel polar NRZ Signal Conversion
Binary to multilevel conversion is used to reduce the bandwidth required by the binary signaling. Multiple bits (l number of bits) are converted into words having SYMBOL durations Ts=lTb where the Symbol Rate or the BAUD Rate D=1/Ts=1/lTb. The symbols are converted to a L level (L=2l ) multilevel signal using a l-bit DAC. Note that now the Baud rate is reduced by l times the Bit rate R (D=R/l). Thus the bandwidth required is reduced by l times. Ts: Symbol Duration L: Number of M ary levels Tb: Bit Duration l: Bits per Symbol L=2l D=1/Ts=1/lTb=R/l Bnull=R/l
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Power Spectra for Multilevel Polar NRZ Signals
(c) L = 8 = 23 Level Polar NRZ Waveform Out
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Spectral Efficiency The Spectral efficiency of a digital signal is given by, where R is the data rate and B is the bandwidth required. If limited BW is desired, then use a signaling technique that has high spectral efficiency. Maximum spectral efficiency (which is limited by channel noise) is given by the Shannon’s Channel Capacity formula: Spectral efficiency for multilevel signaling is
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PSD of a multilevel polar NRZ waveform
å = + I i k n P a R 1 ) ( Ps(f) PSD for a multilevel polar NRZ signal: Multilevel signaling is used to reduce the BW of a digital signal
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