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Chapter 4 Digital Transmission. 4.#2 4-1 DIGITAL-TO-DIGITAL CONVERSION line coding, block coding, and scrambling. Line coding is always needed; block.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 4 Digital Transmission. 4.#2 4-1 DIGITAL-TO-DIGITAL CONVERSION line coding, block coding, and scrambling. Line coding is always needed; block."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 4 Digital Transmission

2 4.#2 4-1 DIGITAL-TO-DIGITAL CONVERSION line coding, block coding, and scrambling. Line coding is always needed; block coding and scrambling may or may not be needed.

3 Figure 4.2 Signal element versus data element r = number of data elements / number of signal elements

4 Baseline wandering Baseline: running average of the received signal power DC Components Constant digital signal creates low frequencies Self-synchronization Receiver Setting the clock matching the sender’s

5 Figure 4.4 Line coding schemes

6 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

7 Bipolar schemes: AMI (Alternate Mark Inversion) and pseudoternary

8 Multilevel Schemes In mBnL schemes, a pattern of m data elements is encoded as a pattern of n signal elements in which 2 m ≤ L n m: the length of the binary pattern B: binary data n: the length of the signal pattern L: number of levels in the signaling

9 Figure 4.13 Multitransition: MLT-3 scheme

10 Table 4.1 Summary of line coding schemes

11 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

12 Table 4.2 4B/5B mapping codes

13 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

14 4-2 ANALOG-TO-DIGITAL CONVERSION The tendency today is to change an analog signal to digital data. In this section we describe two techniques, pulse code modulation and delta modulation.

15 Figure 4.21 Components of PCM encoder

16 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

17 Figure 4.26 Quantization and encoding of a sampled signal

18 What is the SNR dB in the example of Figure 4.26? Solution We have eight levels and 3 bits per sample, so SNR dB = 6.02 x 3 + 1.76 = 19.82 dB Increasing the number of levels increases the SNR. Contribution of the quantization error to SNR db SNR db = 6.02n b + 1.76 dB n b : bits per sample (related to the number of level L)

19 We have a low-pass analog signal of 4 kHz. If we send the analog signal, we need a channel with a minimum bandwidth of 4 kHz. If we digitize the signal and send 8 bits per sample, we need a channel with a minimum bandwidth of 8 × 4 kHz = 32 kHz. The minimum bandwidth of the digital signal is n b times greater than the bandwidth of the analog signal. B min = n b x B analog

20 DM (delta modulation) finds the change from the previous sample Next bit is 1, if amplitude of the analog signal is larger Next bit is 0, if amplitude of the analog signal is smaller

21 Figure 4.31 Data transmission and modes

22 Chapter 5 Analog Transmission

23 Figure 5.1 Digital-to-analog conversion

24 Figure 5.2 Types of digital-to-analog conversion

25 1. Data element vs. signal element 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 = log 2 L

26 Figure 5.3 Binary amplitude shift keying B = (1+d) x S = (1+d) x N x 1/r

27 Figure 5.6 Binary frequency shift keying

28 Figure 5.9 Binary phase shift keying

29 Figure 5.12 Concept of a constellation diagram

30 Figure 5.13 Three constellation diagrams

31 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 by a single signal change Combination of phase shifting and amplitude shifting (8 phases, 2 amplitudes)

32 Figure 5.14 Constellation diagrams for some QAMs

33 Figure 5.15 Types of analog-to-analog modulation

34 Figure 5.16 Amplitude modulation The total bandwidth required for AM can be determined from the bandwidth of the audio signal: B AM = 2B.

35 Figure 5.18 Frequency modulation

36 Figure 5.20 Phase modulation The total bandwidth required for PM can be determined from the bandwidth and maximum amplitude of the modulating signal: B PM = 2(1 + β)B.

37 Chapter 6 Bandwidth Utilization: Multiplexing and Spreading

38 Figure 6.1 Dividing a link into channels

39 Figure 6.2 Categories of multiplexing

40 Figure 6.4 FDM process FDM is an analog multiplexing technique that combines analog signals.

41 Figure 6.5 FDM demultiplexing example

42 Figure 6.7 Example 6.2

43 Figure 6.10 Wavelength-division multiplexing WDM is an analog multiplexing technique to combine optical signals.

44 Figure 6.12 TDM 1.TDM is a digital multiplexing technique for combining several low-rate channels into one high-rate one. 2.Two types: synchronous and statistical

45 Figure 6.13 Synchronous time-division multiplexing 1.In synchronous TDM, each input connection has an allotment in the output even if it is not sending data. 2.In synchronous TDM, the data rate of the link is n times faster, and the unit duration is n times shorter.

46 Figure 6.17 Example 6.9 Solution Figure 6.17 shows the output for four arbitrary inputs. The link carries 50,000 frames per second. The frame duration is therefore 1/50,000 s or 20 μs. The frame rate is 50,000 frames per second, and each frame carries 8 bits; the bit rate is 50,000 × 8 = 400,000 bits or 400 kbps. The bit duration is 1/400,000 s, or 2.5 μs.

47 Figure 6.18 Empty slots Synchronous TDM is not always efficient

48 Figure 6.19 Multilevel multiplexing

49 Figure 6.20 Multiple-slot multiplexing

50 Figure 6.21 Pulse stuffing

51 Figure 6.22 Framing bits

52 Figure 6.26 TDM slot comparison

53 Figure 6.27 Spread spectrum Bss >> B 1 Wrap message in a protective envelope for a more secure transmission. 2 the expanding must be done independently 3 two types: frequency hopping spread spectrum (FHSS) and direct sequence spread spectrum (DSSS)

54 Figure 6.28 Frequency hopping spread spectrum (FHSS)

55 Figure 6.29 Frequency selection in FHSS

56 Figure 6.32 DSSS Direct sequence spread spectrum Replace each data bit with n bits using a spreading code


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