Principles of Electronic Communication Systems: Second Edition Louis Frenzel
Principles of Electronic Communication Systems: Second Edition Louis Frenzel
Principles of Electronic Communication Systems: Second Edition Louis Frenzel
Communication Systems
Second Edition
Louis Frenzel
Transistor modulator
Collector modulator
Series modulator
Collector Modulator
The collector modulator is a linear power amplifier.
Low level modulating signals are amplified to a high-
power level.
A modulating output signal is coupled through a
modulation transformer to a class C amplifier.
The secondary winding of the modulation transformer
is connected in series with the collector supply
voltage of the class C amplifier.
High-Level Collector Modulator
Series Modulator
A series modulator produces high-level modulation without a
large and expensive modulation transformer used in collector
modulators.
Diode detector
Synchronous detector
Diode Detector AM Demodulator
Diode Detector
On positive alternations of the AM signal, the capacitor
charges quickly to the peak value of pulses passed by the
diode.
When the pulse voltage drops to zero, the capacitor discharges
into the resistor.
The time constant of the capacitor and resistor is long
compared to the period of the carrier.
The capacitor discharges only slightly when the diode is not
conducting.
The resulting waveform across the capacitor is a close
approximation to the original modulating signal.
By Definition…
Because the diode detector recovers the envelope of
the AM (modulating) signal, the circuit is sometimes
called an envelope detector.
If the RC time constant in a diode detector is too
long, the capacitor discharge will be too slow to
follow faster changes in the modulating signal. This
is referred to as diagonal distortion.
Synchronous Detection
Synchronous detectors use an internal clock signal at
the carrier frequency in the receiver to switch the AM
signal off and on, producing rectification similar to
that in a standard diode detector.
Synchronous Detector
Balanced Modulator
A balanced modulator is a circuit that generates a DSB
signal, suppressing the carrier and leaving only the
sum and difference frequencies at the output.
Filter method
Phasing method
Generating SSB Signals: The Filter
Method
The filter method is the simplest and most widely used.
The modulating signal is applied to the audio
amplifier.
The amplifier’s output is fed to one input of a
balanced modulator.
A crystal oscillator provides the carrier signal which
is also applied to the balanced modulator.
The output of the balanced modulator is DSB.
An SSB signal is produced by passing the DSB signal
through a highly selective bandpass filter.
SSB Transmitter: The Filter Method
Generating SSB Signals: Phasing
Method
The phasing method of SSB generation uses a phase-shift
technique that causes one of the sidebands to be canceled out.
The phasing method uses two balanced modulators which
eliminate the carrier.
The carrier oscillator is applied to the upper balanced
modulator along with the modulating signal.
The carrier and modulating signals are both shifted in phase by
90 degrees and applied to another balanced modulator.
Phase-shifting causes one sideband to be canceled out when
the two modulator outputs are added together.
SSB Generator: Phasing Method
DSB and SSB Demodulation
To recover the intelligence in a DSB or SSB signal,
the carrier that was suppressed at the receiver must be
reinserted.