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Download ICN lecture6_ Digital-Digital & Analog
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Digital-to-digital Conversion A digital signal is a sequence of discrete discontinuous voltage pulses. Each pulse is a signal element (symbol). Binary data are transmitted by encoding each data bit into signal elements. Basic Ideas of conversion: BINARY DATA to DIGITAL SIGNAL. Line coding and decoding There is a variety of language that can be used to describe the process of transforming binary data into a digital signal. Line coding is another term used to describe digital encoding Digital Transmission Data element – The actual information/data/message to be delivered Signal element – The right format of signals or suitable signal types used to carry the data element (actual data) Ratio of Data/Signal r=d/s d = data element s = signal element The higher the r the better the transmission efficiency Data element (Actual information/message) Signal element (how the information is ‘carried’) Both elements can be specified in terms of: Time interval. Both measured in secs Rate. Data rate: Bits per second (bps). Signal rate: Symbols per second or Baud. The relationship between the date rate and the signal rate will indicate how efficiently the bandwidth is being used. Requirements for digital signaling Adequate noise immunity. (The receiver can determine a level above the noise. This will either be above a threshold, in relation to previous symbols or relative to 0V.) Synchronization. (The receiver knows when to sample the signal.) Security. (Only the receiver is able to decode the signal) Effect of lack of synchronization Adequate Noise immunity This effectively means maintaining an adequate signal to noise ratio. As the ability to control noise is limited the mechanisms focus on signal viability. Two broad approaches are considered: Minimize attenuation mechanisms. The significant factor here is to remove any DC bias because coupling will severely attenuate this component of the signal. Use transitions and changes as mechanisms to encode the data. Line coding schemes UNIPOLAR NRZ scheme (Non Return to Zero) Main problem of NRZ: No timing information is carried to provide correct synchronisation at the receiver. (Not knowing when one bit ended and next bit starts) DC Component – when voltage level in a digital signal is constant for a while. The spectrum creates a very low frequencies which cannot allow to be passed by certain devices/systems (e.g. transfomer/ telephone) Baseline Wandering: Running average of received signal power. (BI)POLAR RZ scheme: (Return to Zero) at the middle of the bit No DC component problem Main problem of RZ: Requires two signal changes to encode a data bit (low r), which needs extra bandwidth 3 signal levels results in more complexity Baseline Wandering can still exists. POLAR Bi-phase: Manchester and differential Manchester No DC component problem No Baseline Wandering Timing information is provided Duration of signal bit divided into two halves. (two signal levels) The transition at the middle of the bit is used for synchronization. Only drawback: r = 0.5 (or 1/2): The minimum bandwidth of Manchester and differential Manchester is 2 times that of NRZ (1/2bit/baud). BIPOLAR schemes: AMI* and pseudoternary In bipolar encoding, we use three levels: positive, zero, and negative. No DC component problem No Baseline Wandering Signal rate ‘r’ can be improved Need to provide Timing information via: AMI - Alternate Mark Inversion Start/stop bits Control bits prior to actual data Analog to Digital Conversion/Encoding WCB/McGraw-Hill The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 Analog-to-Digital Conversion A-D conversion requires Sampling method; where a series of pulse-trains is applied to the analog signal. This process is called Pulse Amplitude Modulation (PAM). Hence, it is require to apply sufficient sample of pulse-trains or sampling frequency to the analog signal: fs = 2 X Signal_Bandwidth (according to Nyquist Sampling Theorem). After suitable sampling, each pulse will be represented a binary number: the process of converting this pulse-level to binary level in called Quantisation. Number of M bits used for Quantisation is a crucial factor. The final resultant is the digital representation of the analog signal in a binary coding representation via the line-coding or binary encoding. The entire A-D process is called Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) Nyquist’s Sampling Theorem To convert an analogue signal to a digital signal, the sampling frequency involved (frequency of pulse-trains) needs to be: Sampling frequency fs = 2 × W Bandwidth of signal A band-limited signal of finite energy, which has no frequency components higher than W Hertz, may be completely described by specifying the values of the signal at instants of time separated by (1/2W) seconds or can be recovered from a knowledge of its samples taken at a rate of 2W samples per second. Nyquist’s Sampling Theorem Message signal Frequency Content Frequency Content of the sampled message signal Message bandwidth fs = 2 × W Sampling frequency Nyquist’s Sampling Theorem Sampling frequency = message bandwidth Message signal cannot be recovered from the sampled signal !! Components of PCM encoder Three different sampling methods for PCM Pulse Amplitude Modulation (PAM) Sampling Pulse Amplitude Modulation (PAM) - Sampling Duty cycle = T / Ts Quantized PAM Signal WCB/McGraw-Hill The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 Quantizing Using Sign and Magnitude WCB/McGraw-Hill The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 Quantized PAM Signal PCM The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 From Analog to PCM The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 From Analog to PCM WCB/McGraw-Hill The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 From Analog to PCM WCB/McGraw-Hill The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 From Analog to PCM WCB/McGraw-Hill The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 Extra Notes on Line coding: MULTILEVEL. In mBnL schemes, a pattern of m data elements is encoded as a pattern of n signal elements. Multilevel: 2B1Q scheme (2bits/baud) Multilevel: 8B6T scheme (8/6 bits/baud). Converts bytes of data into 6 digits of ternary code (36 = 729 possible states) Multitransition: MLT-3 scheme Summary of line coding schemes