Title: Chapter 3 : Single-Sideband (SSB) Communication System Chapter contents
1Chapter 3 Single-Sideband (SSB) Communication
SystemChapter contents
- 3.1 Single-Sideband System
- SSBFC, SSBSC, SSBRC
- 3.2 Transmission to Conventional AM
- Power conservation, bandwidth conservation,
selective fading, noise reduction, complex
receivers, tuning difficulties - 3.3 Single-Sideband Transmitters
- Filter method, Phase-Shift Method
- 3.4 Single-Sideband Receivers
- SSB BFO Receiver, Coherent SSB BFO Receiver
- 3.5 Single-Sideband and Frequency-Division
Multiplexing
2Chapter 3 Single-Sideband (SSB) Communication
System
- 2 main disadvantages of the conventional AM DSBFC
- Carrier power constitutes 2/3 or more of the
total transmitted power no information in the
carrier. - Utilize twice as much bandwidth both the upper
and lower sideband actually contains same
information (redundant). - Introduce several systems of SSB and their pros
and contras over the conventional AM DSBFC system - Comparison of frequency spectrum and relative
power distribution for AM DSBFC and several
common SSB systems
33.1.1 AM Single-Sideband Full Carrier (SSBFC)
- The carrier is transmitted at full power but only
one sideband is transmitted - requires half the bandwidth of DSBFC AM
- Carrier power constitutes 80 of total
transmitted power, while sideband power consumes
20 - SSBFC requires less total power but utilizes a
smaller percentage of the power to carry the
information
43.1.1 AM Single-Sideband Full Carrier (SSBFC)
- The output modulated signal
- as SSB only has one sideband, the peak change in
the envelope is only half of what it is with
DSBFC - Therefore, the demodulated wave has only half the
amplitude of the DSB modulated wave
53.1.2 AM Single-Sideband Suppressed Carrier
(SSBSC)
- The carrier is totally suppressed and one
sideband is removed - requires half the bandwidth of DSBFC AM
- Considerably less power than DSBFC and SSBFC
schemes - Sideband power makes up 100 of the total
transmitted power - The wave is not an envelope but a sine wave at
frequency equal to the carrier frequency
modulating frequency (depending on which
sideband is transmitted)
63.1.3 AM Single-Sideband Reduced Carrier (SSBRC)
- One sideband is totally removed and the carrier
voltage is reduced to approximately 10 of its
unmodulated amplitude - requires half the bandwidth of DSBFC AM
- Less transmitted power than DSBFC and SSBFC but
more power than SSBSC - As much as 96 of the total transmitted power is
in the sideband - The output modulated signal is similar to SSBFC
but with reduced maximum and minimum envelope
amplitudes
73.2 Comparison of Single-Sideband Transmission
to Conventional AM
3.2.1 SSB Advantages Power Conservation
- With SSB, only one sideband is transmitted and
the carrier is either suppressed or reduced
significantly - Much less total transmitted power is necessary to
produce the same quality signal as achieved with
DSBFC AM - Eliminating the carrier would increase the power
available for the sidebands by at least a factor
of 3, providing approximately a 4.8 dB
improvement in the signal-to-noise ratio
83.2.2 SSB Advantages Bandwidth Conservation
- SSB requires half as much bandwidth as DSB AM,
which is important today with the already
overcrowded RF spectrum - 50 reduction in bandwidth for a SSB compared to
DSB equal to an improvement in the
signal-to-noise ratio of 3 dB - By combining the bandwidth improvement and the
power advantage of removing the carrier, the
overall improvement in the signal-to-noise ratio
using SSBSC is approximately 7.8 dB better that
DSBFC
93.2.3 SSB Advantages Selective Fading
- With DSB, the carrier and two sidebands may
propagate through the channel by different paths
and experience different transmission impairment
called as selective fading. - 3 types of selective fading
- Sideband fading one sideband is significantly
attenuated resulting in a reduced signal
amplitude at the output of the receiver and
causing some distortion but not detrimental to
the signal because the 2 sidebands contain the
same information. - Carrier fading reduction of the carrier level
of a 100 modulated wave will make the carrier
voltage less than the sum voltage of the
sidebands. Consequently, the envelope resembles
an overmodulated envelope and causing distortion. - Carrier or sideband phase shift as the position
change, a change in the shape of the envelope
will occur, causing severely distorted
demodulated signal. - With SSB, carrier phase shift and carrier fading
can not occur, thus smaller distortion is
expected.
103.2.4 SSB Advantages Noise Reduction
- As SSB only utilizes half as much bandwidth as
conventional AM, the thermal noise power is
reduced to half that of a DSB system - Considering both the bandwidth reduction and the
immunity to the selective fading, SSB system has
an approximately a 12 dB S/N ratio advantage over
DSB system - This means the DSB system must transmit 12 dB
more powerful signal to achieve the same
performance as the SSB system
113.2.5 SSB Disadvantages Complex receivers
- SSB requires more complex and expensive receivers
than DSB. - As SSB includes either a reduced or a suppressed
carrier, envelope detection cannot be used. SSB
requires a carrier recovery and synchronization
circuit, which adds to their cost, complexity and
size.
3.2.6 SSB Disadvantages Tuning difficulties
- SSB requires more complex and precise tuning than
the DSB receiver.
123.3 SSB Transmission
- transmitters used for SSB suppressed and reduced
carrier transmission are identical except that
the re-inserted carrier transmitters have an
additional circuits that adds a low amplitude
carrier to the single sideband waveform after
suppressed-carrier modulation has been performed
and one of the sideband has been removed. - the re-inserted carrier is called a pilot
carrier. - the circuit where the pilot carrier is
re-inserted is called a linear summer. - 3 transmitter configurations are commonly used
for single sideband generation - Filter method
- Phase shift method
- Third method
133.3.1 Filter Method
- Block diagram for a SSB transmitter using
balanced modulators to suppressed the unwanted
carrier and filters to suppress the unwanted
sideband. - The low frequency IF is converted to the final
operating frequency band through a series of
frequency translation - 3-stages of frequency up-conversion
- modulating signal is an audio spectrum that
extends from 0 kHz 5 kHz
143.3.1 Filter Method
- modulating signal mixes with a low frequency (LF)
100 kHz carrier in the balanced modulator 1 to
produced a DSB frequency spectrum centered at the
suppressed 100 kHz carrier. - bandpass filter 1 (BPF 1) that is tuned to a 5
kHz bandwidth centered at 102.5 kHz used to
eliminate the lower sideband and pass only the
upper sideband. - the pilot carrier or reduced amplitude carrier is
added to the single-sided waveform in the carrier
re-insertion stage (summer). - the summer is a simple adder circuit that
combines the 100 kHz pilot carrier with the 100
kHz 105 kHz upper sideband frequency spectrum.
153.3.1 Filter Method
- Output of the summer is the SSBRC waveform. the
SSBRC waveform is mixed in the balanced modulator
2 with a 2 MHz medium frequency (MF) carrier. - output is a DSB suppressed carrier signal in
which the upper and lower sidebands each contain
the original SSBRC frequency spectrum. - upper and lower sidebands are separated by a 200
kHz frequency band that is void of information.
163.3.1 Filter Method
- the lower sideband then is filtered (cut) through
the BPF 2 (5 kHz bandwidth centered at 2.1025
MHz. - the output from BPF 2 is once again a single
sideband reduced carrier waveform with a reduced
2.1 MHz carrier and a 5 kHz wide upper sideband. - then the SSBRC waveform from BPF 2 is mixed in
the balanced modulator 3 with the 20 MHz high
frequency carrier (HF), producing a double
sideband suppressed carrier signal in which the
upper and lower sidebands each contain the
original SSBRC frequency spectrum. - upper and lower sidebands are separated by a 4.2
MHz frequency band that is void of information.
173.3.1 Filter Method
- the lower sideband then is filtered (cut) through
the BPF 3 (5 kHz bandwidth centered at 22.1025
MHz. - the output from BPF 3 is once again a single
sideband reduced carrier waveform with a reduced
22.1 MHz RF carrier and a 5 kHz wide upper
sideband. - Conclusion
- the original modulating signal frequency spectrum
was up-converted in 3 modulation steps to a final
carrier frequency of 22.1 MHz and a single upper
sideband that extended from the carrier (22.1
MHz) to 22.105 MHz. - after each up-conversion (frequency translation),
the desired sideband is separated from the double
sideband spectrum with a bandpass filter (BPF).
183.3.1 Filter Method
- Why not using single heterodyning process (1
balanced modulator, 1 bandpass filter single HF
carrier) ? - Block diagram of a single conversion SSBSC
transmitter - the output of the balance modulator is a DSB
spectrum centered around a suppressed carrier
frequency of 22.1 MHz.
193.3.1 Filter Method
- to separate the 5 kHz upper sideband from the
composite spectrum, a bandpass filter with
extremely high Q is required. - for fixed modulating bandwidth, the filter Q
increase rapidly with the centre frequency. - the difficulty with this method the filter with
high Q is difficult to construct and not economic.
203.3.1 Filter Method
- the solution to this direct filtering is to use a
3-stages up-conversion as explained previously. - the advantages of the 3-stages up-conversion as
compared to single-conversion transmitter on the
selection of BPF. - to construct a 5 kHz wide, steep-skirted BPF at
100 kHz (BPF 1) is relatively simple as only a
moderate Q is required. - the sideband at BPF 2 are 200 kHz apart, thus a
low Q-filter with gradual roll-off
characteristics can be used with no danger of
passing any portion of unwanted sideband. - if multiple channel are used and the HF carrier
is tunable, a broadband filter can be used for
BPF 3 with no danger of any portion of the
undesired sideband leaking through the filter.
213.3.2 Phase Shift Method
- with phase-shift method, the undesired sideband
is cancelled in the output of the modulator. - Block diagram of a SSB transmitter using
phase-shift method - use 2 separate DSB modulators (balanced modulator
1 2). - modulating signal and carrier are applied
directly to one of the modulators, then both are
shifted 90º and applied to the second modulator. - the outputs from the two balanced modulators are
DSBSC signals with the proper phase (when they
are combined in a linear summer, the upper
sideband is cancelled).
223.3.2 Phase Shift Method
- Mathematical analysis of the phase-shift
transmitter - modulating signal (sin wmt) is fed directly to
balanced modulator 1 and shifted 90º (cos wmt)
and fed to balanced modulator 2. - carrier signal (sin wmt) is also fed directly to
balanced modulator 1 and shifted 90º (cos wmt)
and fed to balanced modulator 2 - the outputs of the balanced modulators are
expressed as - Output of balanced modulator 1
- (1)
-
- Output of balanced modulator 2
- (2)
233.3.2 Phase Shift Method
- the final output from the linear summer
- (3)
- which is the lower sideband of the AM wave.
243.4 SSB Receivers3.4.1 SSB BFO Receiver
- Block diagram for a simple noncoherent SSB BFO
receiver - in a receiver, the input signal (suppressed or
reduced carrier and one sideband) is amplified
and then mixed with the RF local oscillator
frequency to produce intermediate frequency. - the output from the RF mixer is then goes through
further amplification and band reduction prior to
second mixer. - the output from the IF amplifier stage is then
mixed (heterodyned) with beat frequency
oscillator (BFO) frequency.
253.4.1 SSB BFO Receiver
- BFO frequency is equal to the IF carrier
frequency. Thus the difference between the IF and
the BFO frequency is the information signal. - i.e. the output from the IF mixer is the sum and
difference frequencies between the IF and the
beat frequency. The difference frequency band is
the original input information. - the receiver is classified as noncoherent because
the RF oscillator and the BFO signals are not
synchronized to each other and to the oscillators
in the transmitter. - Consequently, any difference between the
transmitter and receiver local oscillator
frequencies produces a frequency offset error in
the demodulated information signal. - the RF mixer and IF mixer are product detectors.
A product detector and balanced (product)
modulator are essentially the same circuit.
263.4.1 SSB BFO Receiver
273.4.2 Coherent SSB BFO Receiver
- Block diagram for a coherent SSB BFO receiver
- this type of receiver is identical to the
previous noncoherent type, except that the LO and
BFO frequencies are synchronized to the carrier
oscillators in the transmitter. - the carrier recovery circuit is a narrowband PLL
that tracks the pilot carrier in the SSBRC
signal. - the recovered carrier is then used to generate
coherent local oscillator frequencies (RF LO
frequency BFO frequency) in the synthesizer.
283.4.2 Coherent SSB BFO Receiver
- any minor changes in the carrier frequency in the
transmitter are compensated in the receiver, and
the problem of frequency offset error is
eliminated. - Ex 6-3
293.5 SSB and Frequency-Division Multiplexing
- the most common application of SSB (especially
SSBSC) is frequency-division multiplexing (FDM)
due to the bandwidth and power efficiencies of
SSB system. - Frequency-division multiplexing is an analog
method of combining two or more analog sources
that originally occupied the same frequency band
in such a manner that the channels do not
interfere with each other - Example of simple FDM system where four 5 kHz
channels are frequency-division multiplexed into
a single 20 kHz channel
303.5 SSB and Frequency-Division Multiplexing
- channel 1 signals modulate a 100 kHz carrier in a
balanced modulator. The output is a DSBSC with a
bandwidth of 10 kHz. - the DSBSC wave is then passed through BPF
producing a SSBSC signal occupying the frequency
band between 100 kHz and 105 kHz. - channel 2 signals modulate a 105 kHz carrier
producing a DSBSC wave that is converted to SSBSC
by passing it through a BPF. - the output from the BPF occupies the frequency
band between 105 kHz and 110 kHz. - similar process is used to convert channel 3 and
channel 4 signals to the frequency bands 110 kHz
to 115 kHz and 11f kHz to 120 kHz, respectively.
313.5 SSB and Frequency-Division Multiplexing
- the combined frequency spectrum produced by
combining the outputs from 4 filters is shown
below. - the total combined bandwidth is equal to 20 kHz
and each channel occupies a different 5 kHz
portion of the total 20 kHz bandwidth. - FDM is used extensively to combine many
relatively narrowband channels into a single ,
composite wideband channel without the channel
interfering with each other. - Ex public telephone systems