Chapter Six: Receivers

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Chapter Six: Receivers

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Chapter Six: Receivers. Introduction. Two important specifications are fundamental to all receivers: Sensitivity: signal strength required to achieve a given signal-to-noise ratio Selectivity: the ability to reject unwanted signals. Receiver Topologies. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Chapter Six: Receivers

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Chapter Six:Receivers

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Introduction

• Two important specifications are fundamental to all receivers:– Sensitivity: signal strength required to achieve a given

signal-to-noise ratio

– Selectivity: the ability to reject unwanted signals

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Receiver Topologies

• Nearly all modern receivers use the superheterodyne principle

• The simplest receiver would consist of a demodulator connected directly to an antenna

• Adding a tuned circuit would improve the performance

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Simple Receiver

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Tuned-radio-frequency Receiver• In a receiver

with multiple RF stages, all tuned circuits must track together, typically by ganged-tuning methods as shown:

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The Superheterodyne Receiver

• The superheterodyne receiver was invented in 1918 by Edwin H. Armstrong and is still almost universally used

• A superheterodyne receiver is characterized by one or more stages of RF amplification and the RF stage may be tuned or broadband

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Functional Elements of Superheterodyne Receivers

• The input filter and RF stage are referred to as the Front End of a receiver

• The mixer combines the signal frequency with a sine-wave signal generated by a local oscillator creating an intermediate frequency

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Receiver Characteristics• Sensitivity - the ability to receive weak signals with an

acceptable signal-to-noise ratio• One common specification for AM receivers is the signal

strength required for a 10-dB signal-plus-noise-to-noise ratio at a specified power level

• Adjacent channel sensitivity is another way of specifying selectivity

• Techniques like alternate channel rejection are also used to specify selectivity

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Receiver Characteristics: Distortion• Distortion comes in several forms:

– Harmonic distortion is when the frequencies generated are multiples of those in the original signal

– Intermodulation distortion occurs when frequency components in the original signal mix and produce sum and difference signals

– Phase distortion consists of irregular shifts in phase and is common when signals pass through filters

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Dynamic Range• The ratio between between the receiver’s response to weak

signals and signals that are overload one or more stages is referred to as Dynamic Range

• Blocking may occur when two adjacent signals, one of which is much stronger than the other, cause a reduction in sensitivity to the desired channel. This is also referred to as desensitization or desense

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Spurious Responses• Superheterodyne receivers have a tendency to receive signals

they are not tuned to• Image Frequencies are signals that are produced as a result of

the generation of intermediate frequencies

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Demodulators

• The demodulator, also known as the detector, is the part of the receiver that recovers the baseband signal. It performs the inverse operation to the transmitter modulator

• Several types of modulators are used, depending upon the type of modulation in use

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Full-Carrier AM• The simplest, most popular demodulator for full-

carrier AM is the envelope detector• To recover the baseband signal, the incoming

signal is simply rectified to remove half the envelope, then filtered to remove the high-frequency components

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SSBSC AM

• A diode detector alone will not work for SSB or DSBSC because the envelope is different from that of AM

• Typically, a product detector using a balanced modulator is used

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FM• FM demodulators must convert frequency

variations of the input signal into amplitude variations at the output

• The amplitude of the output must be proportional to the frequency deviation of the input

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FM Detectors

• There are four major types of FM detectors:– Foster-Seely discriminator

– Ratio detector

– Quadrature detector

– PLL detector

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Foster-Seely Detector

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Ratio Detector

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Quadrature Detector

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Communications Receivers• The term communications receiver is used mainly

for general-purpose receivers that cover a wide range of frequencies from 100 kHz to 30 MHz

• Generally, communications receivers divide their coverage over several bands

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Components of Communications Receivers

• Squelch - disables the receiver audio in the absence of a signal• Noise limiters typically use a diode limiter or clipper in the

audio section of the receiver

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Transceivers• A transceiver is simply a transmitter and receiver in

one box• Transceivers are convenient and allow certain

economies to be made• Most transceivers operate in the half-duplex mode

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Receiver Measurements• Sensitivity - measured with a calibrated RF signal

generator and audio voltmeter• Selectivity - measured with an RF generator