Digital Transmission
4-2 ANALOG-TO-DIGITAL
CONVERSION
A digital signal is superior to an analog signal because
it is more robust to noise and can easily be recovered,
corrected and amplified. For this reason, 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.
Topics discussed in this section:
Pulse Code Modulation (PCM)
PCM
PCM consists of three steps to digitize an
analog signal:
1. Sampling
2. Quantization
3. Binary encoding
Before we sample, we have to filter the
signal to limit the maximum frequency of
the signal as it affects the sampling
rate.
Filtering should ensure that we do not
distort the signal, ie remove high frequency
components that affect the signal shape.
Figure 4.21 Components of PCM
encoder
Sampling
Analog signal is sampled every TS secs.
Ts is referred to as the sampling interval.
fs = 1/Ts is called the sampling rate or
sampling frequency.
There are 3 sampling methods:
Ideal - an impulse at each sampling
instant
Natural - a pulse of short width with
varying
amplitude
Flattop - sample and hold, like natural but
with single amplitude value
The process is referred to as pulse amplitude
modulation PAM and the outcome is a signal
Figure 4.22 Three different sampling methods for
PCM
Note
According to the Nyquist theorem, the
sampling rate must be
at least 2 times the highest frequency
contained in the signal.
Figure 4.23 Nyquist sampling rate for low-pass and bandpass
signals
Quantization
Sampling results in a series of pulses of
varying amplitude values ranging between
two limits: a min and a max.
The amplitude values are infinite between the
two limits.
We need to map the infinite amplitude values
onto a finite set of known values.
This is achieved by dividing the distance
between min and max into L zones, each of
height
= (max - min)/L
Quantization Levels
The midpoint of each zone is assigned a
value from 0 to L-1 (resulting in L
values)
Each sample falling in a zone is then
approximated to the value of the
midpoint.
Quantization Zones
Assume we have a voltage signal with
amplitutes Vmin=-20V and Vmax=+20V.
We want to use L=8 quantization
levels.
Zone width = (20 - -20)/8 = 5
The 8 zones are: -20 to -15, -15 to -
10,
-10 to -5, -5 to 0, 0 to +5, +5 to +10,
+10 to +15, +15 to +20
The midpoints are: -17.5, -12.5, -7.5,
-
Figure 4.26 Quantization and encoding of a sampled
signal
Quantization Error
When a signal is quantized, we introduce an
error - the coded signal is an approximation
of the actual amplitude value.
The difference between actual and coded
value (midpoint) is referred to as the
quantization error.
The more zones, the smaller which results
in smaller errors.
BUT, the more zones the more bits required
to encode the samples -> higher bit rate
Quantization Error and SNQR
Signals with lower amplitude values will suffer
more from quantization error as the error
range: /2, is fixed for all signal levels.
Non linear quantization is used to alleviate
this problem. Goal is to keep SNQR fixed for
all sample values.
Two approaches:
The quantization levels follow a logarithmic
curve. Smaller ’s at lower amplitudes and larger
’s at higher amplitudes.
Companding: The sample values are compressed
at the sender into logarithmic zones, and then
expanded at the receiver. The zones are fixed in
height.
Bit rate and bandwidth
requirements of PCM
The bit rate of a PCM signal can be calculated form
the number of bits per sample x the sampling rate
Bit rate = nb x fs
The bandwidth required to transmit this signal
depends on the type of line encoding used. Refer to
previous section for discussion and formulas.
A digitized signal will always need more bandwidth
than the original analog signal. Price we pay for
robustness and other features of digital transmission.