Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Chapter 7 - Wide Area Networks: Wireline Transmission

This section describes WAN devices that fit into the first two layers of the ISO OSI model:
Layer 1, the Physical layer, and (above it) Layer 2, the Data Link layer. These are sometimes
referred to as "levels" in texts written before the creation of the OSI model. Layer 1, the
Physical layer, provides the actual connection-the electrical and mechanical means to
establish, maintain, and end physical connections between Data Link points. Layer 1 provides
the functional and procedural means including "handshakes." Layer 2, the Data Link
layer, provides functional means to establish, maintain, and disconnect data link connections
between data terminals, modems, gateways, and the like. Please understand that
there may be very little demarcation between Layer 1 and Layer 2, particularly if both functions
are generated in a single piece of equipment, as may be the case with modems that
are integrated into servers, and so on.

Most long-distance transmission of data is serial (in fact, almost all high-speed data is serial
except for very local areas like a motherboard). This method makes possible two major
types of links: switched and permanent. A switched network is much like the landline telephone
system. The connections are originated at the beginning of a communication
(off-hook and dial) and taken down at the end of communication (hang-up). A permanent
connection is normally leased twenty-four hours by seven days a week. It utilizes the same
media but doesn't go through the switching equipment.

Since the distance of the line introduces distortions and line losses to signals that have a
large direct current (DC) component (known as baseband signals), an alternating current
(AC) is used as a carrier for the data. This is accomplished through the process of modulation
and demodulation, which provides a method for translating frequencies by taking the
DC signaling rate and transforming it into a higher frequency range, thus eliminating the
DC component.

Modulation is a term used to describe the "impression of intelligence on a carrier." In other
words, modulation consists of modifying some sort of "carrier" (in this case, an electrical
waveform) with some sort of information. This information is the "intelligence."
Demodulation is the reverse, removing intelligence from the carrier. It is actually the more
difficult of the two processes.

Many, many books have been written about both modulation and demodulation. The following
information is therefore but a concise simplification of modulation and its effects on
circuit behaviors. We will detail only the effects; the mathematical models are absent. Since
almost all electrical communications of any great distance or high speed use one or more
modulation techniques, grasping them is essential to understanding industrial applications
in which data is normally transferred some distance. However, this discussion won't help
you when selecting a communications device as that choice is made by the equipment
designer, normally not the user.

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