Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Chapter 7 - Wide Area Networks: Frequency Modulation

In frequency modulation, the modulating signal varies the carrier's frequency change from
rest according to the modulating signal's amplitude. Moreover, the carrier's frequency
changes vary at the modulating frequency. An important fact to remember about FM is that
the output carrier's amplitude remains constant; only the frequency changes. Most noise
involves amplitude; that is, it tends to ride on signals above and below that of the average
carrier. By slicing off the top and bottom of the received carrier (a process known as limiting),
most of the amplitude-type noise can be removed from the FM signal. All this is not
without cost, however. Bandwidth is needed to properly demodulate an FM signal. There
are two kinds of FM: wideband and narrowband. Most of FM's appealing characteristics are
inherent only in the wideband type. An important fact to remember about FM is that the
"deviation"-the amount by which the carrier frequency is varied-depends only on the
modulating signal's amplitude. The frequency of the modulating signal determines at what
rate the deviation takes effect, but not the amount of deviation.

An FM signal has an infinite number of sidebands. They are spread out over the frequency
spectrum, above and below the carrier frequency at differing amplitudes. Their relationship
to the carrier is such that each sideband is an integral (whole number) multiple of the modulating
frequency away from the carrier. That is, if the modulating frequency is represented
by "(fm)," then the sidebands are separated from the carrier frequency by: ±fm, ±2fm ...
The amount of energy in each sideband decreases as its distance from the carrier increases,
eventually becoming insignificant. The decrease is not characterized by a simple linear relationship,
but rather is based on a mathematical treatment using Bissell functions. This
treatment is beyond the scope of this discussion, but may be found in any standard text on
frequency modulation. What is an FM signal's bandwidth requirement? Typically, without
encoding, three cycles of bandwidth are required for each bit per second of data.

We stated earlier that there were two kinds of FM, wideband and narrowband. The dividing
point between them is their deviation ratio or the ratio of the maximum carrier deviation
divided by the maximum modulating frequency. As an example, if the maximum deviation is
75 KHz and the maximum modulating frequency is 15 KHz, then (75 ÷ 15 = 5) the deviation
ratio is 5. Signals that have a deviation ratio greater than three are considered
wideband; if less than three, they are considered narrowband. Because the FM signal
requires a large bandwidth (in uncoded form), it is seldom used in digital transmission as
the sole means of modulation.

 

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