Unit04 Cs Multiplexing
Unit04 Cs Multiplexing
Unit04 Cs Multiplexing
Multiplexing
Multiplexing is a set of techniques that allows
the simultaneous transmission of multiple
signals across a single data link.
Multiplexer combines the incoming lines into
one [single stream].
De-multiplexer (DEMUX) separates the stream
back into its component transmissions (one to
many) and directs them to their
corresponding lines.
Multiple Access
Users share a common pool of radio channels,
and user can access to any channel.
A channel is portion of limited radio resource
which is temporarily allocated for a specific
purpose (e.g. phone call).
It is a technique to divide radio spectrum into
channels, and to allocate channels to number
channels
of users,
users simultaneously.
Types of multiplexing
There are three basic types of multiplexing in use:
Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM)
Time Division Multiplexing (TDM).
Code Division Multiplexing (CDM)
Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) is one special
kinds of FDM used in fiber optical transmission.
TDM can be further divided into
Synchronous TDM and
Asynchronous TDM.
Features of FDMA
In FDMA all users share the system (e.g., satellite) simultaneously
but each user transmits at single frequency.
FDMA can be used with both analog and digital signal.
FDMA requires high-performing filters in the radio hardware, in
contrast to TDMA and CDMA.
FDMA is not vulnerable to the timing problems that TDMA has.
Since a predetermined frequency band is available for the entire
period of communication, stream data (a continuous flow of data
that may not be packetized) can easily be used with FDMA.
Due to the frequency filtering, FDMA is not sensitive to near-far
problem which is pronounced for CDMA.
Each user transmits and receives at different frequencies as each
user gets a unique frequency slot
Example
Problem: Five channels, each with a 100-KHz
bandwidth, are to be multiplexed together. What is
the minimum bandwidth of the link if there is a
need for a guard band of 10 KHz between the
channels to prevent interference?
Example 2
Problem: The Advanced Mobile Phone System (AMPS)
uses two bands. The first band, 824 to 849 MHz, is used
for sending; and 869 to 894 MHz is used for receiving.
Each user has a bandwidth of 30 KHz in each direction.
The 3-KHz voice is modulated using FM, creating 30 KHz
of modulated signal. How many people can use their
cellular phones simultaneously?
Example 3
Problem: Four 1-Kbps connections are multiplexed
together. A unit is 1 bit. Find (1) the duration of 1 bit
before multiplexing, (2) the transmission rate of the link,
(3) the duration of a time slot, and (4) the duration of a
frame?
Solution:
1. The duration of 1 bit is 1/1 Kbps, or 0.001 s (1 ms).
2. The rate of the link is 4 Kbps.
3. The duration of each time slot 1/4 ms or 250 ms.
4. The duration of a frame 1 ms.
TDM Basics
The basic principle of
TDM is Sampling Theorem.
The basic unit in TDM is
Time Slot.
The data in TDM is
grouped into Frames,
which consists of one
cycle of time slots.
Example
Problem: A multiplexer combines four 100-Kbps channels using a
time slot of 2 bits. Show the output with four arbitrary inputs.
What is the frame rate? What is the frame duration? What is the
bit rate? What is the bit duration?
Solution:
frame rate? 50,000 frames/s
frame duration? 20 ms
bit rate? 400 kbps
bit duration? 2.5 ms
TDMA Features
Shares single carrier frequency with multiple users
Non-continuous transmission makes handoff simpler
Slots can be assigned on demand in dynamic TDMA
Less stringent power control than CDMA due to
reduced intra cell interference
Higher synchronization overhead than CDMA
Advanced equalization may be necessary for high data
rates if the channel is "frequency selective" and creates
Inter-symbol interference
TDMA Example
Consider a TDMA system with a peak bit rate
of 1 Mbps. Given that the number of users is
10, the frame length is 2 ms and the guard
time is 10 µs. Find (a) Total bit rate per frame
and (b) bit rate per user per frame.
TDMA Example
Consider a TDMA system with a peak bit rate of 1 Mbps. Given that the number of
users is 10, the frame length is 2 ms and the guard time is 10 µs. Find (a) Total bit rate
per frame and (b) bit rate per user per frame.
Solution:
Total Guard time = 10 x 10 x 10–6 = 100 µs Guard interval = 10 µs
Total useful time = 2 ms – 100 µs = 1900 µs
We assume that for this useful time we always #1 #2 #10
transmit at peak bit rate, therefore,
# of bits per frame = 1900 x 10–6 x 1 x 106
= 1900 bits = 1.9 x 103 bits Frame length = 2 ms
3 –3
(a) Total bit rate per frame = 1.9 x 10 bits/2 x 10 s = 0.95 Mbps
# of bits per frame per user = (2 x 10–3 s – 100 x 10–6 s)/10 = 190 x 10–3 s/user
190 x 10–3 s/user x 1 x 10–6 = 190 bits/user/frame
(b) Bit rate per user per frame = (190 bits/frame/user)/(2 x 10–3 s/frame) = 95 kbps
CDMA
The narrowband signal is multiplied
by a very large BW signal called
spreading signal, which is a pseudo-
noise (PN) code sequence.
Each user can transmit information on
same frequency channel at any time.
The receiver needs to know the exact
codeword of the desired transmitter.
Can be user with FDD and TDD.
Soft capacity and soft handover are
two features.
Near-far problem occurs
Orthogonal Signals
The key to all multiplexing or multiple access schemes is that various
signals sharing a CR does not create unmanageable interference.
Orthogonal signals on separate channels will avoid interference.
Signal waveforms xi(t), where i = 1, 2, …, are defined to be orthogonal if
they can be described as:
Time domain
frequency domain
Where the function Xi(f) are the Fourier transform of the signal waveform
xi(t).
A Comparison
Power Density
Power Density
FDMA
TDMA
Frequency Frequency
CDMA
Power Density
Frequency
Department of Telecommunication, Mehran UET 25