24 Multiplexing Techniques
24 Multiplexing Techniques
24 Multiplexing Techniques
Dr. G.Aarthi,
Associate Professor, School of Electronics Engineering
Note
6.2
MULTIPLEXING
Frequency-Division Multiplexing
Wavelength-Division Multiplexing
Time-Division Multiplexing
6.3
Categories of multiplexing
Dividing a link into channels
The word channel refers to the portion of a link that carries a transmission
between a given pair of lines. One link can have many (n) channels.
6.5
Frequency-division multiplexing (FDM)
These modulated signals are then combined into a single composite signal that can be
transported by the link.
6.6
Frequency-division multiplexing (FDM)
In addition, carrier frequencies must not interfere with the original data frequencies.
6.7
Frequency-division multiplexing (FDM)
A digital signal can be converted to an analog signal before FDM is used to multiplex
them.
6.8
Note
6.9
FDM process
The resulting modulated signals are then combined into a single composite signal
that is sent out over a media link that has enough bandwidth to accommodate it.
6.10
FDM demultiplexing example
The demultiplexer uses a series of filters to decompose the multiplexed signal into its
constituent component signals.
The individual signals are then passed to a demodulator that separates them from their
carriers and passes them to the output lines.
Problem 1
Solution
For five channels, we need at least four guard bands.
This means that the required bandwidth is at least
5 × 100 + 4 × 10 = 540 kHz,
as shown in Figure 2.
6.14
Figure 2
Problem 3
Four data channels (digital), each transmitting at 1
Mbps, use a satellite channel of 1 MHz. Design an
appropriate configuration, using FDM.
Solution
The satellite channel is analog. We divide it into four
channels, each channel having 1M/4=250-kHz
bandwidth.
6.17
Wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM)
WDM is conceptually the same as FDM, except that the multiplexing and
demultiplexing involve optical signals transmitted through fiber-optic channels.
Very narrow bands of light from different sources are combined to make a wider
band of light. At the receiver, the signals are separated by the demultiplexer.
6.18
Note
6.19
Prisms in wavelength-division multiplexing and demultiplexing
Time Division Multiplexing (TDM)
Time-division multiplexing (TDM) is a digital process that allows several connections to share
the high bandwidth of a link.
Note that the same link is used as in FDM; here, however, the link is shown sectioned by time
rather than by frequency. In the figure, portions of signals 1,2,3, and 4 occupy the link
sequentially.
Note
6.22
Synchronous time-division multiplexing
A frame consists of one complete cycle of time slots, with one slot dedicated to each
sending device.
In a system with n input lines, each frame has n slots, with each slot allocated to
carrying data from a specific input line.
6.23
Problem 4
Solution
We can answer the questions as follows:
a. The data rate of each input connection is 1 kbps. This
means that the bit duration is 1/1000 s or 1 ms. The
duration of the input time slot is 1 ms (same as bit
duration).
6.24
Problem 4
6.25
Statistical Time-Division Multiplexing
In synchronous TDM, each input has a reserved slot in the output frame.
Only when an input line has a slot's worth of data to send is it given a slot
in the output frame.
6.26
TDM slot comparison
6.27