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Structure and spectral description

The focus of this technical note is on the decomposition of an FDM signal into its constituent narrowband components. As we have seen, the use of the right assumptions allows digital implementation of this operation to be done very efficiently with an FDM-to-TDM transmultiplexer. In practice, there are applications in which it is desirable to perform the converse operation - combine multiple narrowband signals into an FDM composite. As might be expected, if suitable simplifying assumptions are made, some of the same efficiencies that lead to the FDM-to-TDM transmultiplexer allow the formulation of a TDM-to-FDM transmultiplexer. This appendix demonstrates how this is done. For simplicity, the architecture shown here uses complex-valued input signals and produces a complex-valued output signal.

The block diagram of a digitally implemented frequency-division multiplexer is shown in [link] . Each input signal, denoted x n ( r ) , is complex-valued and sampled at a rate of f s M . It is zero-filled by the factor M to produce the sequence x ¯ n ( k ) and then lowpass-filtered to produce the interpolated sequence ρ n ( k ) . This interpolated sequence is then upconverted by ω n and then added with other similarly processed inputs to produce the FDM output y ( k ) .

This figure is a flow chart progressing from left to right. On the left hand side is the phrase Complex Samples above the mathematical expression X_n(r)@f_s/M. An arrow points to the right from the expression to a rectangle containing the phrase Zero-fill by M. Below this rectangel is a series of five vertical dots. An arrow points to the right from the previous rectangle to another rectangle. Above the arrow is the expression (this x has an overbar) x_n(k). The rectangle contains the phrase FIR Lowpass Filter and below the rectangle is a series of five vertical dots. An arrow points to the right and above this arrow is the expression p-n(k). The arrow points to a circle an x. Below the circle is another arrow labeled with the expression below e^(jω_nkT). There are also a series of five dots below this expression. Another arrow points from the circle to the right to another circle containing a +. Around the left side of this circle are five other arrows pointing to the circle, and on the left end of these arrows are dots. To the right of this circle is another arrow pointing to the right to the phrase FDM Output y(k)@f_s
Analytical View of a TDM-FDM Transmultiplexer

The spectral implications of these steps are shown in [link] . We start by assuming that the narrowband input signal's spectrum is as shown in [link] (a). The zero-filling process creates M - 1 additional images of the input spectrum and expands the sampling rate to f s Hz. A properly designed lowpass filter removes the images created by the zero-filling, leaving only the original image centered at DC, shown in [link] (d). Multiplication by e j ω n k T translates the signal so that it is centered at ω n Hz. If the other translation frequencies are chosen so that the other upconverted input signals do not overlap, then the situation shown in [link] (f) results, that is, the separate input narrowband signals all appear in the single composite output y ( k ) , but in disjoint spectral bands.

This figure consists of 6 images. The first image is labeled (a) Input channel spectrum and consist of a horizontal line on which sits a right triangle where the right angle is formed by the horizontal line and a line rising perpendicular to it on the right side of the line. On the left end of the horizontal line is a small vertical line under which is the mathematical expression f_s/-2M. On the right end of the horizontal line is a small vertical line under which is the mathematical expression f_s/2M. The next figure is labeled (b) After zero-filing. The image consist of a horizontal line whose extremes are labeled -f_s/2 on the left and f_s/2 on the right. Sitting on the line are three right triangles like the previously discussed graph, and also a piece of a triangle on the left missing the right most point and a piece of a triangle on the right missing the left half of the triangle. The third image is labeled Response of LPF. The image consist of a horizontal line with the extremes labeled on the left -f_s/2 and f_s/2 on the right. In the middle of this graph shape which has a nearly vertical lines on the left and right that curve at the top and a straight line the continues from here to connect the two lines. These lines in conjuctions with the bottom horizontal line make something like a curved trapazoid. The fourth image is labeled Filtered, zero-filled signal. It consist of a long horizontal line with the extremes labeled -f_s/2 on the left and f_s/2 on the right. In the middle of this line is a lone right triangle. The fifth  image consist of a long horizontal line with its extremes labeled -f_s/2 on the left and f_s/2 on the right. On the far right side of this line is a single shaded right triangle with a line pointing from the previous graphs right triangle to this one. The sixth image consist of a long horizontal line with the extremes labeled -f_s/2 on the left and f_s/2 on the right. On this line from left to right there is a scalene triangle, a trapazoid forming a right angle on the left corners, a figure that looks like half of a square with rounded corners, and a shaded right triangle.
Spectral Implications of Passing a Signal Through a TDM-to-FDM Transmultiplexer

Mathematical description of equations

We now develop a set that describes the block diagram shown in [link] . The zero-filled input x ¯ n ( k ) is given by

x ¯ ( k ) = x n ( r ) , k = r M , p = 0 , 0 , k r M , p 0 ,

that is, x ¯ n ( k ) equals x n ( r ) when k = M r but equals 0 otherwise. If we write k as k r M + p , with p ranging from 0 to M - 1 , then we see that x ¯ n ( k ) equals zero unless p = 0 .

The next step is the lowpass filtering of the zero-filled sequence. Denote the pulse response of this filter, as usual, by h ( ) , where runs from 0 to L - 1 , and L is the pulse response duration. With no loss of generality we can assume that L is an integer multiple of M , the interpolation factor, and therefore that there exists some positive integer Q that satisfies the equation L Q ¯ M . This in turn allows , the running index of the pulse response, to be written as = q M + v , where the integer q runs from 0 to Q ¯ - 1 and the integer v runs from 0 to M - 1 .

The output of the lowpass interpolation filter ρ n ( k ) is given by the expression

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Source:  OpenStax, An introduction to the fdm-tdm digital transmultiplexer. OpenStax CNX. Nov 16, 2010 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11165/1.2
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