In electronics, a
superheterodyne receiver (often shortened to superhet) uses frequency mixing or
heterodyning to convert a received signal to a fixed intermediate frequency
(IF), which can be more conveniently processed than the original radio carrier
frequency. Virtually all modern radio receivers use the superheterodyne principle.
Block
diagram:
The
diagram contains a RF amplifier, a variable frequency local oscillator(LO), a
frequency mixer, a band pass filter and intermediate frequency (IF) amplifier,
and a demodulator plus additional circuitry to amplify or process the original
audio signal (or other transmitted information).For AM The Intermediate
frequency(IF) is 455Hz.
principle
of operation:
The
principle of operation of the superheterodyne receiver depends on the use of
heterodyning or frequency mixing. The signal from the antennal i.e RF Signal (fs)
is filtered sufficiently at least to reject the image frequency (see below) and possibly amplified by RF Amplifier.
A local oscillator(LO) in the receiver produces a sine wave( i.e fl ) which mixes with that
signal, shifting it to a specific intermediate frequency (IF= fl – fs OR fIF = fLO - fRF),
usually a lower frequency(i.e Mixer
performs Down Conversion Here).The IF signal is itself filtered and
amplified and possibly processed in additional ways. The demodulator uses the
IF signal rather than the original radio frequency to recreate a copy of the
original information (such as audio).An AF amplifier used to amplify audio
signal.
Image
Frequency & its suppression:
One
major disadvantage to the superheterodyne receiver is the problem of image
frequency. In heterodyne receivers, an image frequency is an undesired input
frequency equal to the station frequency plus twice the intermediate frequency.
The image frequency results in two stations being received at the same time,
thus producing interference. Image frequencies can be eliminated by sufficient
attenuation on the incoming signal by the RF amplifier filter of the
superheterodyne receiver.
fimg(Image Frequency) = fs +2* fIF
For
example, an AM broadcast station at 580 kHz is tuned on a receiver with a 455
kHz IF. The local oscillator is tuned to 580 + 455 = 1035 kHz. But a signal at
580 + 455 + 455 = 1490 kHz is also 455 kHz away from the local oscillator; so
both the desired signal and the image, when mixed with the local oscillator,
will also appear at the intermediate frequency. This image frequency is within
the AM broadcast band.
Practical
receivers have a tuning stage before
the converter, to greatly reduce the amplitude of image frequency signals;
additionally, broadcasting stations in the same area have their frequencies
assigned to avoid such images.
Image
Rejection Ratio:
To
determine the suppression factor of tuned ckt image rejection ratio is used.
The
image rejection ratio, or image frequency rejection ratio, is the ratio of the
intermediate-frequency (IF) signal level produced by the desired input
frequency to that produced by the image frequency. The image rejection ratio is
usually expressed in db.
Mathematically,
Note
that IMRR is not a measurement of the performance of the IF stages or IF
filtering (selectivity); the signal yields a perfectly valid IF frequency.
Rather, it is the measure of the bandpass characteristics of the stages
preceding the IF amplifier, which will consist of RF bandpass filters and
usually an RF amplifier stage or two.
NOTE: The
image frequency should be suppressed before the mixer stage.Practically IRR
Should be as high as possible ,so the tuned circuits are connected in cascade.if X is the IRR Of tuned ckt 1
&Y is the IRR of tuned ckt 2
then IRR of the cascaded stage is X*Y.To improve the IRR either Q Factor or IF should be
increased but to increase IRR we practically prefer to increase IF Because
increasing Q Factor causes decrease in Bandwidth.
1 comment:
I am looking for some good blog sites for studying. I was searching over search engines and found your blog site on nmims solved assignments
Post a Comment