In
telecommunications, frequency-division multiplexing (FDM) is a technique by which the total
bandwidth available in a
communication medium is divided into a series of non-overlapping
frequency bands, each of which is used to carry a separate signal. This allows a single transmission medium such as a cable or
optical fiber to be shared by multiple independent signals. Another use is to carry separate serial bits or segments of a higher rate signal in
parallel.
The most common example of frequency-division multiplexing is
radio and television broadcasting, in which multiple radio signals at different frequencies pass through the air at the same time. Another example is
cable television, in which many television channels are carried simultaneously on a single cable. FDM is also used by telephone systems to transmit multiple telephone calls through high capacity trunklines,
communications satellites to transmit multiple channels of data on uplink and downlink radio beams, and broadband
DSL modems to transmit large amounts of computer data through
twisted pair telephone lines, among many other uses.
An analogous technique called
wavelength division multiplexing is used in
fiber-optic communication, in which multiple channels of data are transmitted over a single
optical fiber using different
wavelengths (frequencies) of light.
How it works

The multiple separate information (modulation) signals that are sent over an FDM system, such as the video signals of the television channels that are sent over a cable TV system, are called
baseband signals. At the source end, for each frequency channel, an
electronic oscillator generates a ''
carrier'' signal, a steady oscillating waveform at a single
frequency that serves to "carry" information. The carrier is much higher in frequency than the baseband signal. The carrier signal and the baseband signal are combined in a
modulator circuit. The modulator alters some aspect of the carrier signal, such as its
amplitude,
frequency, or phase, with the baseband signal, "
piggybacking" the data onto the carrier.
The result of
modulating (mixing) the carrier with the baseband signal is to generate sub-frequencies near the
carrier frequency, at the sum (''f''
C + ''f''
B) and difference (''f''
C − ''f''
B) of the frequencies. The information from the modulated signal is carried in
sidebands on each side of the carrier frequency. Therefore, all the information carried by the channel is in a narrow band of frequencies clustered around the carrier frequency, this is called the
passband of the channel.
Similarly, additional baseband signals are used to modulate carriers at other frequencies, creating other channels of information. The carriers are spaced far enough apart in frequency that the band of frequencies occupied by each channel, the passbands of the separate channels, do not overlap. All the channels are sent through the transmission medium, such as a coaxial cable, optical fiber, or through the air using a
radio transmitter. As long as the channel frequencies are spaced far enough apart that none of the passbands overlap, the separate channels will not interfere with each other. Thus the available bandwidth is divided into "slots" or channels, each of which can carry a separate modulated signal.
For example, the
coaxial cable used by
cable television systems has a bandwidth of about 1000
MHz, but the passband of each television channel is only 6 MHz wide, so there is room for many channels on the cable (in modern
digital cable systems each channel in turn is subdivided into subchannels and can carry up to 10 digital television channels).
At the destination end of the cable or fiber, or the radio receiver, for each channel a
local oscillator produces a signal at the carrier frequency of that channel, that is mixed with the incoming modulated signal. The frequencies subtract, producing the baseband signal for that channel again. This is called
demodulation. The resulting baseband signal is filtered out of the other frequencies and output to the user.
Telephone
For
long distance telephone connections, 20th century telephone companies used
L-carrier and similar
coaxial cable systems carrying thousands of voice circuits multiplexed in multiple stages by
channel banks.
For shorter distances, cheaper
balanced pair cables were used for various systems including
Bell System K- and N-Carrier. Those cables did not allow such large bandwidths, so only 12 voice channels (
double sideband) and later 24 (
single sideband) were multiplexed into
four wires, one pair for each direction with
repeaters every several miles, approximately 10 km. See
12-channel carrier system. By the end of the 20th century, FDM voice circuits had become rare. Modern telephone systems employ digital transmission, in which
time-division multiplexing (TDM) is used instead of FDM.
Since the late 20th century,
digital subscriber lines (DSL) have used a
Discrete multitone (DMT) system to divide their spectrum into frequency channels.
The concept corresponding to frequency-division multiplexing in the optical domain is known as
wavelength-division multiplexing.
Group and supergroup
A once commonplace FDM system, used for example in
L-carrier, uses crystal filters which operate at the 8 MHz range to form a Channel Group of 12 channels, 48 kHz bandwidth in the range 8140 to 8188 kHz by selecting carriers in the range 8140 to 8184 kHz selecting
upper sideband this group can then be translated to the standard range 60 to 108 kHz by a carrier of 8248 kHz. Such systems are used in DTL (Direct To Line) and DFSG (Directly formed super group).
132 voice channels (2SG + 1G) can be formed using DTL plane the modulation and
frequency plan are given in FIG1 and FIG2 use of DTL technique allows the formation of a maximum of 132 voice channels that can be placed direct to line. DTL eliminates group and super group equipment.
DFSG can take similar steps where a direct formation of a number of super groups can be obtained in the 8 kHz the DFSG also eliminates group equipment and can offer:
* Reduction in cost 7% to 13%
* Less equipment to install and maintain
* Increased reliability due to less equipment
Both DTL and DFSG can fit the requirement of low density system (using DTL) and higher density system (using DFSG). The DFSG terminal is similar to DTL terminal except instead of two super groups many super groups are combined. A Mastergroup of 600 channels (10 super-groups) is an example based on DFSG.
Other examples
FDM can also be used to combine signals before final modulation onto a carrier wave. In this case the
carrier signals are referred to as
subcarriers: an example is
stereo FM transmission, where a 38 kHz subcarrier is used to separate the left-right difference signal from the central left-right sum channel, prior to the frequency modulation of the composite signal.
An analog
NTSC television channel is divided into
subcarrier frequencies for video, color, and audio.
DSL uses different frequencies for voice and for
upstream and
downstream data transmission on the same conductors, which is also an example of
frequency duplex.
Where frequency-division multiplexing is used as to allow multiple users to share a physical
communications channel, it is called
frequency-division multiple access (FDMA).
[
]
FDMA is the traditional way of separating
radio signals from different
transmitters.
In the 1860s and 70s, several inventors attempted FDM under the names of
acoustic telegraphy and harmonic telegraphy. Practical FDM was only achieved in the electronic age. Meanwhile, their efforts led to an elementary understanding of electroacoustic technology, resulting in the
invention of the telephone.
See also
*
AN/UCC-4 – an example of FDM implementation
*
Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM)
*
Non-orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (N-OFDM)
References
;General
* Harold P.E. Stern, Samy A. Mahmoud (2006). "Communication Systems: Analysis and Design", ''Prentice Hall''. .
{{DEFAULTSORT:Frequency-Division Multiplexing
Category:Multiplexing
he:ריבוב#FDM