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Detector (radio)

 

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Detector (radio)



 
 
A detector is a device that recovers information
Information

Information as a Conveyed concept has a diversity of meanings, from everyday usage to technical settings. Generally speaking, the concept of information is closely related to notions of constraint, communication, control system, data, form, instruction, knowledge, Meaning , stimulation, pattern, perception, and knowledge representation....
 of interest contained in a modulated wave. The term dates from the early days of radio when all transmissions were in Morse Code
Morse code

Morse code is a type of character encoding that transmits telegraphic information using rhythm. Morse code uses a standardized sequence of short and long elements to represent the alphanumeric, punctuation and special characters of a given message....
, and it was only necessary to detect the presence (or absence) of a radio wave using a device such as a coherer
Coherer

The coherer was a primitive form of radio signal Detector used in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, consisting of a capsule of metal filings in the space between two electrodes....
 without necessarily making it audible.

Envelope detector
One major technique is known as envelope detection.






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A detector is a device that recovers information
Information

Information as a Conveyed concept has a diversity of meanings, from everyday usage to technical settings. Generally speaking, the concept of information is closely related to notions of constraint, communication, control system, data, form, instruction, knowledge, Meaning , stimulation, pattern, perception, and knowledge representation....
 of interest contained in a modulated wave. The term dates from the early days of radio when all transmissions were in Morse Code
Morse code

Morse code is a type of character encoding that transmits telegraphic information using rhythm. Morse code uses a standardized sequence of short and long elements to represent the alphanumeric, punctuation and special characters of a given message....
, and it was only necessary to detect the presence (or absence) of a radio wave using a device such as a coherer
Coherer

The coherer was a primitive form of radio signal Detector used in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, consisting of a capsule of metal filings in the space between two electrodes....
 without necessarily making it audible.

Amplitude modulation detectors


Envelope detector


One major technique is known as envelope detection. The simplest form of envelope detector
Envelope detector

An envelope detector is an electronic circuit that takes a high-frequency signal as input, and provides an output which is the "envelope" of the original signal....
 is the diode detector that consists of a diode
Diode

In electronics, a diode is a two-terminal device .Diodes have two active electrodes between which the signal of interest may flow, and most are used for their unidirectional electric current property....
 connected between the input and output of the circuit, with a resistor and capacitor in parallel from the output of the circuit to the ground. If the resistor and capacitor are correctly chosen, the output of this circuit will approximate a voltage-shifted version of the original signal.

An early form of envelope detector was the cat's whisker, which was used in the crystal set radio receiver.

Product detector


A product detector
Product detector

A product detector is a type of demodulator used for amplitude modulation and Single-sideband modulation signals. Rather than converting the envelope of the signal into the decoded waveform like an envelope detector, the product detector takes the product of the modulated signal and a local oscillator, hence the name....
 is a type of demodulator used for AM
Amplitude modulation

Amplitude modulation is a technique used in electronic communication, most commonly for transmitting information via a radio carrier wave....
 and SSB
Single-sideband modulation

Single-sideband modulation is a refinement of amplitude modulation that more efficiently uses electric power and bandwidth . It is closely related to vestigial sideband modulation ....
 signals. Rather than converting the envelope of the signal into the decoded waveform like an envelope detector, the product detector takes the product of the modulated signal and a local oscillator
Local oscillator

A local oscillator is an electronic device used to generate a signal normally for the purpose of converting a signal of interest to a different frequency using a Frequency mixer....
, hence the name. This can be accomplished by heterodyning. The received signal is mixed, in some type of nonlinear device, with a signal from the local oscillator, to produce an intermediate frequency
Intermediate frequency

In communications and electronic engineering, an intermediate frequency is a frequency to which a Carrier wave is shifted as an intermediate step in Transmission or reception....
, referred to as the beat frequency, from which the modulating signal
Modulation

In telecommunications, modulation is the process of varying a Periodic function waveform, i.e. a tone, in order to use that signal to convey a message, in a similar fashion as a musician may modulate the tone from a musical instrument by varying its volume, timing and Pitch ....
 is detected and recovered.

Frequency and phase modulation detectors

AM detectors cannot demodulate FM and PM signals because both have a constant amplitude. However an AM radio may detect the sound of an FM broadcast by the phenomenon of Slope Detection which occurs when the radio is tuned slightly above or below the nominal broadcast frequency. Frequency variation on one sloping side of the radio tuning curve gives the amplified signal a corresponding local amplitude variation, to which the AM detector is sensitive. Slope Detection gives inferior distortion and noise rejection compared to the following dedicated FM detectors that are normally used.

Phase detector


A phase detector
Phase detector

A phase detector is a frequency mixer or analog multiplier circuit that generates a voltage signal which represents the difference in phase between two signal inputs....
 is a nonlinear device whose output represents the phase
Phase

A phase is one part or portion in recurring or serial activities or occurrences logically connected within a greater process, often resulting in an output or a change....
 difference between the two oscillating input signals. It has two inputs and one output: a reference signal is applied to one input and the phase or frequency modulated signal is applied to the other. The output is a signal that is proportional to the phase difference between the two inputs.

In phase demodulation the information is contained in the amount and rate of phase shift in the carrier wave
Carrier wave

In telecommunications, a carrier wave, or carrier is a waveform that is Modulation with an signal for the purpose of conveying information....
.

The Foster-Seeley discriminator

The Foster-Seeley discriminator
Foster-Seeley discriminator

The Foster-Seeley discriminator is a common type of Frequency modulation Detector , invented in 1936 by Dudley E. Foster and Stuart William Seeley....
 is a widely used FM detector. The detector consists of a special center-tapped transformer
Transformer

A transformer is a device that transfers electrical energy from one electrical network to another through inductive coupling conductors — the transformer's coils or "windings"....
 feeding two diodes in a full wave DC rectifier
Rectifier

A rectifier is an electrical device that converts alternating current to direct current , a process known as rectification. Rectifiers have many uses including as components of power supply and as detector s of radio signals....
 circuit. When the input transformer is tuned to the signal frequency, the output of the discriminator is zero. When there is no deviation of the carrier, both halves of the center tapped transformer are balanced. As the FM signal swings in frequency above and below the carrier frequency, the balance between the two halves of the center-tapped secondary are destroyed and there is an output voltage proportional to the frequency deviation.

Ratio detector

The ratio detectoris a variant of the Foster-Seeley discriminator, but one diode conducts in an opposite direction. The output in this case is taken between the sum of the diode voltages and the center tap. The output across the diodes is connected to a large value capacitor, which eliminates AM noise in the ratio detector output. While distinct from the Foster-Seeley discriminator, the ratio detector will similarly not respond to AM signals
Amplitude modulation

Amplitude modulation is a technique used in electronic communication, most commonly for transmitting information via a radio carrier wave....
, however the output is only 50% of the output of a discriminator for the same input signal.

Quadrature detector

In quadrature detectors, the received FM signal is split into two signals. One of the two signals is then passed through a high-reactance capacitor
Capacitor

A capacitor or condenser is a Passive component electronic component consisting of a pair of electrical conductor separated by a dielectric....
, which shifts the phase of that signal by 90 degrees. This phase-shifted signal is then applied to an LC circuit, which is resonant at the FM signal's unmodulated, "center," or "carrier" frequency. If the received FM signal's frequency equals the center frequency, then the two signals will have a 90-degree phase difference and they are said to be in "phase quadrature" — hence the name of this method. The two signals are then multiplied together in an analog or digital device, which serves as a phase detector
Phase detector

A phase detector is a frequency mixer or analog multiplier circuit that generates a voltage signal which represents the difference in phase between two signal inputs....
; that is, a device whose output is proportional to the phase difference between two signals. In the case of an unmodulated FM signal, the phase detector's output is — after the output has been filtered
Electronic filter

Electronic filters are electronic circuits which perform signal processing functions, specifically to remove unwanted frequency components from the signal and/or to enhance wanted ones....
; that is, averaged over time — constant; namely, zero. However, if the received FM signal has been modulated, then its frequency will vary from the center frequency. In this case, the resonant LC circuit will further shift the phase of the signal from the capacitor, so that the signal's total phase shift will be the sum of the 90 degrees that's imposed by the capacitor and the positive or negative phase change that's imposed by the LC circuit. Now the output from the phase detector will differ from zero, and in this way, one recovers the original signal that was used to modulate the FM carrier.

This detection process can also be accomplished by combining, in an exclusive-OR
XOR gate

The XOR gate is a digital logic gate that implements exclusive disjunction - it behaves according to the truth table above. A HIGH output results if one, and only one, of the inputs to the gate is HIGH ....
 (XOR) logic gate, the original FM signal and a square wave
Square wave

A square wave is a kind of non-sinusoidal waveform, most typically encountered in electronics and signal processing. An ideal square wave alternates regularly and instantaneously between two levels....
 whose frequency equals the FM signal's center frequency. The XOR gate produces an output pulse whose duration equals the difference between the times at which the square wave and the received FM signal pass through zero volts. As the FM signal's frequency varies from its unmodulated center frequency (which is also the frequency of the square wave), the output pulses from the XOR gate become longer or shorter. (In essence, this quadrature detector converts an FM signal into a pulse-width modulated (PWM) signal.) When these pulses are filtered, the filter's output rises as the pulses grow longer and its output falls as the pulses grow shorter. In this way, one recovers the original signal that was used to modulate the FM carrier.

Other FM detectors

Less common, specialized, or obsolescent types of detectors include :
  • Travis or double tuned circuit discrimintator using two non-interacting tuned circuits above and below the nominal center frequency
  • Weiss discriminator which uses a single LC tuned circuit or crystal
  • Pulse count discriminator which converts the frequency to a train of constant amplitude pulses, producing a voltage directly proportional to the frequency.


Phase-locked loop detector

The phase-locked loop
Phase-locked loop

A phase-locked loop or phase lock loop is a control system that generates a Signal that has a fixed relation to the phase of a "reference" signal....
 detector requires no frequency-selective LC network to accomplish demodulation. In this system, a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) is phase locked by a feedback loop, which forces the VCO to follow the frequency variations of the incoming FM signal. The low-frequency error voltage that forces the VCO's frequency to track the frequency of the modulated FM signal is the demodulated audio output.

See also

  • Cat's whisker detector
  • Coherer
    Coherer

    The coherer was a primitive form of radio signal Detector used in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, consisting of a capsule of metal filings in the space between two electrodes....
  • Electrolytic detector
    Electrolytic detector

    The electrolytic detector, or the bare-point electrolytic detector as it was also called, was a type of wet demodulator used in early radio receivers....
  • Foster-Seeley discriminator
    Foster-Seeley discriminator

    The Foster-Seeley discriminator is a common type of Frequency modulation Detector , invented in 1936 by Dudley E. Foster and Stuart William Seeley....
  • Grid-leak detector
    Grid-leak detector

    A grid-leak detector is a combination diode rectifier and sound reproduction amplifier used as a detector in vacuum tube Amplitude modulation radio receivers....
  • Hot wire barretter
    Hot wire barretter

    The hot wire barretter was a demodulator detector invented in 1902 by Reginald Fessenden that found limited use in early radio receivers. In effect it was a highly sensitive thermoresistor developed to permit the reception of amplitude modulated signals, something that the coherer could not do....
  • Magnetic detector
    Magnetic detector

    The magnetic detector was one of the first practical devices able to make radio signals audible through a pair of Headphones. It was not as sensitive as some Detector but despite that, it was favored for early maritime use because of its reliability....
  • Plate detector
    Plate detector (radio)

    A plate detector is a vacuum tube detector circuit used in amplitude modulation radios. This circuit employs a tube with an hot cathode, typically a medium-mu triode, or a tetrode or pentode with a sharp cut-off control grid....
  • Wunderlich detector
    Wunderlich (vacuum tube)

    Wunderlich refers to a series of vacuum tubes introduced in the early 1930s. Wunderichs were designed to be used as full-wave detector in amplitude modulation radio receivers....


External links

Ratio Detector with schematics:

Simple block diagrams and descriptions of key circuits for FM transmitters and receivers: