Abstract

The echo-cancelling voice-grade modems used on PSTN are projected to increase in bit rate from the present 14.4 kb/s (V.32bis) to 19.2 kb/s and even 24 kb/s in the near future. This will be facilitated by increasing the symbol rate from 2400 baud to maximum of 3200 baud, but will cost a 3-dB increase in dynamic range for every 2.4 kb/s increment. Improvement of 12 to 18 dB in dynamic range and linearity is required for the modem analog front-end (MAFE) described. The modem block diagram presented gives the worst-case magnitudes of the signals in the duplexer performing two-wire/four-wire conversion. The demodulator receives a signal between -3 dBm and -43/-48 dBm corrupted by a -9 dBm local echo. After echo removal, the signal-to-noise ratio must reach 25 dB to 35 dB for good performance at 19.2 kb/s, 30 dB to 40 dB at 24 kb/s, depending on the line quality. It is demonstrated that the second-order sigma-delta analog-to-digital converter used in the MAFE is consistent with this goal, taking into account the 12-dB peak factor of the quadrature amplitude modulation used in high-speed single-carrier modems.< >

Keywords:
Baud Analog front-end Demodulation Dynamic range Electrical engineering Linearity Modulation (music) Duplexer Symbol rate Physics Computer science Electronic engineering Acoustics Bit error rate Engineering CMOS Antenna (radio) Transmission (telecommunications)

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