CH 1612
CH 1612
QPSK Modulation
In digital modulation techniques a set of basis functions are chosen for a particular
modulation scheme.Generally the basis functions are orthogonal to each other. Basis functions
can be derived using ‘Gram Schmidt orthogonalization’ procedure.Once the basis function are
chosen, any vector in the signal space can be represented as a linear combination of the basis
functions. In Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (QPSK) two sinusoids (sin and cos) are taken as
basis functions for modulation. Modulation is achieved by varying the phase of the basis
functions depending on the message symbols. In QPSK, modulation is symbol based,where one
symbol contains 2 bits. The following equation outlines QPSK modulation technique.
sin(t)=2EsT−−−−√cos(2πfct+(2n−1)π4),n=1,2,3,4
When n=1, the phase shift is 45 degrees. This is called pi/4 QPSK.The constellation diagram
of QPSK will show the constellation points lying on both x and y axes.This means that the QPSK
modulated signal will have an in-phase component (I) and also a quadrature component (Q). This
is because it has only two basis functions.
The signal on the in-phase arm is multiplied by cosine component and the signal on the
quadrature arm is multiplied by sine component. QPSK modulated signal is obtained by adding
the signal from both in-phase and quadrature arm.
QPSK Demodulation:
For demonstration purposes we simply assume that the carrier phase recovery is done and
simply use the generated reference frequencies at the receiver (cos(ωt)) and (sin(ωt)).