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Quadrature (I/Q) Modulator Sideband Suppression
Quadrature modulators are used to conserve bandwidth for a given data rate. This is accomplished by modulating two orthogonal data streams onto a common carrier. If the phases and amplitudes of both data stream (in-phase "I" and quadrature "Q"), then one of the sidebands is completely cancelled out. If there is no DC bias feedthrough, then the carrier itself is completely cancelled out. In practice, complete cancellation is never accomplished, but without too much work, achieving 40 dB of sideband cancellation is not hard to do. Even 60 dB is relatively easy; however, preventing drift due to thermal and mechanical effects is not so easy, and the result is that a "textbook" quadrature alignment during alignment can look pretty bad over time.
Without showing all the trigonometry and algebra steps in-between, here are the basics of quadrature modulation. See the chart below.
In-Phase Data (I)
Quadrature Data (Q)
Carrier (C)
After Multiplying I & Q by the Carrier and Adding
Note that the D cos(wct) term is the carrier and disappears if D (the DC component) equals zero.
Lower Sideband Envelope (LSB)
Upper Sideband Envelope (USB)
where G is the amplitude imbalance (ratio) and f is the phase imbalance, and
This chart was created with Excel, using the above equations.
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