Differential Manchester encoding

Differential Manchester encoding Scheme is a line code in which data and clock signals are combined to form a single 2-level self-synchronizing data stream. It is a differential encoding, using the presence or absence of transitions to indicate logical value. It is not necessary to know the polarity of the sent signal since the information is not kept in the actual values of the voltage but in their change: in other words it does not matter whether a logical 1 or 0 is received, but only whether the polarity is the same or different from the previous value; this makes synchronization easier.

Differential Manchester encoding is not to be confused with biphase mark code (BMC) or FM1, biphase space coding, and biphase level coding since these four lines codes are each unique.[1]

Differential Manchester encoding has the following advantages over some other line codes:

These positive features are achieved at the expense of doubling clock frequency - the symbol rate is twice the bitrate of the original signal. Each bit period is divided into two half-periods: clock and data. The clock half-period always begins with a transition from low to high or from high to low. The data half-period makes a transition for one value and no transition for the other value. One version of the code makes a transition for 0 and no transition for 1 in the data half-period; the other makes a transition for 1 and no transition for 0. Thus, if a "1" is represented by one transition, then a "0" is represented by two transitions and vice versa, making Differential Manchester a form of frequency shift keying. Either code can be interpreted with the clock half-period either before or after the data half-period.

An example of Differential Manchester encoding: data before clock. There are two variants. In the first variant, 1 is represented by a transition at the beginning of the clock period (rising edge) and 0 is represented by no transition. In the other variant, 1 is represented by no transition and 0 is represented by a transition. There is always a transition in the middle of the clock period (falling edge). The opposite polarity would also be valid; it depends on the preceding line state.

Biphase mark coding transitions on every positive edge of the clock signal (when the clock goes from 0 to 1) and also transitions on the negative edge of the clock signal when the data is a 1.

An example of Biphase Mark Coding: clock before data (positive edge clock), and 1 means transition.

Differential Manchester is specified in the IEEE 802.5 standard for token ring LANs, and is used for many other applications, including magnetic and optical storage. Biphase Mark Code (BMC) is used as the encoding method in AES3 and S/PDIF. Many magnetic stripe cards also use BMC encoding, often called F2F (frequency/double frequency) or Aiken Biphase. That standard is described in ISO/IEC 7811. SMPTE time code also uses BMC. BMC is also the original "frequency modulation" used on single-density floppy disks, before being replaced by "double-density" modified frequency modulation.

References

  1. http://ckp.made-it.com/encodingschemes.html

 This article incorporates public domain material from the General Services Administration document "Federal Standard 1037C".

See also

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