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15.3 DIGITAL COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS 721

One frame, 193 bits, 125 μs

2 3 4 5 24

One framing bit
8 bits per message word

MSB LSB

1

182 3 4 5 6 7

....... 23
Time


Message time slots 22

Figure 15.3.10Frame structure for a D3 channel bank.

D3 channel
bank

64 kbit/s
each

Digital
subscriber
signals

1
2

..


.


24

..


.


7

Second
level
multiplexer
DS-2

First
level
multiplexer
DS-1

DS-1 lines
1.544 Mbit/s
each

Signals from
other DS-1
units

1
2
3
4

Third
level
multiplexer
DS-3

DS-2 lines
6.312 Mbit/s
each

Signals from
other DS-2
units

1
2

..


.


6

Fourth
level
multiplexer
DS-4

DS-3 lines
44.736 Mbit/s
each

Signals from
other DS-3
units

1
2

2

Fifth
level
multiplexer
DS-5

DS-4 lines
274.176 Mbit/s
each

DS-5 line
560.16 Mbit/s
output

Signals from
other DS-4units

1

Figure 15.3.11Digital TDM hierarchy for North American telephone communication system.


In digital speech transmission over telephone lines via PCM, a standard TDM hierarchy has been
established for accommodating multiple subscribers. Figure 15.3.11 illustrates the TDM hierarchy
for the North American telephone system. The output from the channel bank is a digital signal
(DS) on a line said to carry level 1 multiplexing. In the first level of the TDM hierarchy, 24
digital subscriber signals are time-division multiplexed into a single high-speed data stream of
1.544 Mbit/s (nominal bit rate). The resulting combined signal is usually called a DS-1 channel.
In the second level of TDM, four DS-1 channels are multiplexed into a DS-2 channel, having the
nominal bit rate of 6.312 Mbit/s. In a third level of hierarchy, seven DS-2 channels are combined
via TDM to produce a DS-3 channel, which has a nominal bit rate of 44.736 Mbit/s. Beyond
DS-3, there are two more levels, as shown in Figure 15.3.11. All multiplexers except the channel
bank are asynchronous.
In a mobile cellular radio system (see Section 15.2) for the transmission of speech signals,
since the available channel bandwidth per user is small and cannot support the high bit rates
needed by waveform encoding methods such as PCM, the analysis–synthesis method based on
linear predictive coding(LPC) is used to estimate the set of model parameters from short segments
of the speech signal. The speech-model parameters are then transmitted over the channel. With
LPC, a bit rate of 4800–9600 bit/s is achieved.
In mobile cellular communication systems, LPC speech compression is only needed for
the radio transmission between the mobile transcriber and the base station in any cell. At the
base station interface, the LPC-encoded speech is converted to analog form and resampled and
digitized (by using PCM) for transmission over the terrestrial telephone system. Thus, a speech
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