18 Feb 2008 04:53:04 | Jeff Su
b> Background:
The main advantages of HDMI, high definition multimedia
interface, over standard analog video transmission is that it is
100 % digital from source to display. However, transmitting HDMI
over long distances is not so easy. In this article we will
describe some of the issues encountered during HDMI transmission
and present a solution that can significantly improve HDMI
transmission: the HDMI Extender.
Basic HDMI transmission characteristics:
HDMI is based on TMDS, transmission minimized differential
signaling, developed by Silicon Image. In order to support
non-compressed HD video quality, HDMI needs to support data
rates up to ~1.65 Gbps for each of 3 transmission pairs. In
addition, TMDS is based on a characteristic impedance of 50 Ohms
( 100 ohms differential).
The math of HDMI signaling:
Although TMDS is a base-band "digital" signal, mathematically it
can be thought of as a summation of harmonically related sine
waves. The great French mathematician, Jean Baptiste Fourier
(1768-1830), showed that any signal waveform including a square
wave (think digital here) could be resolved into a summation of
harmonically related sine waves. As the data rate of a digital
signal increase, so does the frequency of the individual sine
waves that make up the "composite" digital signal. For example,
for a 50% duty cycle perfect square wave, the fundamental
frequency (lowest frequency component) is ½ of the data rate. In
summary, a digital signal is simply composed of the fundamental
frequency sine wave and harmonics of this fundamental sine wave.
The amplitude of the individual sine waves is determined by
Fourier transforms.
The challenges of HDMI signaling over long cables:
Transmitting high-speed HDMI signals is not easy because the
frequency of the individual sine waves is such high frequency.
As frequencies of the signal increase, the design of a good HDMI
transmission product falls in the realm of good RF/microwave
engineering. The challenges of high-speed digital transmission
can be broken down to :
Attenuation: as frequencies increase, signal attenuation
of the cables increases due to the "skin effect." Essentially,
the "skin effect" describes the phenomena that as the frequency
of a sine wave increase, the wave tends to travel on the outer
portions of the cable conductor. Whereas ordinary 60Hz AC signal
might travel through the entire cross sectional area of the
conductor, a high frequency may only travel along the outer
edges of the conduct therefore the "impedance" to signal travel
is greater. Think of this as a water pipe where the center of
the pipe is blocked and fluid can only travel on the outer edges
of the pipe. In addition, the attenuation of a cable increases
with the cable length.
Intra-signal pair skew: recall that higher frequency sine
wave also have shorter wavelengths. HDMI is based on
differential signaling, therefore the "skew" ( any delay between
a transmission pair ) of each the signal must be minimized. Any
differences in trace/cable lengths will tend to skew the arrival
time of the signal to the receiver. As frequencies and cable
lengths increase, the errors will be more pronounced.
Impedance matching: : HDMI is based on 50-Ohm ( 100 ohm
differential) impedance. All cables, traces must be matched to
this characteristic impedance. Any "mis-match" causes
reflections, which degrades transmission performance.
Using a HDMI extender to mitigate transmission problems over
long cables:
In many front projection installation where cable lengths are
significant, the problems described above will surface in the
form of "pixelization" or even a complete picture drop out. An
external HDMI Extender can be used in order to correct and
compensate for the long cables that causes the impairments. The
HDMI Extender automatically adjust and compensate for cable
attenuation up to 40 dB. In addition, an adaptive equalizer
compensates for the time-based skews. A limiting amp "squares "
up and re-shapes the input signal before sending to the output
through output buffers.
The HDMI Extender is low power and can be attached to the
display end ( after the long cable) to completely rectify any
errors caused by transmission over long HDMI cables. The
extender is housed in a small ease to use package. Power can be
supplied directly from the HDMI source, however an external AC
adapter is provided and recommended. The HDMI Extender can be
used with DVI-D products simply by using a HDMI to DVI-D cable
or adapter.
Conclusion:
HDTV technology is changing rapidly. HD connections such as HDMI
will become the de facto standard in HDTV connections.
Transmitting HDMI signals over long cables is a challenge and
often causes pixelization and signal drop out. An external HDMI
Extender can be placed at the display end of the cable to
completely compensate for signal degradation caused by a long
HDMI cable.
About Author :
Jeff Su is product marketing manager at Octava Inc.
http://www.octavainc.com. Jeff is a graduate of the Georgia
Institute of Technology (BSEE, MSEE) and has over 10 years of
experience in CATV systems, RF, and microwave designs. He may be
reached at info@octavainc.com