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1993_Motorola_Linear_Interface_ICs_Vol_2.pdf

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Communication Circuits<br />

In Brief ...<br />

RF<br />

Radio communication has greatly expanded its scope in<br />

the past several years. Once dominated by public safety<br />

radio, the 30 to 1000 MHz spectrum is now packed with<br />

personal and low cost business radio systems. The vast<br />

majority of this equipment uses FM or FSK modulation and<br />

is targeted at short range applications. From mobile phones<br />

and VHF marine radios to garage door openers and radio<br />

control/ed toys, these new systems have become a part of<br />

our lifestyle. <strong>Motorola</strong> <strong>Linear</strong> has focused on this technology,<br />

adding a wide array of new products including complete<br />

receivers processed in our exclusive 3.0 GHz MOSAIC® 1.5<br />

process. New surface mount packages for high density<br />

assembly are available for all of these products, as is a<br />

growing family of supporting applications notes and<br />

development kits.<br />

Telephone & Voice/Data<br />

Traditionally, an office environment has utilized two<br />

distinctly separate wired communications systems -<br />

Telecommunications and Data communications. Each had<br />

its individual hardware components complement, and each<br />

required its own independent transmission line system:<br />

twisted wire pairs for Telecom and relatively high priced<br />

coaxial cable for Datacom. But times have changed. Today,<br />

Telecom and Datacom coexist comfortably on inexpensive<br />

twisted wire pairs and use a significant number of<br />

components in common. This has led to the development<br />

and enhancement of PBX (Private Branch Exchanges) to<br />

the point where the long heralded "office of the future, " with<br />

simultaneous voice and data communications capability at<br />

each station, is no longer of the future at all. The capability<br />

is here today!<br />

<strong>Motorola</strong> Semiconductor serves a wide range of<br />

requirements for the voice/data marketplace. We offer both<br />

CMOS and <strong>Linear</strong> technologies, each to its best advantage,<br />

to upgrade the conventional analog voice systems and<br />

establish new capabilities in digital communications. Early<br />

products, such as the solid-state single-chip crosspoint<br />

switch; the more recent monolithic Subscriber Loop<br />

<strong>Interface</strong> Circuit (SLlC); a single-chip CodeC/Filter<br />

(Mono-Circuit); the Universal Digital Loop Transceivers<br />

(UDLT); basic rate ISDN (Integrated Services Digital<br />

Network), and single-chip telephone circuits are just a few<br />

examples of <strong>Motorola</strong> leadership in the voice/data area.<br />

Page<br />

RF Communications .............................. 8-2<br />

Telecommunications ............................. 8-26<br />

PBX Architecture (Analog Transmission) . . . . . . . . . . . .. 8-8<br />

ISDN Voice/Data Circuits .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 8-12<br />

Voice/Data Communication (Digital Transmission) ... 8-15<br />

Complete Electronic Telephone Circuit ............. 8-17<br />

Tone Ringers ................................... 8-18<br />

Speech Networks ............................... 8-19<br />

Speakerphones ................................. 8-20<br />

Telephone Accessory Circuits ..................... 8-22<br />

Phase-Locked Loop Components. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 8-28<br />

Index .......................................... 8-30<br />

Data Sheets .................................... 8-32<br />

Addendum .................................... 8-179

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