FDMA

The Problem

Multiple users want to make calls at the same time.

But there’s only one radio spectrum. How do we share it?


The Solution: Divide by Frequency

FDMA (Frequency Division Multiple Access) gives each user their own slice of the spectrum.

Think of radio stations. Each broadcasts on its own frequency:

  • 101.1 FM
  • 102.3 FM
  • 104.5 FM

They all transmit simultaneously, but on different frequencies. No interference.

FDMA works the same way for phone calls.


How It Works


The total spectrum is divided into non-overlapping channels.

Each user gets one channel for their entire call.

Guard bands sit between channels to prevent overlap.

Key point: Users transmit continuously on their assigned frequency. The channel is theirs until the call ends.


Channel Allocation

How do we decide who gets which channel?

Fixed Assignment:

  • Channels permanently assigned to specific users
  • Simple, but wasteful if the user isn’t always transmitting

Demand Assignment:

  • Channels assigned only when needed
  • Released when the call ends
  • More efficient use of spectrum

Advantages

  • Simple to implement
  • No synchronization needed between users
  • Works well for continuous traffic (like voice calls)

Disadvantages

  • Wastes bandwidth when user is silent (channel still reserved)
  • Limited users (one per channel)
  • Guard bands waste spectrum
  • Inflexible (can’t easily give one user more bandwidth)

Real World Example

1G cellular (AMPS) used FDMA:

  • 30 kHz channels
  • One call per channel
  • Analog voice transmission

Modern systems moved beyond pure FDMA because it wastes too much spectrum. But the concept of dividing by frequency is still used in combination with other techniques.