Electronic Design

  
Reprints     Printer-Friendly    Email this Article    RSS        Font Size     What's This?


[Technology Report]
Fresh Applications Breed New Amplifiers

Don Tuite  |   ED Online ID #14471  |   January 11, 2007


Interesting new applications continue to emerge within the world of amplifiers. In some cases, the applications themselves are novel. In others, the combination of applications and their influence on architecture constitutes the story. Sometimes, the application provides unexpected insight into consumer behavior.

For reasons of battery life, efficient Class D amplifiers are squeezing their way into cell phones, particularly as mobile phones become repositories for downloaded music and video. What's surprising is that more than one Class D amplifier is needed in this application. The second is used to drive ringtone speakers.

How come? In some subsets of the class "Things I Don't Do Myself With a Mobile Phone," owning the latest and most distinctive ringtone is a mark of status. The possessors of such intellectual property like to flaunt their avant-garde-ness by letting everyone within earshot hear said ringtones loudly and for the full duration of the performance. Of course, they want the longest possible battery life (despite the pencil-thin form factor of their hip jewelry), so Class D efficiency is the answer.

The Race Continues
Class D has its attractions in cell phones and personal media players, but there is no clear winner yet in the race between Class D, Class AB, and bridge-tiedload (BTL) topologies for audio power amplifiers.

One reason there is still a race is that electromagnetic interference (EMI) from the switcher is a concern for Class D amplifiers. One demonstration of how deeply this concern is felt is that last October, National Semiconductor used the first paragraph of its press announcement to declare that its 2.65-W LM4675 monophonic amp "reduces EMI more than 11 dB below the United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC) limit" (Fig. 1).

Spread-spectrum techniques for reducing (or at least redistributing) switcher energy is becoming an important part of chip companies' intellectual property. One indication of that is that National's datasheet for the new chip limits itself to a statement that "The LM4675 features a filterless spread-spectrum modulation scheme that eliminates the need for output filters, ferrite beads, or chokes. The switching frequency varies by ±30% about a 300-kHz center frequency, reducing the wideband spectral content, improving EMI emissions radiated by the speaker and associated cables and traces."

Class D's efficiency is appealing in the portable applications National is targeting with the LM4675. And, the National design team's achievement of 11 dB below the FCC spec is notable.

In terms of efficiency, National says, "with a 3.6-V supply driving an 8-Ω speaker, the amplifiers' efficiency for a 100-mW power level will be greater than 80%, reaching 89% at 400 mW." The chip operates from 2.4 to 5.5 V and consumes 1.6 mA from a 2.7-V supply.

Another trend represented by the LM4675 is the chip designer's effort to deal with the shrinking supply voltages that go with small-geometry logic chips. In response, the LM4675 uses differential signaling to preserve signal-to-noise ratios.

A representative example of other companies taking a nonClass D approach to mobile apps would be ON Semiconductor's 1.3-W NCP2892 BTL audio power amplifier. Internally, the chip uses two identical power amplifiers. One allows gain-setting via external resistors, while the other is internally fixed in an inverting unity-gain configuration. The load is driven differentially, eliminating the need for an output coupling capacitor.

Amps In Surprising Places
A particularly novel application integrates amplifiers into data cables (Fig. 2). W.L. Gore & Associates offers high-data-rate, low-power active cable assemblies for InfiniBand SDR, DDR, and CX-4, applications. They triple the reach of standard InfiniBand and 10 Gigabit Ethernet cables, and they're skinnier and lighter, which simplifies routing.

The cables use a combination of technologies. GORE Eye-Opener technology uses passive equalization built into the conductor. Quellan's Q-ACTIVE devices compensate for signal attenuation. The devices are nested completely within the cable assembly and consume 60 mW.

Quellan's large family of signalintegrity-enhancing ICs for the physical layer provides fixed, adjustable, and adaptive equalization, active crosstalk cancellation, and what the company calls "collaborative signal processing" (CSP), with "analog and digital signal processing in tandem to achieve the desired functionality."

Details are sparse, but the CSP chip is based on a five-tap finite-impulse response (FIR) filter rated for up to 10-dB cancellation of near-field reflections. It applies feed forward equalization, modulation, and symbolization to analog signals on backplanes.


<-- prev. page     [1] 2     next page -->

Reprints   Printer-Friendly  Email this Article  RSS    Font Size   What's This?


  • Engineers Rely On Internet For Product Info
  • Rochester Electronics Establishes New Design and Technology Group
  • Custom Sources Light Way To 22-nm IC Lithography
  • In EDA, A Year Of Mergers, Failed And Otherwise
  • Software Turns Scopes Into Vector RF Signal Analyzers
  • Couple’s $15 Million Gift Advances Rice Engineering Education
  • November 7, 2008
  • Startup Sets Sail For Speedier Spice Simulation
    1) Ten Top Design Skills For Tough Times
    (3623 views today)
    2) Energy Harvester Perpetually Powers WIreless Sensors
    (374 views today)
    3) Ultracapacitors Branch Out Into Wider Markets
    (364 views today)
    4) Build A Smart Battery Charger Using A Single-Transistor Circuit
    (323 views today)
    5) Technology Has Been Very Good To Obama, And He Plans To Reciprocate
    (213 views today)
    ALL TOP 20



    POST YOUR COMMENTS HERE
    Name:

    Email:
    Your Comments:

    Enter the text from the image below


    Please refresh the page if you have trouble reading this text.

    Search Electronic Design
         
      
     
    Email Newsletter
    Sponsored By:
    Electronic Design UPDATE provides readers with late-breaking news, opinions from industry experts, and timely technology stories. It's a unique opportunity to get your product message in front of engineers, engineering managers, and corporate managers while they're reading about critical information online.

    Enter Email to Subscribe
      

    Electronic Design Europe Electronic Design China EEPN Power Electronics Auto Electronics Microwaves & RF
    Mobile Dev & Design Schematics Find Power Products Military Electronics EE Events Related Resources