The present invention relates to an amplifier used for a portable device etc.
In a portable device etc. using a battery, a step-up DD converter is increasingly used as a power supply circuit, in order to secure a large sound. In this situation, it is required to secure a higher sound quality and the large sound volume at the same time.
Conventionally, in the portable device using a battery, a variety of amplifiers are proposed which employ a D-class amplifier for amplifying an audio signal and a DD converter in the power supply circuit to step up the battery voltage configuring the power source (refer to Patent Publication JP-1989-147907, for example).
Hereinafter, a conventional step-up DD converter will be described with reference to
As shown in the figure, the conventional step-up DD converter 25 compares the output voltage 27 of the DD converter against a reference voltage 17, and controls a switching device 13 via a differential amplifier 16 and using a PWM (pulse width modulation) control circuit 15 so that the difference approaches “zero”.
In such a step-up DD converter 25, neglecting the loss of the devices used therein, the relationship Vout=(1+Ton/Toff)×Vin holds where Vin, Vout, Ton, and Toff represent the input voltage, output voltage, ON time of the switching device 13 and OFF time thereof, respectively. The output voltage 18 can be smoothed using a capacitor 18 to reduce the ripples generated therein by the switching to some extent, and thus Vout may be expressed as the average voltage.
In a time zone of the stationary state of the DD converter 25 of
In the time chart of
If the load current of the DD converter 25 increases, the output voltage 27 experiences a rapid voltage fall until the next clock, as a result of which the average of the output voltage 27 reduces so long as the ratio of Ton to Toff is constant. The PWM system uses a control technique such that the voltage fall is suppressed by comparing the reduced voltage and the reference voltage 17 against each other in the differential amplifier to change the time ratio of Ton to Toff. That is, in the PWM system, a larger ratio of Ton to Toff, if employed, results in a larger pulse width, which raises the output voltage 27.
Conversely, if the load current reduces, the output voltage 27 experiences a moderate voltage fall until the next clock, which reduces the pulse width. However, if the load current rapidly changes, the output voltage 27 may temporarily fall in the case of an increased current, due to occurring of a delay time, such as a time length needed for the differential amplifier 16 to detect the voltage drop and a time length need therefrom to control the switching device 13. In the case of a rapid decrease of the load current, the output voltage 27 may temporarily rise.
As described heretofore, use of the power supply circuit including the conventional DD converter incurs, upon a rapid level change of the input signal of the D-class amplifier, a temporary fall in the output voltage of the DD converter. This is because the time delay occurs from the time instant when the differential amplifier 16 of the DD converter 25 detects the voltage fall and the time instant when the PWM control circuit 15 changes the pulse width, and the output voltage of the power supply source becomes unstable during the delay time and the transient response time. In the case of a D-class amplifier in particular, the temporary fall of the output voltage of the power supply source causes the output thereof to have a large distortion, and if the speaker suddenly outputs a larger volume, the beginning portion of the loud sound thus output has an increased distortion to generate a noisy sound, to cause a problem.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an amplifier wherein the PWM signal of the amplifying block driving a speaker is made as the PWM signal for the power supply source, to increase the output capacitance of the power supply source at the same timing at which the amplifying block outputs a loud volume, whereby the fluctuation of the output voltage of the power supply source is reduced to reduce distortion of the sound at the rising edge thereof.
The present invention provides an amplifier including an amplifying block for receiving an input signal to drive a speaker and a power supply block for supplying an output voltage to the amplifying block, wherein: the amplifying block includes a PWM-signal generation circuit for converting the input signal to a PWM signal, a speaker driving circuit for driving the speaker based on the PWM signal, and a duty detection circuit for outputting a pulse width signal depending on a pulse width of the PWM signal; and the power supply block includes a PWM control circuit for controlling the output voltage based on the pulse width signal.
According to the amplifier of the present invention, control of the output voltage of the power supply block by the PWM control circuit of the power supply block based on the pulse width signal, which depends on the pulse width of the PWM signal of the amplifying block driving the speaker, allows the output voltage of the power supply block to be higher at the same timing when the amplifying block outputs a larger sound. For this reason, fluctuation of the power supply voltage may be made small to reduce the distortion of the sound at the rise timing thereof. It is preferable to adopt, as the above pulse width signal, a signal depending on the difference between the pulse width of the PWM pulse and the interval between each pulse and an adjacent pulse, or a signal depending on the duty ratio which is a ratio of the pulse width to the pulse interval. The depending signal may preferably be a signal monotonically increasing with an increase of the pulse width that the pulse width signal represents, and may be a proportional signal, for example.
Hereinafter, embodiments of the present invention will be described with reference to the drawings.
The present invention is directed to an amplifier including amplifying block 26 which receives an input signal to drive a speaker, and a power supply block 25 which supplies power supply voltage to the amplifying block 26, wherein the amplifying block 26 includes a PWM-signal generation circuit 4 which converts the input signal into a PWM signal, and a duty detection circuit 8 which outputs a signal proportional to a time difference component of the PWM signal, and the power supply block 25 includes a PWM control circuit 15 which receives a signal from the duty detection circuit 8 to control the power supply output voltage based on the received signal.
In the amplifier of the present embodiment, as shown in
The PWM signal output from the comparator 2 drives the constant-voltage switching circuits 5,9 and is also input to the duty detection circuit 8, which outputs a signal proportional to the difference between the ON-time (Ton) and the OFF-time (Toff), whereby the PWM signal is converted into a signal which is in proportion to the time difference. The output signal from the duty detection circuit 8 is used as an input signal of the of PMW control circuit 15 of the DD converter 25 which configures the power supply block supplying the power source to the D-class amplifier 26, and controls the output voltage of the DD converter 25.
The present embodiment uses the D-class amplifier 26 of the PWM scheme having a full-bridge connection generally used, and the PWM signal for driving the constant-voltage switching circuit 5 is supplied through two branches. One of the branched signals is passed by a phase inversion circuit 7 for phase inversion thereof, to drive the constant-voltage switching circuit 9, whereby the constant-voltage switching circuits 5 and 9 have opposite phases. The output of each of the constant-voltage switching circuits 5, 9 is coupled to a low-pass-filter 6, 10, which removes therefrom noise such as a clock component, and drives the speaker 23.
A step-up DD converter 25 of the PWM drive scheme is used as the power supply block which supplies power source to the D-class amplifier 26.
The power supply voltage supplied from a battery 11 is supplied to a switching device 13 via an inductor 12. The PWM signal generated in the D-class amplifier 26 is converted, in the duty detection circuit 8, into a signal which is proportional to the time difference between Ton and Toff, and drives the switching device 13 via the PWM control circuit 15. Since the voltage output from the rectifying element 14 connected to the output side of the inductor 12 includes ripples, a capacitor 18 is used to output a smooth output voltage 27.
In the way as described above, the DD converter 25 configuring the power supply block is driven by the signal directly linked with the level of the input signal of the D-class amplifier 26 which drives the speaker 23, whereby the DD converter 25 can rise rapidly. Thus, the DD converter 25 can suppress the drop of the power supply voltage in the case of a rapid increase in the load current.
Hereinafter, operation of the above amplifier will be described in more detail. Operation of the circuit of the D-class amplifier 26 configuring the amplifying block will be described first.
The input analog signal 21 is input to the differential amplifier 1, which delivers a difference between the analog signal 21 and the feedback control signal to the PWM-signal generation circuit 4. This feedback control exerts control of the gain of the entire amplifier circuit, and reduction in the distortion occurring.
The PWM-signal generation circuit 4 is comprised of the comparator 2 and triangular-wave generation circuit 3, and outputs the PWM signal as in the time chart shown in
If the analog input signal is higher than the triangular wave signal, the output of the comparator 2 assumes a “positive” signal; and if the analog input signal is lower than the triangular wave signal, the output of the comparator assumes a “negative” signal. This signal is the PWM signal which has a pulse width proportional to the voltage of the analog input signal. The clock 22 is a sampling clock having a sufficiently higher frequency compared to the maximum frequency of the analog input signal. The triangular-wave generation circuit 3 generates the triangular wave signal based on this clock.
The PWM signal output from the PWM-signal generation circuit 4 is separated into two: one passing through the phase inversion circuit 7 which generates a signal having a phase shift of 180 degrees; and the other not passing through such a phase inversion circuit. The two signals are passed by the constant-voltage switching circuits 5, 9 and low-pass-filters 6, 10 to be again converted into the analog signals, which drive the speaker in opposite phases.
In
This driving scheme of the speaker 23 is generally adopted as a full-bridge-connection system, and has a variety of advantages of expected higher output power under a lower power supply voltage, a higher utilization factor of the power supply source, and omission of the output coupling capacitor. However, as the driving scheme of the speaker, a half-ridge connection system including a single constant-voltage switching circuit may be adopted other than the full-ridge connection system.
On the other hand, the PWM signal output from the PWM-signal generation circuit 4 is further delivered to the duty detection circuit 8. In this circuit, as shown in the time chart shown in
Next, the DD converter 25 configuring the power supply block will be described.
In the step-up DD converter shown in
If the switching device 13 is controlled by the PWM signal output from the D-class amplifier 26 at this stage, upon an increase of the load current of the DD converter 25, i.e., upon an increase of the dissipation current due to a loud sound output from the D-class amplifier 26, the pulse width of the signal output from the duty detection circuit 8 based on the PWM signal changes from the beginning, whereby a reduction in the power source voltage output from the DD converter 25 can be suppressed.
A technique is generally adopted wherein the DD converter 25 is fixed at the state of a lower duty in the case of an extremely lower load current, and automatically changed into the PFM control scheme where the control clock frequency is variable to prevent a reduction in the efficiency of the DD converter 25. It is to be noted that the PFM control system refers to a control technique of pulse frequency modulation, wherein the frequency is changed without changing the duty of the pulses.
Although an analog signal is input in the embodiment shown in
The amplifier of the present embodiment may be applied in any of the portable devices, such as a cellular phone, PHS and PDA, which uses a D-class amplifier 26 to drive a speaker 23 and has a function of outputting audio from the speaker, and in which the voltage of the battery 11 is stepped-up by the DD converter 25 to obtain the power source.
While the invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments thereof, the amplifier of the present invention is not limited only to the configuration of the embodiments, and various changes or alterations made to the configuration of the above embodiments may fall within the scope of the present invention. For example, although the signal proportional to the time difference signal of the PWM signal is used in the above embodiments, the present invention is not limited thereto, and the duty ratio of the PWM pulse, besides the time difference signal of the PWM pulse, may be used as the pulse width signal, and not limited to a proportional signal so long as the signal monotonically increases with an increase in the pulse width of the PWM pulses.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2005-091892 | Mar 2005 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP2006/306091 | 3/27/2006 | WO | 00 | 8/29/2007 |