1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the field of class D power amplifiers.
2. Prior Art
Microcontrollers have been commonly used for pulse width modulation of low frequency and low dynamic range signals such as are used in motor control. However, the use of Microcontrollers for pulse width modulation of high frequency audio amplifiers has been limited by the basic instruction cycle time of the Microcontroller. In order to establish a digitally generated audio pulse width modulation signal with high frequency capability and high dynamic range, it is necessary for the digital pulse width modulation time steps to be much shorter than common Microcontroller cycle time.
The circuits and methods disclosed herein allow the use of a relatively inexpensive Microcontroller to establish the timing signals required for pulse width modulation of high frequency audio amplifiers, allowing the achievement of high dynamic range and signal to noise ratio. In accordance with an embodiment of the invention, rather than use a Microcontroller to directly control the output time resolution, a variable time delay circuit is added having a time delay resolution of the order needed to produce the desired output time resolution. With the delay time being controlled by the Microcontroller operating under program control as pulse width modulation logic3, a circuit can be formed that allows the Microcontroller to generate pulse width modulated signals with extremely fine digital time step increments, even though the Microcontroller itself has a much longer cycle time, thus yielding the necessary signal fidelity for high frequency, high dynamic range, high signal-to-noise audio output signals.
For example, to digitally generate pulse width modulated audio signals up to 7 KHz it is desirable to have the analog signal sampled at a frequency higher than double the highest frequency of interest=14 KHz. Higher sample rates will yield lower distortion, and 44 KHz is often used. In order to allow filtering of a Class D power output stage which allows the desired signal to pass while suppressing the basic switching frequency, it is desirable to have a relatively high basic switching frequency. High power output transistors, FETs, etc. limit this upper frequency. 120 KHz may be used as an example. In order to produce a pulse width modulated signal with 12 bit (72 dB) resolution, the pulse width modulated time steps must be no larger than 1/4096 (1/(2^12)) of the basic switching frequency's period. For this example, the time step resolution will be (1/120 KHz)*(1/4096), or 2 nSec (2e-9 Sec). This time step resolution is 10 to 20 times smaller than the single instruction cycle capability of a typical Microcontroller. In the example above, providing a time delay circuit with 2 nSec digital time resolution and allowing the Microcontroller to program this delay, a Microcontroller controlled pulse width modulated signal can be generated with 2 nSec modulation time steps and a 44 KHz modulation update rate. In that regard, note that the 120 KHz modulation update rate is easily within the capability of a relatively inexpensive Microcontroller, so that the modulation update rate is not the problem, the allowable increments in the pulse width (delay time) is. Note also that “delay time” may be an actual delay in the negative going transition using the convention illustrated in
A block diagram of a basic class D amplifier system is shown in
In a preferred embodiment, the delay line whose output reflects its input delayed by a programmed time delay is an analog delay line that is programmed by the Microcontroller on the fly as required. Its input is triggered by a logic transition from the Microcontroller providing the initiation of the delay line's logic delay, with the output of the delay line reflecting its input when the programmed delay expires. The Microcontroller, typically having a quartz crystal clock, is programmed to trigger the next pulse after a fixed number of Microcontroller clock cycles, so the period between the triggering successive pulses is highly accurate and repeatable. Of course, other types of delay lines could also be used if desired.
Now referring to
Shakers are normally designed to be capable of providing the maximum possible acceleration to a test article mounted thereon, and accordingly, can consume large amounts of power, to the extent that such shakers may be provided with augmented cooling, such as is illustrated in
Thus while certain preferred embodiments of the present invention have been disclosed and described herein for purposes of illustration and not for purposes of limitation, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
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| 4700148 | Pauly | Oct 1987 | A |
| 4989158 | Sloane | Jan 1991 | A |
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| 20130013241 | Sill et al. | Jan 2013 | A1 |
| Entry |
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| Authors: Bah-Hwee Gwee, Member, Joseph S. Chang, and Huiyun Li, Title: A Micropower Low-Distortion Digital Pulsewidth Modulator for a Digital Class D Amplifier, Date: Apr. 2002, Publisher: IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems—II: Analog and Digital Signal Processing, vol. 49, No. 4, p. 245-256. |