The present invention relates to electronic circuitry and, in particular, to a sigma delta class D architecture which corrects for power supply, load, and H-bridge errors.
Typically Class D architectures employ multiple feedback loops in order to attain all performance goals in the system. Primarily power supply rejection ratio (PSRR) and distortion are the most difficult issues to surmount. Since an ideal Class D amp has zero output impedance and switches the load terminal between ground and the power supply, it has no power supply rejection. Class D outputs are also susceptible to errors introduced by non-ideal, non-symmetric H-bridge switching.
A sigma delta class D device that uses a low pass filter to smooth the output waveform and eliminate high frequency switching noise from the feedback value includes: a first summing node having a positive input coupled to a signal input node; a second summing node having a first positive input coupled to an output of the first summing node and having an output coupled to a signal output node; a low pass filter having an input coupled to the output of the second summing node; an analog to digital converter having an input coupled to an output of the low pass filter; a third summing node having a positive input node coupled to an output of the analog to digital converter and a negative input node coupled to the output of the first summing node; and a feedback device coupled between an output of the third summing node and a negative input of the first summing node.
In the drawings:
The circuit according to the present invention employs a feedback structure which will correct for all such errors and eliminate the need for separate power supply and H-bridge feedback loops. The circuit structure has the added advantage of eliminating the digital to analog (D2A) converter typically used in audio codec receive (D2A) channels since its input is a direct digital word.
A typical prior art digital implementation of a first order sigma delta modulator is shown in
A system, according to the present invention, with the addition of two analog blocks: a simple first order low pass filter LPF and an analog to digital converter A2D, is shown in
In
The low pass filter LPF is added to smooth the output waveform and eliminate the high frequency switching noise from the feedback value. This is appropriate since the original system was all digital. No information should be lost in the band of interest if the cut-off frequency of the low pass filter LPF is greater than the signal bandwidth. The resulting signal will include all system errors. In particular, power supply induced errors and distortion related to non-ideal H-bridge switching should be present and unaffected inside the signal bandwidth.
The purpose of the analog to digital converter A2D is to convert the signal which includes all sources of error and distortion into a digital word representation that can be fed back into the system. Simulations of the first order system prove functionality.
Although the theory is sound and simulations prove functionality, the performance of the first order system is lacking. Therefore, the theory must be extended to the second order case.
Since the pole frequency variation of the digital low pass filter DLPF does not vary with process and the analog low pass filter LPF can vary up to +/−30% there is concern for robustness over process variation. Simulations show the architecture to be stable across a wide range of low pass filter LPF pole frequencies.
While this invention has been described with reference to illustrative embodiments, this description is not intended to be construed in a limiting sense. Various modifications and combinations of the illustrative embodiments, as well as other embodiments of the invention, will be apparent to persons skilled in the art upon reference to the description. It is therefore intended that the appended claims encompass any such modifications or embodiments.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5030952 | Ledzius et al. | Jul 1991 | A |
5392040 | Hayashi | Feb 1995 | A |
5392282 | Kiema | Feb 1995 | A |
6271781 | Pellon | Aug 2001 | B1 |