Class D Amplifier Design Basics II
02/19/2009 Rev 1.0
Contents
Chapter 1
Getting Familiar with Class D Audio Amplifier
Chapter 2
Latest Class D Audio Amplifier Technology Trend
Chapter 3
Identifying Problems ~ Performance Measurement of Class D Amplifier
Chapter 4
Reducing Distortion ~Dead-time ~ LPF Designs
Chapter 5
Reducing Noise ~ Isolation Technique ~ PCB Design
APPENDIX
Simulation of a Simple Class D Amplifier
Chapter 1: Getting Familiar with Class D Audio Amplifier
Audio Amplifier Market Trend
More Channels Smaller Box Lighter Weight
A Wire with Gain More Functions
(Digital Input, Diag)
Device Technology
Smaller Size Lower Cost Control Technology Audio Performance
Why Class D Now?
Audio Market Trend
Class AB
More Channels Smaller Size
Smaller Size
IR Class D
Higher Performance
Device Technology
MOSFET High Speed HVIC
Basic Concept of Class D Audio Amplifier
COMP
Class D Switching Stage
LPF
Analog signal
PWM
Amplify
PWM
Analog signal
VOUT = B (2D-1) In concept, Class D amplifier is linear; i.e. 0% distortion. 6
PWM: Heart of Class D Operation
Audio signal PWM PWM Audio signal
10 5 0 -5 -10 60 Time/uSecs 80 100 120 140 20uSecs/div V V
10 5 0 -5 -10 60 Time/uSecs 80 100 120 140 20uSecs/div
Class AB vs. D Energy Point of View
Similar to a variable resistor
Class AB
PLOSS depends on output power factor Similar to a transformer with variable turn ratio
IIN = IOUT
Class D
VIN x IIN = VOUT x IOUT Note that input current and output current are not equal.
Bi-directional energy flow
Class AB vs. D Characteristic Comparison (1/2)
Feature Class D Advantage
Superior efficiency Efficiency can be improved with device technology Efficiency Suitable to drive lower impedance load Can drive reactive load without significant degradation of efficiency Requires smaller power supply Bi-directional energy flow; any energy reflected from the load is recycled to the power supply. Suitable to drive highly reactive load, such as woofer, speaker system with dividing network, piezo speaker, etc.
Class AB
Efficiency is fixed. Extremely inefficient when driving lower impedance load. Extremely inefficient when driving reactive load.
Energy flow
Drivability
All the reflected energy from reactive components and back EMF are consumed dissipating heat The output device has high impedance, ~tens of k ohm. Inherently has low output impedance (m ohm range) With a strong voltage feedback, Class AB can achieve low output impedance. Power supply current = load current. For a given output Lower impedance loading does not burden power supply. power with decreased load (Power supply current) (load current). impedance, the supply current and heat dissipation in the output device increase. Cross conduction limits high Wide power bandwidth; no extra effort to drive high frequency rated power. frequency power bandwidth.
Class AB vs. D Characteristic Comparison (2/2)
Feature Class D Advantage
Topology is inherently linear without feedback Linearity Cross over distortion is not in zero crossing area Output device is non-linear; exponential in BJT, quadratic in MOSFET. Strong feedback is necessary to achieve good linearity. Cross over distortion is at where load current crosses zero, which is most critical point of operation. Output devices in linear operating mode has strong temperature coefficient in gain. Loop-gain is changing dynamically with output power. Because of strong non-linearity in device and 'exposed' feedback node, weak to RF noise.
Class AB
Stability
Thermally stable; gain of the Class D stage, bandwidth, loop-gain are independent of output device temperature. No bias-current thermal compensation
Noise immunity
Inherently immune to incoming noise; low drive impedance, inductor between the load and amplifier. Higher reliability from less heat. Less metal fatigue in solder joints.
Reliability
10
Class AB vs D Comparison
Loss in Class AB
Pc = 0.2
Loss
VCC 8 RL
2
1 Vcc (1 K sin t ) Vcc K sin t d t PC = 2 0 2 2 RL
Vcc 2 = 8 RL
2K K 2 2
Note that this is independent to device parameters.
Loss
K=2/
K=1
Loss in Class D
PTOTAL = Psw + Pcond + Pgd
Pcond = RDS (ON ) RL Po
2
Efficiency can be improved further!
Pgd = 2 Qg Vgs f PWM
K=1
K is a ratio of Vbus and output voltage.
Psw = COSS VBUS f PWM
To learn more about power losses in Class D, refer to AN-1070 Class D Amplifier Performance Relationship to MOSFET Parameters.
11
Practical Class D Amplifier
Perturbation Supply impedance Bus Pumping Nonlinear inductance / Capacitance DC Resistance
Limited Gain & BW Noise Figure
+VCC
Audio source
PWM
F/B
Gate Driver
-VCC
1. Non-linearity in the switching stage due to timing errors added, such as dead-time, ton/toff, and tr/tf 2. Limited amount of error collection capability due to limited gain and bandwidth in PWM modulator 3. Audio frequency band noise added in PWM modulator 4. Unwanted characteristics in the switching devices, such as finite ON resistance, finite switching speed or body diode characteristics. 5. Parasitic components that cause ringing on transient edges 6. Power supply voltage fluctuations due to its finite output impedance and reactive power flowing through the DC bus 7. Non-linearity in the output LPF.
Dead-time
Finite RDS(on) Vth and Qg Body diode recovery Stray inductances
RDS(ON)
ON delay
OFF delay
Note that 0.01% of nonlinearity corresponds to10mV out of 100V DC bus, or 0.25ns in 400kHz!
Finite dV/dt
12
MOSFET Basics
A MOSFET is a device to switch electronic current. A driving MOSFET charges/discharges a capacitor (Gate to Source, Gate to Drain). A MOSFET does not require any energy to keep it on-state. In switching transition, stray impedance in each terminal slows down switching and generates unwanted rings.
To learn more about power MOSFETs, refer to AN-1084 Power MOSFET Basics.
13
Driving MOSFET for PWM
Only one side, either high-side or lowside, MOSFET is ON at a time. side and low-side MOSFETs determines the output voltage.
High-side ON
The ratio of ON time between the high-
Driving a high-side MOSFET
A floating power supply that referenced
Alternating at Switching Frequency
to switching node drives the gate of the high-side MOSFET when the low-side MOSFET is ON. (Bootstrap power supply)
The floating power supply is charged
Low-side ON
Driving a low-side MOSFET
A bias voltage that refers to negative
bus voltage B drives the gate of the low-side MOSFET.
NOTE: In a practical design, a dead-time where both high- and low-side MOSFETs are off is inserted to prevent simultaneous ON state. Refer to chapter 4 for more details.
14
Bootstrap High Side Power Supply
High-side ON
I4 turns off the low-side MOSFET. Then, I5 turns on the high-side MOSFET, lifting VS up to +B. As long as the high side is ON, bootstrap diode DBS isolates the floating power supply VBS and bootstrap capacitor CBS retains VBS voltage. After the high-side MOSFET ON state, I1 turns off the high-side MOSFET, then I2 turns on the low side MOSFET. As soon as switching node VS reaches negative supply B, the bootstrap diode DBS turns on and starts charging bootstrap capacitor CBS with current I3 from VCC. Note that VBS = VCC (forward drop voltage of DBS).
Low-side ON
15
Example of a 100W Class D Amplifier
VAA supply
Optional switching noise filter Feedback resistor
High-side OCP Input resistor Startup resister Bootstrap floating supply charging path
6V
DC blocking capacitor
ENABLE
20 V
6V
C11 10 F
R8 4.7
Bootstrap floating supply capacitor Demodulation LPF
2nd order integrator
VSS supply
20 V
Low-side OCP
Dead-time
16
Chapter 2: Latest Class D Audio Amplifier Technology Trend
Class D Amplifier Innovations
Device Technologies
Packaging Technology
Signal Processing Technologies
MOSFET FOM (Figure of Merit) improvements Higher voltage capability Faster and accurate switching time High gain low noise process High GBW (Gain BandWidth) process
Smaller Low stray inductance Surface mount Dual sided cooling Hybrid module Multi chip module
Feedback techniques Self-oscillating topologies Digital domain PWM processing
Higher Performance + Smaller Size + Lower Cost At The Same Time !
18
1. MOSFET Technology Trend
A MOSFET has inherent trade-offs between ON resistance and gate charge, RDS(on) vs Qg. In device design, this translates into Conduction loss vs Switching loss trade-off. The objective of optimization for Class D applications is to achieve minimal power loss. Newer platforms show better FOM (Figure of Merit) This is what makes Class D keep improving!
Normalized R*Qg
International Rectifier Mosfet R*Qg Trend
1.2 Planar Stripe Technology 1.1 1 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 2000
IR Mosfet Technology Constant Improvement
Trench Technology
2001
2002 Fiscal Year
2003
2004
2005
19
MOSFET Evolution
The latest trench MOSFET technology shows 7 times better figure of merit.
Higher cell density
Planar MOSFET Structure
IRF540 100 V 66m ohms 50 nC
RDS(on) x Qg=3300
Trench MOSFET Structure
IRF6665 100 V 53m ohms 8.4 nC
RDS(on) x Qg=445
20
Trade-offs in MOSFET Design
There is a best die size for a given output power. Optimum die size for minimal PLOSS depends on load impedance, rated power and switching frequency. A more advanced platform with better FOM acheives lower PLOSS.
Optimal MOSFET die size Optimal MOSFET Parameters Total Loss = Conduction Loss + Switching Loss
Total Loss
Optimal MOSFET Die Size
Conduction Loss
Switching Loss
To learn more about MOSFET selection, refer to AN-1070 Class D Amplifier Performance Relationship to MOSFET Parameters.
21
Importance of Packaging
How the package affects the design? 1. Amplifier size Increase efficiency Increase current capability Improve the MOSFET thermal efficiency 2. EMI considerations Better control of current and voltage transients 3. Amplifier linearity Decrease switching times Narrow the MOSFET parameter distribution 22 To utilize benefits from a newer generation MOSFET, new package with reduced stray inductance is necessary.
D2/S1
G1
TO-220 Full-Pak 5 PIN
G2
S2
D1
Stray Inductance
A MOSFET has capacitive elements. Stray inductance is where excessive energy is stored, causing over/under shoots and rings. Stray inductance in Source returns feedback voltage to gate, slowing down switching speed significantly. The smaller the parasitic components the better performance!
To learn more about MOSFET switching behavior, refer to AN-947 Understanding HEXFET Switching Performance.
23
Package Comparison
Lower inductance at frequency than SO-8, D-Pak, MLP and D-Pak TO-220 inductance package is ~ 12nH DirectFET is 0.4nH 24
EMI Comparison
DirectFET amplifier shows better EMI performance than TO-220 amplifier Over 2MHz, DirectFET amplifier shows approximately 9dBuV lower Peak,
Quasi-Peak and Average noise than TO-220 amplifier
Both PCBs meet audio amplifier EMI standards limits (CISPR13) DirectFET
Frequency (MHz)
TO-220 (w/DirectFET die)
Frequency (MHz)
CISPR13 Quasi-Peak Limits Average Limits
CISPR13 Quasi-Peak Limits Average Limits
25
2: Gate Driver IC Technology Trend
More integration to realize smaller footprint
Analog signal processing Level shifting
Feed back
Gate driving Power switching
AUDIO SIGNAL
PWM Level Shift Down Level Shift Up Dead Time Shut Down
Speaker
Over Current Protection Control Logic
Protection functions
26
What The Gate Driver IC Does?
Four Essential Functions in Gate Driver IC
Level Shift Deadtime Generation
Gate Drive Under Voltage Lockout
Gate Driver IC
To learn more about High Voltage Gate Driver IC, refer to AN-978 HV Floating MOS-Gate Driver ICs.
27
How Internal High Voltage Level Shifter Works
Operation Principle A pair of SET and RESET signals are generated at the PULSE GEN block. The SET and RESET pulses drive the high voltage MOSFET to send these signals to circuitries in a floating highside well.
Pulse Gen Waveform Example
HIN
The high-side circuitry reconstructs PWM from SET and RESET pulses. This method minimizes power dissipation in the high voltage MOSFETs in level shifter. 28
SET
RESET
HO
Floating Well and Noise Isolation
INPUT SECTION
HIGH SIDE GATE DRIVE
LOW SIDE GATE DRIVE LEVEL SHIFTERS Translate PWM signal to different voltage potential Isolate circuit blocks that are in different voltage potentials Note Level shifter rates supply voltage ranges Level shifting is useful to drive high-side the MOSFET whose source is tied to switching node. Level shifting blocks switching noise coming into sensitive input section.
29
Dead-time Generation
With Dead-time
Dead-time (or blanking time) is a period of time intentionally inserted in between the ON states of high- and low-side MOSFETs. This is necessary because the MOSFET is a capacitive load to the gate driver that delays switching time and causes simultaneous ON.
NO DEADTIME
Without Dead-time
INPUT
Lack of dead-time results in lower efficiency, excessive heat and potential thermal failure. Usually, dead-time is realized by delaying turn on timing.
HIGH-SIDE
LOW-SIDE
SIMULTANEOUS ON
30
Under Voltage Lockout
Under voltage lockout (UVLO) prevents the MOSFET from entering the half-ON region when the gate bias voltage is reduced. The half-ON condition of the MOSFET creates excessive power loss due to increased RDS(on) that could lead to MOSFET failure, therefore must be avoided.
UV DETECT
During the UVLO, gate drive stage keeps HO/LO low in order to prevent unintentional turn-on of the MOSFETs. UVLO in VCC resets shutdown logic and causes CSD recycling to start over the power up sequence. The IR Class D audio gate driver family is designed to accept any power sequence.
CSH VB
HIGH SIDE CS
UV Q
HO
HV LEVEL SHIFT
FLOATING HIGH SIDE
HV LEVEL SHIFT
VS
UVLO of VBS shuts down HO and disable high-side current sensing
31
Inside of High Voltage Gate Driver IRS2092
High Voltage Isolation
FLOATING INPUT
OTA
ENABLE
GND
PWM MODULATOR HV LEVEL SHIFT UV DETECT
20.4V
PWM Modulation Pop Noise Elimination
VAA
6.5V
CLICK NOISE ELLIMINATION
UV DETECT
CSH VB
IN-
VAA+VSS 2
HIGH SIDE CS
UV Q
COMP
HO
COMP
6.5V
HV LEVEL SHIFT
FLOATING HIGH SIDE
HV LEVEL SHIFT
5V REG UV DETECT
VSS
High Speed, Low Distortion VCC Level Shift
VS
DEAD TIME
Shut down Recycle Control
CSD
20.4V CHARGE / DISCHARGE SD DT
LO
HV LEVEL SHIFT PROTECTION CONTROL HV LEVEL SHIFT
Dead Time Control
COM
LOW SIDE CS
Over Current Sensing OCSET
VREF DT
32
3. PWM and Feedback Technologies
PWM modulators functions Convert analog or digital audio signal (PCM) to PWM that has reasonable switching frequency for power MOSFET Error corrections to improve audio performance Demands
Feedback to reduce DC offset,
distortion and noise floor
Larger loop gain for lower distortion,
higher power supply rejection ratio (PSRR) damping factor reduced EMI
Post filter feedback for higher Switching frequency control for
33
Natural PWM vs. Self Oscillating PWM
Natural PWM
Open loop or closed loop Fixed frequency
Optional feedback
Self-oscillating PWM
Closed loop Frequency changes with modulation High loop gain Fewer components
34
Modern PWM Topologies
Self-oscillating PWM with 2nd order integration
Self-oscillating PWM with pulse width control
Global feedback from speaker output
Inductor-less PWM
35
IRAUDAMP5 Functional Block Diagram
Typical IR audio evaluation board based on self-oscillating PWM with 2nd order integration *
FEEDBACK VOLUME IC CS3310 INPUT
IRF6645 DirectFET
ERROR AMP +
+
PWM COMP.
L /S DT SD
L/S
LPF
*
CS
Micro controller
OTP
DCP
IRS2092
PROTECTION LOGIC
PROTECTION CONTROL
36
Chapter 3: Identifying Problems ~ Performance Measurement of Class D Amplifier
Identifying Problems
Proper audio performance measurement is crucial to identify potential
problems.
Frequency response and THD+N are the minimum basic measure of audio
performance.
Problem Low frequency response High frequency response High harmonic distortion High noise floor
Possible Causes Audio input, feedback network Audio input, feedback network, LPF design Shoot-through, dead-time, switching noise coupling Analog input, switching noise coupling
38
1. Frequency Response
Use resistive dummy load. Set reference voltage level to 1W output power at 1kHz. Sweep sinusoidal signal from 20Hz to 100kHz. Take frequency response with various load impedances and without
loading.
International Rectifier
+1 +0.5 +0 -0.5 -1 -1.5
A-A FREQUENCY RESPONSE
08/15/06 10:56:54
d B r A
Reference 1kHz=0dB, usually set to 1W output power
-2 -2.5 -3 20
50
100
200
500
1k Hz
2k
5k
10k
20k
50k
100k
Sweep 1
Trace 1
Color Red
Line Style Solid
Thick 1
Data Anlr.Level A
Axis Left
Comment 8Ohm, 1W, 80kHz BW
Frequency Response from 20k to 20 Hz. F4 first to set 0 dBr at 1kHz. The 2 Ch Ampl Function Reading meter BW is set to <10 Hz & >500kHz so the bandwidth is the same as the Level meter. Optimize for detail. A-A FREQ RESP.at2
39
Check for..
R117 3.3k 1w R17 R22 10K U1 75k R18 9.6k R19 10k CP6 GND INCOMP CSD VSS VREF OCSET IRS2092S DIP VB HO VS VCC LO COM DT 5 2 3 1nF 1nF C6 5 10uF 6 CP2 22uF R118 3.3k 1w R13 10k 8 R12 8.7k 9 R26 10k R27 10k CP5 22uF VCC 7 11 -B 10 R21 10R R23 4.7K 12 D3 R20 4.7R 20R R25 LED1 Blue C14 0.1uF CP7 470uF,100V 1 2 -B C13 0.1uF, 400V C7 1nF 4 15 22uF 14 VS1 13 20R R24 3 C12 0.47uF, 400V R30 R31 10, 1W 2.2k 4 D4 C11 0.1uF,100V FET1 CP8 470uF,100V +B
Low Frequency
RCA1 CP1 10uF R2 3.3k
CP4 1 R8 100k R11 270R 22uF VAA CSH 16
High Frequency
L1 22uH CH_OUT SPKR1 1 2
R3 SD D1 100R CP3
C4
+ CH1 -
-B
40
2: THD+N
THD+N is a sum of harmonic distortion components and noise, i.e. anything except fundamental spectrum. THD is a measure of linearity. Refer to Chapter 4 Noise is a measure of added errors not depending on the input signal Refer to Chapter 5
Fundamental
Fundamental
THD
3rd order harmonic
2nd order harmonic
frequency
THD+N
3rd order harmonic Noise
2nd order harmonic
frequency
41
What is Distortion?
THD is a simple way to measure non-linearity of the amplifier. If the amplifier is not linear, it generates harmonics.
Any repetitive waveforms can be expressed as a sum of sinusoidal signal as
Harmonic distortion is a ratio of rms value of the harmonic component and the original waveform. Total harmonic distortion is a ratio of rms value of sum of the all harmonic component and the original waveform.
42
How to Read THD+N vs. Power
100
T
IRAUDAMP4 THD+N
10
30 V
THD+N vs. Power spells
out noise floor, distortion and output power in a shot.
1 % 0.1
25 V 35 V
Noise floor dominant part
has 20dB/dec slope.
0.01
Reading above noise floor
slope is dominated by harmonic distortion.
200m 500m 1 2 W 5 10 20 50 100 200
0.001 100m
To trouble shoot, better to
start with single channel operation.
Noise floor
Distortion
Clipping
43
Check for..
R117 3.3k 1w R17 R22 10K U1 CP4 1 R8 100k VAA GND INCOMP CSD VSS VREF OCSET IRS2092S DIP CSH VB HO VS VCC LO COM DT 16 15 22uF 3 1nF 1nF C6 5 10uF 6 CP2 22uF R118 3.3k 1w R13 10k 8 R12 8.7k 9 R26 10k R27 10k CP5 22uF VCC 7 11 -B 10 R21 10R R23 4.7K 12 D3 R20 4.7R 20R R25 LED1 Blue C14 0.1uF CP7 470uF,100V 1 2 -B C13 0.1uF, 400V C7 1nF 4 14 VS1 13 20R R24 3 C12 0.47uF, 400V R30 R31 10, 1W 2.2k 4 75k R18 9.6k R19 10k CP6 2 D4 C11 0.1uF,100V FET1 5 CP8 470uF,100V +B
Ceramic?
RCA1 CP1 10uF R2 3.3k
dead-time
R11 270R
22uF
LPF
L1 22uH CH_OUT SPKR1 1 2
R3 SD D1 100R CP3
C4
+ CH1 -
-B
Switching noise coupling
44
Audio Measurement Setup
Amplifier Output
20KHz LPF
Amplifier Output Filtered
Amplifier Input
For more information on Class D audio measurement, refer to white paper, Measuring Switch-mode Power Amplifiers by Bruce Hofer, from //ap.com
45
Audio Measurement Setup with IRAUDAMP7D
Audio Precision System Two with AES-17 Filter
46
AP Substitute
Old audio analyzers are not designed to
tolerate high frequency noise that is from carrier signal residual from a Class D amplifier.
Place a 3rd order LPF to remove the
switching carrier ingredients in front of the audio analyzer changing scaling range manually
Check measurements are correct by
An Example of an additional pre-LPF for HP8903B
470 R1 8 R4 680 R2 1K R3
4.7n C1
2.2n C2
1n C3
To HP8903B Dummy Load
47
Chapter 4: Reducing Distortion ~dead-time ~ LPF Designs
Trade-off 1: Dead-time and Distortion
34 40
30
20
1 Positive half cycle: Hard Switching 2 4 Cross over region: ZVS
10
Vout( t )
10
20
30 34 40 0 0
3 Negative half cycle: Hard Switching
5 .10
4
0.001 t
0.0015
0.002 0.0021
Dead-time reduces volt-second therefore voltage gain. There is a region that dead-time does not affect around zero crossing (regions 2 and 4). The smaller the dead-time, the lower the distortion. Too narrow dead-time could cause shoot-through from unit-to-unit, temperature and production variations, that could seriously affect product reliability. Audio performance and reliability is NOT a trade-off. 49
Gate Drive and Switching Output
ZVS Region Turning off of the previous MOSFET dictates transition in switching waveform. Hard Switching Region Turning on dictates output switching waveform.
High-side VGS
Low-side VGS
Switching Node VS
50
PWM Switching Cycle
1 High Side ON
+B
VBS +B
VCC
-B
4 Dead-time
?
VBS +B
2 Dead-time
?
VBS +B
VCC
-B
VCC
-B
-B
VBS
+B
VCC
-B
3 Low Side ON 51
During Dead-time
Polarity of IL is always toward the load VS follows high side switch status Polarity of IL alternates VS follows turning off edges of both high and low sides ZVS No influence from dead-time insertion Polarity of IL is always toward the amp VS follows low side switch status
2 4
Note: Dead-time insertion reduces volt-second of VS. Dead-time inserted in the rising edge of the high side affects the operating region 1. Dead-time inserted in the rising edge of the low side affects the operating region 3. As a result, output voltage gets lower than it should be, causing non-linearity in the output stage.
52
Trade-off 2: Inductor and Distortion
The quality of the output inductor
is crucial to achieve not only the target audio performance but also efficiency.
THD characteristic with various inductors
100 T TTTT TT T 10
Inductance changes with load
current, which causes distortion.
0.1
0.01
Core saturation increase inductor
ripple significantly that can trigger over current protection.
Inductance
0.001
0.0001 100m 200m 500m 1 2 5 W 10 20 50 100 200
Soft saturation core Hard saturation core Load current
Frequency characteristic of IRAUDAMP4
53
LPF Design
Set corner frequency according to
the bandwidth requirement.
Inductance and inductor ripple
Design LC-LPF with Q=0.7 for a
nominal load impedance to attain flat frequency response. Note that - The higher the corner frequency the higher the switching carrier leakage - The lower the corner frequency the bigger the inductance size
I L PP =
Vbus L f SW
Inductor ripple current dictates ZVS region
Lower Switching Frequency
Higher Ripple Current Higher Corner Frequency
Higher Ripple Current
54
LPF Design
1. Decide the order of the filter based on the attenuation of the switching frequency given by:
f 2 N At = 10 log 1 + fC
2nd order LPF
3rd order LPF
4th order LPF
2. Design Butterworth filter
# of Order Lk1 Ck1 Lk2 Ck2
Ln = Cn =
RL Lk n 2 fC Ck n 2 f C RL
1.414214
0.707107
1.5000
1.3333
0.5000
1.530734
1.577161
1.082392
0.382683
3. Design Zobel network
55
Choosing Inductor for LPF
Air Coil Large, High DCR, Low distortion, Leakage flux
Drum Core (Ferrite, Open Circuit)
Small, Leakage Flux, Low DCR
Drum Core (Ferrite, Closed Circuit)
Small, Hard saturation, Low DCR
Toroidal Core (Iron Powder)
Soft saturation, Lower iron loss
NOTE Ferrite core is suitable for smaller size Iron powder is suitable for high power
Determine IRMS rating for temperature rise condition with 1/8 rated power Determine peak current (ISAT) based on maximum load current
56
Choosing Capacitor for LPF
Polyester film, winding Small, High ESR
Ceramic
High dielectric type has large distortion, lower AC ratings
Polyester, non-inductive
Small, lower AC voltage rating
Polypropylene, non-inductive
Low dissipation factor, large size, low distortion
NOTE Do not use winding structure types. Use stacked structure. Check AC voltage ratings at highest audio frequency.
57
LPF Design Example
+ 4 + 2 + d 0 B r 2 4 6
Corner frequency: 40kHz Load impedance: 4 ohms Output power: 250W (32Vrms, 11Apeak)
22uH
8 4
8 10 2 0 5 0 10 0 20 0 50 0 1 2 k Hz k 5 k 10 k 20 k 50 k 200 k
0.1uF 0.47uF 10
Sagami 7G17B220 22H, 13A, 10m Ferrite, closed circuit with inner gap
EPCOS B32652A4474J Polypropylene, 0.47F, 400VDC
58
Chapter 5: Reducing Noise ~ Noise Isolation Technique ~ PCB Design
Sources of Noise in Class D Amplifier
Switching noise Switching noise is generated by the output MOSFET switching in wide range of frequency spectrum above the audible range. The amount of switching noise depends on: Switching speed Size of the MOSFET Load current PCB layout Locations and quality of bypass capacitors Audio noise Audio noise is a noise ingredient in audible frequency range in the speaker output. Major causes of audio noise includes: Noise figure (NF) in the front-end error amplifier Jitter in switching time RFI noise from switching noise injection Thermal noise from resistors Hum noise (AC line 60Hz and its harmonics) from ground loop
60
Noise Reduction Strategy
1. Minimize noise source in switching stage
2. Maximize noise immunity in analog stage
3. Minimizing noise coupling from switching stage to analog stage
61
1: Minimizing Noise Source
Self-commutation at idling. If rings, check for shoot-through, check dead time. Reverse recovery charge, Qrr, causes hard switching that triggers resonance in stray reactance. Qrr is a function of di/dt, drain current and die temperature. Slower switching helps to reduce Qrr. Stray inductance is where excessive energy is stored. Look for optimum trace layouts to minimize stray inductance. Careful component selection is key to minimize stray reactance.
Low dV/dt driven by inductor and Coss High dV/dt driven by MOSFET turn on
Idling (ZVS)
Hard-switching
Rings triggered by Qrr
62
Reducing Noise with RC Snubber
RC voltage snubber is used to suppress voltage spikes in switching and power supply nodes. Resistor in RC snubber absorbs energy from reactance by damping resonance. To maximize effectiveness of a snubber - Resistance should be close to impedance of resonant element. - Capacitance should be larger than resonant capacitor. - Capacitance should be small enough not to cause too much dissipation in the resistor. Power dissipation from the resistor P= 2*f*(CV2)
63
Snubber and THD
Adding snubber usually improves THD+N. Change should be in hard switching region. Basic approach: Make all efforts to minimize stray inductances and current loop areas (minimize resonant energy), then tailor snubber values. Pay attention to dissipation at snubber.
% 0.02 0.01 0.005
1 0.5
0.2 0.1 0.05
0.002 0.001 100m
200m
500m
5 W
10
20
50
100
300
Sweep 1 2
Trace 1 1
Color Red Blue
Line Style Solid Solid
Thick 2 2
Data Anlr.THD+N Ratio Anlr.THD+N Ratio
Axis Left Left
Comment original+150p+10ohighside original (low side snubber onl
64
2: Maximizing Noise Immunity
NOTE Ground can be a route of noise injection to error amplifier
Input RF Filter Filter out HF noise and reduce node impedance at high frequency Differential Input RFI Filter Prevent RFI causing audio frequency interferences from switching rings
Feedback LPF Weed out high frequency spectrum to avoid TIM distortion in the error amplifier
65
RFI
Analog stage uses non-linear components such as diode, BJT and FET. When a non-linear component receives high frequency components, it detects envelop information that could fall into audio frequency range (amplitude modulation envelop detector). When non-linear components receives high frequency components along with audio signal, it could shift operating bias point and cause distortion in audio signal.
Diode amplitude detector
66
3: Minimizing Noise Coupling
There are functional blocks that generate noise. There are functional blocks that are sensitive to noise. The PCB designer should identify them and find out the best combination of the placement based on these facts and mechanical and thermal requirements. Noise sensitive functions: - The audio input circuitry - The PWM control circuitry - Noise generating functions - The gate driver stage - The switching stage
Noise Generating Nodes
Noise Sensitive Nodes
67
Switching Noise Injection Example
Noise Coupling from VS Insufficient Bypass Cap Original Design (IRAUDAMP7D)
68
PCB Design Tips
The first and most important step for PCB designers is to group components dedicated to a common purpose, such as: - the audio input circuitry - the PWM control circuitry - the gate driver stage - the switching stage By identifying which components belong together, place the remaining circuitry by coupling them appropriately into open areas of the board.
Key Components Layout Example (IRAUDAMP7D)
PWM
GATE DRIVE
MOSFET
LPF
Placement Determines Maximum Performance !
69
PCB Layout Example
Audio Input, Error Amplifier
Note that Separation between analog and switching sections Minimized trace impedances with planes in power section No overlap between switching nodes and analog nodes
Analog Section
Gate Drive Section
Switching Nodes
Load Current Paths
Power Section 70
APPENDIX
Simulation of a Simple Class D Amplifier (SIMetrix)
Feedback
47k R1 1n C1 220 R2 10k 2.5*(1+tanh(1e4*v(n1,n2))) ARB1 DELAY N1 OUT ARB1-OUT N2 1n C2 E2-N 10u C8 3.3k R8
0 IC
HC04D U5 250n U1
HC04D HO U2 LO S1 D3 IDEAL 50 V4
AC 1 0 Sine(0 1 5k 0 0) V5
E3
18u L1 S2 470n C3 D4 IDEAL 4 R6 sp out
Integrator
Comparator
Delay
Gate Driver
Note Disable initial DC operating point analysis Add initial value in the feedback loop to start off oscillation Get into further work once basic ideal model is confirmed
MOSFET
LPF
50 V1
Simulation set up with SIMetrix
Trial version of SIMetrix can be downloaded from: http://www.catena.uk.com/
72
Simulation Result Example
100
80
Switching Node
60
40
20
Gate and other internal nodes
-20
Speaker Output
-40 150 T im e / S e c s 200 250 300 350 400 450 5 0 S e c s / d iv
73
END
February 19, 2009