Victor Ceron
It would be a mistake to dismiss the ever-present television set as lacking innovation. According to the Consumer Technology Association (CTA), every year more than 200 million TVs are sold worldwide. Although overall the technology is mature, with low growth of 1-2% and dozens of competitors, the most innovative TVs, like 4K TVs, will grow at an amazing 55% year over year for a total of 82 million units in 2017.
Higher-resolution TVs push the innovation frontier even further; however, innovation can take many forms like lower system cost, moreso in competitive markets.
Before digging into how to push the boundaries of cost-saving innovations, let’s understand TVs a little bit better.
Figure 1 shows a typical TV block diagram. As ubiquitous as TVs are, they are not a simple piece of technology. A TV is made of many different complex systems in a very small and slim enclosure, including:
Not only do these systems have to work well together, but they must not electromagnetically interfere with other nearby equipment; in other words, their electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) emissions have to be low enough to pass EMC/electromagnetic interference (EMI) standards.
You have two choices when selecting the best audio amplifier for your Bluetooth® speaker systems: Class-AB or Class-D.
Class-AB audio amplifiers are linear amplifiers that generate no EMI and do not require many external electronic components. They are highly inefficient, however, and require substantial passive or even active thermal management in the form of heat sinks and fans.
Class-D audio amplifiers are highly efficient switching amplifiers that need very little thermal management; however, they require output inductors that are not exempt from EMI concerns.
A TV poses an interesting design challenge: how to keep costs down while minimizing system size in order to fit everything into a very slim and space-limited enclosure.
As stated above, Class-AB audio amplifiers generate no EMI and do not require many external electronic components; as such, you would think that they would be ideal for TVs. But their low efficiency means that the amplifier would have to dissipate a lot of heat. Preventing thermal damage to the amplifier would require a bulky and expensive external heat sink that could not fit in such a small enclosure.
Class-D amplifiers’ high efficiency means that dissipated heat is kept very low and no external heatsinking is necessary; although external inductors are required, total system cost, weight and size are reduced. These additional output inductors may complicate EMC compliance, however.
To complicate matters, TVs use long wires, shown in Figure 2, to connect multiple systems to each other, exacerbating EMI concerns. These long wires typically connect the power supply to the main circuit board, the main circuit board to other secondary boards, and the audio amplifier to multiple speakers.
In the past, these EMI concerns lengthened development time and increased cost, since component selection and placement impact EMI. Satisfying EMC compliance or adding filtering or shielding could require multiple board designs, increasing system costs dramatically.
TI’s latest generation of inductor-free Class-D amplifiers, like the TPA3136D2 and TPA3137D2, solve both of these problems: system cost and EMI performance.
Inductor-free Class-D audio amplifiers are not new on the market; these types of amplifiers generate sound without inductors and use very low-cost ferrite beads instead of costly external inductors, although this feature comes at the expense of EMC performance. In the past, inductor-free technology was not widely used because EMC compliance would be even more difficult with ferrite beads.
By using advanced EMI suppression technology with spread spectrum control, the TPA3136D2 and TPA3137D2’s inductor-free technology enables the amplifier to use low-cost ferrite beads while maximizing EMC performance. Figure 3 shows TPA3136D2 and TPA3137D2 EMC performance with low-cost ferrite beads.
You can also use TI’s inductor-free Class-D audio amplifiers in sound bars, home theaters and other audio equipment.
Have you had trouble passing EMC standards when using Class-D audio amplifiers? How did you resolve it? Log in and leave a comment below.
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