Design
Goals
LDO Input Voltage |
LDO Output Voltage |
Voltage Supervisor Mute
Threshold(1) |
12V |
3.3V |
7V |
(1) If the
VBATTERY voltage is below this threshold, MUTE should be asserted.
Design Description
Power
conditioning is a critical aspect in audio applications. Circuits commonly found in automotive head units and premium
aftermarket automotive audio systems will implement a hardware level mute that
verifies that the audio digital-to-analog converters (DACs) and amplifiers are muted as
supplies are established. The supplies will also need some conditioning to reduce noise
coupled into the audio DAC. This circuit shows a low-noise, low-dropout (LDO) voltage
regulator used to generate the +3.3-V supply for an audio DAC. An added benefit of an LDO is
that there is a wider input voltage range at which the LDO can maintain the supply voltage.
A voltage supervisor is used to notify the DAC when the source of the LDO begins to
collapse, so the audio DAC can soft-mute the output before its supply is removed. This will
reduce unwanted clicking or pops during shutdown and startup.
Design Notes
- In this circuit the DAC mutes
the output when soft-mute pin (XSMT) is held low,
but not all DACs feature active-low mute inputs.
Some devices feature enable signals for other
devices such as mute switches and amplifiers
require MUTE to be active high. In those cases, a
simple N-channel MOSFET can be added to the output
to invert the signal.
- During power-up events, the
capacitor on the CT pin (CCT) of the
supervisor allows additional delay from when the
SNS pin value rises above the threshold voltage
and when the SNS_OUT goes high. This can be used
to the delay the deactivation of the
MUTE output for the LDO to
establish its voltage (as it must charge the
output capacitors). In addition, this can be
useful if there are other devices that need time
to initialize before the DAC comes out of mute.
The additional propagation delay can be calculated
using the following equation:
- Brown-out events occur when the
supplies of a device are partially reduced, but not low enough to issue a full power-on
reset (POR) within the device. For this reason, it is recommended to confirm a full reset
occurs during these events. The supervisor circuit accomplishes this as the XSMT acts as a
reset circuit for the audio DAC.
- Most audio DACs operate in
either a VCOM or VREF architecture. The VCOM
architecture uses a simple voltage divider from
the supply to create the output amplitude
reference. This is beneficial as it ensures that
there will not be output clipping from the DAC if
the supply is not the nominal value, as the output
scales with the input voltage. The drawback of
this architecture is the limited power-supply
rejection ratio (PSRR) for the power supply noise.
While a capacitor on the VCOM pin of the audio DAC
will provide some filtering, it may still impact
the output.
In
a VREF configuration, an internal reference is
generated by the audio DAC. This will result in
better PSRR performance for the system. The
drawback of this design is that if the supply
voltage does drop, the output could clip.
Design Steps
- Select an LDO regulator for its current output
capability, voltage-input range, and output noise.
At minimum, the LDO sourcing the audio DAC must be
able to supply the required current of the DAC. In
addition, if there are other devices on the same
bus, such as amplifiers, then the quiescent
current of those devices must be taken into
account. The LDO input voltage range must
accommodate the main supply source, which, in this
circuit, is assumed to be a 12-V battery.
- The feedback (FB) voltage must be calculated to
provide the correct output voltage. In this
circuit, the resistors R1 and
R2 can be calculated as the following
shows.
Given the design goal of +3.3V for
VDD, and the VREF for this
LDO is approximately 0.8V, use a R1 of
35.7kΩ and R2 of 11.5kΩ. In addition,
note that the FB node has a current requirement
and it is recommended that the following equation
is used for guidance when selecting
R2.
- Select the voltage supervisor
for the features desired in the system. In this
circuit, the selected supervisor has an enable
input pin. This feature allows a user (or
microcontroller) mute signal to be used to
override the supervisor output. In addition, some
supervisors allow multiple supply rails to be
monitored, which is useful for the output
amplifiers.
- The sense voltage is calculated using the
following equation.
The
SNS-OUT pin is pulled low when the SNS voltage is
less than the reference voltage, approximately
1.15V. Using 10kΩ for R3 and 2kΩ for
R4, it is estimated that the device
will be muted if the VBATTERY supply
drops below approximately 6.9V.
The
capacitor CNR/SS is used by the LDO to
reduce noise and enables the LDO soft-start
function.
- The DAC is selected based on the
needs of the application. Consider the required
SNR, THD+N, and supported I2S interface sample
rates. While most audio DACs support rates ranging
from 16kHz to 192kHz, not all support rates like
384kHz or 768kHz. Higher rates result in noise
shaping that moves the out-of-band noise further
from the audible range, but not all audio sources
can provide them.
- The capacitors used for the
audio filter should be COG, NP0 type ceramics.
COG, NP0 type capacitors have a lower voltage
coefficient of capacitance, meaning that the
capacitive value of the component is less impacted
by the voltage bias across the device. As the
capacitors are key for performance of the filter,
other types of ceramic capacitors should be
avoided in the signal path.
- The capacitors used for the
input and output of the LDO should have low
equivalent series resistance (ESR), such as X7R-,
X5R-, and COG-type capacitors.
- The resistors used for the LDO
and voltage supervisor can be thick-film, though
the accuracy of the resistor dividers will impact
the LDO output voltage and the supervisor
threshold. For this reason, it recommended that
R1, R2, R3, and
R4 have a maximum tolerance of 1%.
- Thin-film resistors are
recommended for the resistive elements in the DAC
output filter.
Power-Up Mute Transient
The following
simulation shows the power-up transient of the
circuit. It can be seen that
MUTE output is not released
until the VBAT input reaches approximately 6.9V.
Power-Down Mute Transient
The following simulation shows that the
MUTE output is asserted to low when the VBAT input drops below
6.9V.
Brown-Out Mute Transient
The following simulation demonstrates that
the DAC will be in a mute condition before the VDD supply of the DAC is compromised by the
brown-out event. When the VBAT voltage drops below approximately 6.9V, the
MUTE signal is asserted low. Once the VBAT recovers, the
MUTE signal deasserted.
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Link |
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