LM4846 Output Capacitor-less Audio Subsystem with Programmable National 3D General Description Key Specifications The LM4846 is an audio power amplifier capable of delivering 500mW of continuous average power into a mono 8Ω bridged-tied load (BTL) with 1% THD+N, 25mW per channel of continuous average power into stereo 32Ω single-ended (SE) loads with 1% THD+N, or an output capacitor-less (OCL) configuration with identical specification as the SE configuration, from a 3.3V power supply. The LM4846 features a 32-step digital volume control and eight distinct output modes. The digital volume control, 3D enhancement, and output modes (mono/SE/OCL) are programmed through a two-wire I2C or a three-wire SPI compatible interface that allows flexibility in routing and mixing audio channels. The LM4846 has three input channels: one pair for a two-channel stereo signal and the third for a single-channel mono input. The LM4846 is designed for cellular phone, PDA, and other portable handheld applications. It delivers high quality output power from a surface-mount package and requires only seven external components in the OCL mode (two additional components in SE mode). j THD+N at 1kHz, 500mW into 8Ω BTL (3.3V) 1.0% (typ) j THD+N at 1kHz, 30mW into 32Ω SE (3.3V) 1.0% (typ) j Single Supply Operation (VDD) 2.7 to 5.5V j I2C/SPI Single Supply Operation 2.2 to 5.5V Features n I2C/SPI Control Interface n I2C/SPI programmable National 3D Audio n I2C/SPI controlled 32 step digital volume control (-54dB to +18dB) n Three independent volume channels (Left, Right, Mono) n Eight distinct output modes n microSMD surface mount packaging n “Click and Pop” suppression circuitry n Thermal shutdown protection n Low shutdown current (0.1uA, typ) Applications n Moblie Phones n PDAs Boomer ® is a registered trademark of National Semiconductor Corporation. © 2005 National Semiconductor Corporation DS201668 www.national.com LM4846 Output Capacitor-less Audio Subsystem with Programmable National 3D December 2005 LM4846 Typical Application 20166866 FIGURE 1. Typical Audio Amplifier Application Circuit-Output Capacitor-less www.national.com 2 LM4846 Typical Application (Continued) 20166867 FIGURE 2. Typical Audio Amplifier Application Circuit-Single Ended 3 www.national.com LM4846 Connection Diagrams 25-Bump micro SMD 201668K0 Top View XY - Date Code TT - Die Traceability G - Boomer Family G5 - LM4846TL 201668K1 Top View Pin Descriptions Bump Name 1 A1 SDA Description 2 A2 I2CSPI_VDD 3 A3 RHP3D2 4 A4 RHP3D1 5 A5 VOC 6 B1 MONO- 7 B2 SCL 8 B3 ID_ENB 9 B4 Phone_In Mono Input No Connect I2C or SPI Data I2C or SPI Interface Power Supply Right Headphone 3D Input 2 Right Headphone 3D Input 1 Center Amplifier Output Loudspeaker Negative Output I2C or SPI Clock Address Identification/Enable Bar 10 B5 NC 11 C1 GND Ground 12 C2 VDD Power Supply 13 C3 VDD Power Supply 14 C4 VDD Power Supply 15 C5 GND GND 16 D1 MONO+ 17 D2 NC 18 D3 LHP3D1 19 D4 RIN 20 D5 ROUT 21 E1 I2C SPI_SEL 22 E2 CBYPASS 23 E3 LHP3D2 24 E4 LIN 25 E5 LOUT www.national.com Loudspeaker Positive Output No Connect Left Headphone 3D Input 1 Right Input Channel Right Headphone Output I2C or SPI Select Half-Supply Bypass Left Headphone 3D Input 2 Left Input Channel Left Headphone Output 4 If Military/Aerospace specified devices are required, please contact the National Semiconductor Sales Office/ Distributors for availability and specifications. Supply Voltage Vapor Phase (60 sec.) 215˚C Infrared (15 sec.) 220˚C Thermal Resistance θJA (typ) - TLA25CBA 65˚C/W (Note 8) 6.0V Storage Temperature −65˚C to +150˚C Input Voltage −0.3 to VDD +0.3 ESD Susceptibility (Note 3) ESD Machine model (Note 6) Junction Temperature (TJ) Operating Ratings (Note 2) 2.0kV Temperature Range 200V Supply Voltage (VDD) 2.7V ≤ VDD ≤ 5.5V Supply Voltage (I2C/SPI) 2.2V ≤ VDD ≤ 5.5V 150˚C −40˚C to 85˚C Solder Information (Note 1) Electrical Characteristics 3.3V (Notes 2, 7) The following specifications apply for VDD = 3.3V, TA = 25˚C unless otherwise specified. [AV = 2 (BTL), AV = 1 (SE)] Symbol IDD Parameter Supply Current Conditions Output Modes 2, 4, 6 VIN = 0V; No load, OCL = 0 (Table 2) Output Modes 1, 3, 5, 7 VIN = 0V; No load, BTL, OCL = 0 (Table 2) LM4846 Units (Limits) Typical (Note 4) Limits (Note 5) 3.3 6.5 mA (max) 6 11 mA (max) ISD Shutdown Current Output Mode 0 0.1 1 µA (max) VOS Output Offset Voltage VIN = 0V, Mode 5 (Note 10) 10 50 mV (max) MONO OUT; RL = 8Ω THD+N = 1%; f = 1kHz, BTL, Mode 1 500 400 mW (min) ROUT and LOUT; RL = 32Ω THD+N = 1%; f = 1kHz, SE, Mode 4 42 20 mW (min) MONOOUT f = 20Hz to 20kHz POUT = 250mW; RL = 8Ω, BTL, Mode 1 0.5 % ROUT and LOUT f = 20Hz to 20kHz POUT = 12mW; RL = 32Ω, SE, Mode 4 0.5 % 26 µV Output Mode 1,7 71 dB Output Mode 3 68 dB Output Mode 5 63 dB Output Mode 2 88 dB Output Mode 4 76 dB Output Mode 6, 7 76 dB PO THD+N NOUT Output Power Total Harmonic Distortion Plus Noise Output Noise Power Supply Rejection Ratio MONOOUT PSRR Power Supply Rejection Ratio ROUT and LOUT A-weighted (Note 9), Mode 5, BTL input referred VRIPPLE = 200mVPP; f = 217Hz, CB = 2.2µF, BTL All audio inputs terminated into 50Ω; output referred gain = 6dB (BTL) VRIPPLE = 200mVPP; f = 217Hz CB = 2.2µF, SE, CO = 100µF All audio inputs terminated into 50Ω; output referred gain, OCL = 0 (Table 2) 5 www.national.com LM4846 Absolute Maximum Ratings (Note 2) LM4846 Electrical Characteristics 3.3V (Notes 2, 7) (Continued) The following specifications apply for VDD = 3.3V, TA = 25˚C unless otherwise specified. [AV = 2 (BTL), AV = 1 (SE)] Symbol Parameter Digital Volume Range (RIN and LIN) Mute Attenuation MONO_IN Input Impedance RIN and LIN Input Impedance www.national.com Conditions LM4846 Units (Limits) Typical (Note 4) Limits (Note 5) Input referred maximum attenuation -54 –53.25 –54.75 dB (min) dB (max) Input referred maximum gain 18 17.25 18.75 dB (min) dB (max) Output Mode 1, 3, 5 80 kΩ (min) kΩ (max) kΩ (min) kΩ (max) dB Maximum gain setting 11 8 14 Maximum attenuation setting 100 75 125 6 LM4846 Electrical Characteristics 5.0V (Notes 3, 7) The following specifications apply for VDD = 5.0V, TA = 25˚C unless otherwise specified. [AV = 2 (BTL), AV = 1 (SE)]. Symbol Parameter Conditions LM4846 Typical (Note 4) IDD Supply Current Limits (Notes 5, 10) Units (Limits) Output Modes 2, 4, 6 VIN = 0V; No load, OCL = 0 (Table 2) 3.6 mA Output Modes 1, 3, 5, 7 VIN = 0V; No Load, OCL = 0 (Table 2) 6.8 mA ISD Shutdown Current Output Mode 0 0.1 µA VOS Output Offset Voltage VIN = 0V, Mode 5 (Note 10) PO THD+N NOUT Output Power Total Harmonic Distortion Plus Noise Output Noise Power Supply Rejection Ratio MONOOUT PSRR Power Supply Rejection Ratio ROUT and LOUT Digital Volume Range (RIN and LIN) Mute Attenuation MONO_IN Input Impedance RIN and LIN Input Impedance 10 mV MONOOUT; RL = 8Ω THD+N = 1%; f = 1kHz, BTL, Mode 1 1.15 W ROUT and LOUT; RL = 32Ω THD+N = 1%; f = 1kHz, SE, Mode 4 75 mW MONOOUT f = 20Hz to 20kHz POUT = 500mW; RL = 8Ω, BTL, Mode 1 0.5 % ROUT and LOUT f = 20Hz to 20kHz POUT = 30mW; RL = 32Ω,SE, Mode 4 0.5 % 26 µV Output Mode 1, 7 71 dB Output Mode 3 68 dB Output Mode 5 63 dB Output Mode 2 88 dB Output Mode 4 76 dB Output Mode 6, 7 76 dB Input referred maximum attenuation -54 –53.25 –54.75 dB dB Input referred maximum gain 18 17.25 18.75 dB dB Output Mode 1, 3, 5 80 dB Maximum gain setting 11 kΩ kΩ Minimum gain setting 100 kΩ kΩ A-weighted (Note 9), Mode 5, BTL input referred VRIPPLE = 200mVPP; f = 217Hz, CB = 2.2µF, BTL All audio inputs terminated into 50Ω; output referred gain = 6dB (BTL) VRIPPLE = 200mVPP; f = 217Hz, CB = 2.2µF, SE, CO = 100µF All audio inputs terminated into 50Ω; output referred gain, OCL = 0 (Table 2) 7 www.national.com LM4846 I2C/SPI (Notes 2, 7) The following specifications apply for VDD = 5.0V and 3.3V, TA = 25˚C unless otherwise specified. Symbol Parameter Conditions LM4846 Typical (Note 4) Limits (Notes 5, 10) Units (Limits) t1 I2C Clock Period 2.5 µs (max) t2 I2C Clock Setup Time 100 ns (min) t3 I2C Data Hold Time 100 ns (min) t4 Start Condition Time 100 ns (min) t5 Stop Condition Time 100 ns (min) fSPI Maximum SPI Frequency 1000 kHz (max) tEL SPI ENB Low Time 100 ns (min) tDS SPI Data Setup Time 100 µs (max) tES SPI ENB Setup Time 100 ns (min) tDH SPI Data Hold Time 100 ns (min) tEH SPI Enable Hold Time 100 ns (min) tCL SPI Clock Low Time 500 ns (min) tCH SPI Clock High Time 500 ns (min) tCS SPI Clock Transition Time 100 ns (min) VIH I2C/SPI Input Voltage High 0.7xI2CSPI VDD V (min) VIL I2C/SPI Input Voltage Low 0.3xI2CSPI VDD V (max) Note 1: See AN-450 "Surface Mounting and their effects on Product Reliability" for other methods of soldering surface mount devices. Note 2: Operating Ratings indicate conditions for which the device is functional, but do not guarantee specific performance limits. For guaranteed specifications and test conditions, see the Electrical Characteristics. The guaranteed specifications apply only for the test conditions listed. Some performance characteristics may degrade when the device is not operated under the listed test conditions. Note 3: Human body model, 100pF discharged through a 1.5kΩ resistor. Note 4: Typical specifications are specified at +25˚C and represent the most likely parametric norm. Note 5: Tested limits are guaranteed to National’s AOQL (Average Outgoing Quality Level). Note 6: Machine Model ESD test is covered by specification EIAJ IC-121-1981. A 200pF cap is charged to the specified voltage, then discharged directly into the IC with no external series resistor (resistance of discharge path must be under 50Ω). Note 7: All voltages are measured with respect to the ground pin, unless otherwise specified. Note 8: The given θJA for an LM4846ITL mounted on a demonstration board with a 9in2 area of 1oz printed circuit board copper ground plane. Note 9: Datasheet min/max specifications are guaranteed by design, test, or statistical analysis. Note 10: Potentially worse case: All three input stages are DC coupled to the BTL output stage. www.national.com 8 I2C PIN DESCRIPTION For I2C interface operation, the I2CSPI_SEL pin needs to be tied LOW (and tied high for SPI operation). SDA: This is the serial data input pin. SCL: This is the clock input pin. After the last bit of the address bit is sent, the master releases the data line HIGH (through a pull-up resistor). Then the master sends an acknowledge clock pulse. If the LM4846 has received the address correctly, then it holds the data line LOW during the clock pulse. If the data line is not held LOW during the acknowledge clock pulse, then the master should abort the rest of the data transfer to the LM4846. ID_ENB: This is the address select input pin. I2CSPI_SEL: This is tied LOW for I2C mode. I2C COMPATIBLE INTERFACE The LM4846 uses a serial bus which conforms to the I2C protocol to control the chip’s functions with two wires: clock (SCL) and data (SDA). The clock line is uni-directional. The data line is bi-directional (open-collector). The maximum clock frequency specified by the I2C standard is 400kHz. In this discussion, the master is the controlling microcontroller and the slave is the LM4846. The I2C address for the LM4846 is determined using the ID_ENB pin. The LM4846’s two possible I2C chip addresses are of the form 111110X10 (binary), where X1 = 0, if ID_ENB is logic LOW; and X1 = 1, if ID_ENB is logic HIGH. If the I2C interface is used to address a number of chips in a system, the LM4846’s chip address can be changed to avoid any possible address conflicts. The bus format for the I2C interface is shown in Figure 3. The bus format diagram is broken up into six major sections: The 8 bits of data are sent next, most significant bit first. Each data bit should be valid while the clock level is stable HIGH. After the data byte is sent, the master must check for another acknowledge to see if the LM4846 received the data. If the master has more data bytes to send to the LM4846, then the master can repeat the previous two steps until all data bytes have been sent. The "stop" signal ends the transfer. To signal "stop", the data signal goes HIGH while the clock signal is HIGH. The data line should be held HIGH when not in use. I2C INTERFACE POWER SUPPLY PIN (I2CVDD) The LM4846’s I2C interface is powered up through the I2CVDD pin. The LM4846’s I2C interface operates at a voltage level set by the I2CVDD pin which can be set independent to that of the main power supply pin VDD. This is ideal whenever logic levels for the I2C interface are dictated by a microcontroller or microprocessor that is operating at a lower supply voltage than the main battery of a portable system. The "start" signal is generated by lowering the data signal while the clock signal is HIGH. The start signal will alert all devices attached to the I2C bus to check the incoming address against their own address. The 8-bit chip address is sent next, most significant bit first. The data is latched in on the rising edge of the clock. Each address bit must be stable while the clock level is HIGH. 201668F5 FIGURE 3. I2C Bus Format 9 www.national.com LM4846 Application Information LM4846 Application Information (Continued) 201668F4 FIGURE 4. I2C Timing Diagram 7. If ID_ENB remains HIGH for more than 100ns before all 8 bits are transmitted then the data latch will be aborted. 8. If ID_ENB is LOW for more than 8 CLK pulses then only the first 8 data bits will be latched and activated when ID_ENB transitions to logic-high. 9. ID_ENB must remain HIGH for at least 100ns (tEL ) to latch in the data. SPI DESCRIPTION 0. I2CSPI_SEL: This pin is tied HIGH for SPI mode. 1. The data bits are transmitted with the MSB first. 2. The maximum clock rate is 1MHz for the CLK pin. 3. CLK must remain HIGH for at least 500ns (tCH ) after the rising edge of CLK, and CLK must remain LOW for at least 500ns (tCL) after the falling edge of CLK. 4. The serial data bits are sampled at the rising edge of CLK. Any transition on DATA must occur at least 100ns (tDS) before the rising edge of CLK. Also, any transition on DATA must occur at least 100ns (tDH) after the rising edge of CLK and stabilize before the next rising edge of CLK. 10. Coincidental rising or falling edges of CLK and ID_ENB are not allowed. If CLK is to be held HIGH after the data transmission, the falling edge of CLK must occur at least 100ns (tCS) before ID_ENB transitions to LOW for the next set of data. 5.ID_ENB should be LOW only during serial data transmission. 6. ID_ENB must be LOW at least 100ns (tES ) before the first rising edge of CLK, and ID_ENB has to remain LOW at least 100ns (tEH) after the eighth rising edge of CLK. 20166824 FIGURE 5. SPI Timing Diagram www.national.com 10 LM4846 Application Information (Continued) TABLE 1. Chip Address A7 A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0 Chip Address 1 1 1 1 1 0 EC 0 ID_ENB = 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 ID_ENB = 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 TABLE 2. Control Registers D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 Mode Control 0 0 0 0 OCL MC2 MC1 MC0 Programmable 3D 0 1 0 0 N3D3 N3D2 N3D1 N3D0 Mono Volume Control 1 0 0 MVC4 MVC3 MVC2 MVC1 MVC0 Left Volume Control 1 1 0 LVC4 LVC3 LVC2 LVC1 LVC0 Right Volume Control 1 1 1 RVC4 RVC3 RVC2 RVC1 RVC0 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Bits MVC0 — MVC4 control 32 step volume control for MONO input Bits LVC0 — LVC4 control 32 step volume control for LEFT input Bits RVC0 — RVC4 control 32 step volume control for RIGHT input Bits MC0 — MC2 control 8 distinct modes Bits N3D3, N3D2, N3D1, N3D0 control programmable 3D function N3D0 turns the 3D function ON (N3D0 = 1) or OFF (N3D0 = 0), and N3D1 = 0 provides a “wider” aural effect or N3D1 = 1 a “narrower” aural effect Bit OCL selects between SE with output capacitor (OCL = 0) or SE without output capacitors (OCL = 1). Default is OCL = 0 N3D1 selects between two different 3D configurations TABLE 3. Programmable National 3D Audio N3D3 N3D2 Low 0 0 Medium 0 1 High 1 0 Maximum 1 1 TABLE 4. Output Mode Selection Output Mode Number MC2 MC1 MC0 0 0 0 0 SD SD SD 1 0 0 1 2 x GP x P MUTE MUTE GP x P Handsfree Speaker Output Right HP Output Left HP Output 2 0 1 0 SD GP x P 3 0 1 1 2 x (GL x L + GR x R) MUTE MUTE 4 1 0 0 SD GR x R GL x L 5 1 0 1 2 x (GL x L + GR x R + GP x P) MUTE MUTE 6 1 1 0 SD GR x R + GP x P GL x L + GP x P 7 1 1 1 2 x (GR x R + GL x L) GR x R GL x L On initial POWER ON, the default mode is 000 P = Phone in R = RIN L = LIN SD = Shutdown MUTE = Mute Mode GP = Phone In (Mono) volume control gain GR = Right stereo volume control gain GL = Left stereo volume control gain 11 www.national.com LM4846 Application Information (Continued) TABLE 5. Volume Control Table 1. 2. Volume Step xVC4 xVC3 xVC2 xVC1 xVC0 Headphone Gain, dB Speaker Gain, dB (BTL) 1 0 0 0 0 0 –54.00 –48.00 2 0 0 0 0 1 –46.50 –40.50 3 0 0 0 1 0 –40.50 –34.50 4 0 0 0 1 1 –34.50 –28.50 5 0 0 1 0 0 –30.00 –24.00 6 0 0 1 0 1 –27.00 –21.00 7 0 0 1 1 0 –24.00 –18.00 8 0 0 1 1 1 –21.00 –15.00 9 0 1 0 0 0 –18.00 –12.00 10 0 1 0 0 1 –15.00 –9.00 11 0 1 0 1 0 –13.50 –7.50 12 0 1 0 1 1 –12.00 –6.00 13 0 1 1 0 0 –10.50 –4.50 14 0 1 1 0 1 –9.00 –3.00 15 0 1 1 1 0 –7.50 –1.50 16 0 1 1 1 1 –6.00 0.00 17 1 0 0 0 0 –4.50 1.50 18 1 0 0 0 1 –3.00 3.00 19 1 0 0 1 0 –1.50 4.50 20 1 0 0 1 1 0.00 6.00 21 1 0 1 0 0 1.50 7.50 22 1 0 1 0 1 3.00 9.00 23 1 0 1 1 0 4.50 10.50 24 1 0 1 1 1 6.00 12.00 25 1 1 0 0 0 7.50 13.50 26 1 1 0 0 1 9.00 15.00 27 1 1 0 1 0 10.50 16.50 28 1 1 0 1 1 12.00 18.00 29 1 1 1 0 0 13.50 19.50 30 1 1 1 0 1 15.00 21.00 31 1 1 1 1 0 16.50 22.50 32 1 1 1 1 1 18.00 24.00 x = M, L, or R Gain / Attenuation is from input to output www.national.com 12 f3DR(-3dB) = 1 / 2π * 20kΩ * C3DR (Continued) NATIONAL 3D ENHANCEMENT (2) Optional resistors R3DL and R3DR can also be added (Figure 7) to affect the -3dB frequency and 3D magnitude. The LM4846 features a stereo headphone, 3D audio enhancement effect that widens the perceived soundstage from a stereo audio signal. The 3D audio enhancement creates a perceived spatial effect optimized for stereo headphone listening. The LM4846 can be programmed for a “narrow” or “wide” soundstage perception. The narrow soundstage has a more focused approaching sound direction, while the wide soundstage has a spatial, theater-like effect. Within each of these two modes, four discrete levels of 3D effect that can be programmed: low, medium, high, and maximum (Table 2), each level with an ever increasing aural effect, respectively. The difference between each level is 3dB. The external capacitors, shown in Figure 6, are required to enable the 3D effect. The value of the capacitors set the cutoff frequency of the 3D effect, as shown by Equations 1 and 2. Note that the internal 20kΩ resistor is nominal ( ± 25%). 20166894 FIGURE 7. External RC Network with Optional R3DL and R3DR Resistors f3DL(-3dB) = 1 / 2π * (20kΩ + R3DL) * C3DL (3) f3DR(-3dB) = 1 / 2π * 20kΩ + R3DR) * C3DR (4) ∆AV (change in AC gain) = 1 / 1 + M, where M represents some ratio of the nominal internal resistor, 20kΩ (see example below). 20166895 f3dB (3D) = 1 / 2π (1 + M)(20kΩ * C3D) (5) CEquivalent (new) = C3D / 1 + M (6) FIGURE 6. External 3D Effect Capacitors f3DL(-3dB) = 1 / 2π * 20kΩ * C3DL (1) TABLE 6. Pole Locations R3D (kΩ) (optional) C3D (nF) M ∆AV (dB) f-3dB (3D) (Hz) 0 68 0 0 117 1 68 0.05 –0.4 5 68 0.25 –1.9 10 68 0.50 20 68 1.00 Value of C3D to keep same pole location (nF) new Pole Location (Hz) 111 64.8 117 94 54.4 117 –3.5 78 45.3 117 –6.0 59 34.0 117 PCB LAYOUT AND SUPPLY REGULATION CONSIDERATIONS FOR DRIVING 8Ω LOAD Power dissipated by a load is a function of the voltage swing across the load and the load’s impedance. As load impedance decreases, load dissipation becomes increasingly dependent on the interconnect (PCB trace and wire) resistance between the amplifier output pins and the load’s connections. Residual trace resistance causes a voltage drop, which results in power dissipated in the trace and not in the load as desired. For example, 0.1Ω trace resistance reduces the output power dissipated by an 8Ω load from 158.3mW to 156.4mW. The problem of decreased load dissipation is exacerbated as load impedance decreases. Therefore, to maintain the highest load dissipation and widest output voltage swing, PCB traces that connect the output pins to a load must be as wide as possible. Poor power supply regulation adversely affects maximum output power. A poorly regulated supply’s output voltage decreases with increasing load current. Reduced supply voltage causes decreased headroom, output signal clipping, 13 www.national.com LM4846 Application Information LM4846 Application Information (Continued) The maximum internal power dissipation of the LM4846 occurs when all 3 amplifiers pairs are simultaneously on; and is given by Equation (11). and reduced output power. Even with tightly regulated supplies, trace resistance creates the same effects as poor supply regulation. Therefore, making the power supply traces as wide as possible helps maintain full output voltage swing. PDMAX-TOTAL = PDMAX-SPKROUT + PDMAX-LOUT + PDMAX-ROUT BRIDGE CONFIGURATION EXPLANATION The maximum power dissipation point given by Equation (11) must not exceed the power dissipation given by Equation (12): (12) PDMAX = (TJMAX - TA) / θJA The LM4846 drives a load, such as a speaker, connected between outputs, MONO+ and MONO-. This results in both amplifiers producing signals identical in magnitude, but 180˚ out of phase. Taking advantage of this phase difference, a load is placed between MONO- and MONO+ and driven differentially (commonly referred to as ”bridge mode”). This results in a differential or BTL gain of: AVD = 2(Rf / Ri) = 2 The LM4846’s TJMAX = 150˚C. In the ITL package, the LM4846’s θJA is 65˚C/W. At any given ambient temperature TA, use Equation (12) to find the maximum internal power dissipation supported by the IC packaging. Rearranging Equation (12) and substituting PDMAX-TOTAL for PDMAX’ results in Equation (13). This equation gives the maximum ambient temperature that still allows maximum stereo power dissipation without violating the LM4846’s maximum junction temperature. (13) TA = TJMAX - PDMAX-TOTAL θJA (7) Bridge mode amplifiers are different from single-ended amplifiers that drive loads connected between a single amplifier’s output and ground. For a given supply voltage, bridge mode has a distinct advantage over the single-ended configuration: its differential output doubles the voltage swing across the load. Theoretically, this produces four times the output power when compared to a single-ended amplifier under the same conditions. This increase in attainable output power assumes that the amplifier is not current limited and that the output signal is not clipped. Another advantage of the differential bridge output is no net DC voltage across the load. This is accomplished by biasing MONO- and MONO+ outputs at half-supply. This eliminates the coupling capacitor that single supply, single-ended amplifiers require. Eliminating an output coupling capacitor in a typical single-ended configuration forces a single-supply amplifier’s half-supply bias voltage across the load. This increases internal IC power dissipation and may permanently damage loads such as speakers. For a typical application with a 5V power supply and an 8Ω load, the maximum ambient temperature that allows maximum stereo power dissipation without exceeding the maximum junction temperature is approximately 104˚C for the ITL package. (14) TJMAX = PDMAX-TOTAL θJA + TA Equation (14) gives the maximum junction temperature TJMAX. If the result violates the LM4846’s 150˚C, reduce the maximum junction temperature by reducing the power supply voltage or increasing the load resistance. Further allowance should be made for increased ambient temperatures. The above examples assume that a device is a surface mount part operating around the maximum power dissipation point. Since internal power dissipation is a function of output power, higher ambient temperatures are allowed as output power or duty cycle decreases. If the result of Equation (11) is greater than that of Equation (12), then decrease the supply voltage, increase the load impedance, or reduce the ambient temperature. If these measures are insufficient, a heat sink can be added to reduce θJA. The heat sink can be created using additional copper area around the package, with connections to the ground pin(s), supply pin and amplifier output pins. External, solder attached SMT heatsinks such as the Thermalloy 7106D can also improve power dissipation. When adding a heat sink, the θJA is the sum of θJC, θCS, and θSA. (θJC is the junction-to-case thermal impedance, θCS is the case-to-sink thermal impedance, and θSA is the sink-to-ambient thermal impedance). Refer to the Typical Performance Characteristics curves for power dissipation information at lower output power levels. POWER DISSIPATION Power dissipation is a major concern when designing a successful single-ended or bridged amplifier. A direct consequence of the increased power delivered to the load by a bridge amplifier is higher internal power dissipation. The LM4846 has a pair of bridged-tied amplifiers driving a handsfree speaker, MONO. The maximum internal power dissipation operating in the bridge mode is twice that of a single-ended amplifier. From Equation (8), assuming a 5V power supply and an 8Ω load, the maximum MONO power dissipation is 634mW. PDMAX-SPKROUT = 4(VDD)2 / (2π2 RL): Bridge Mode (8) The LM4846 also has a pair of single-ended amplifiers driving stereo headphones, ROUT and LOUT. The maximum internal power dissipation for ROUT and LOUT is given by equation (9) and (10). From Equations (9) and (10), assuming a 5V power supply and a 32Ω load, the maximum power dissipation for LOUT and ROUT is 40mW, or 80mW total. POWER SUPPLY BYPASSING As with any power amplifier, proper supply bypassing is critical for low noise performance and high power supply rejection. Applications that employ a 5V regulator typically use a 1µF in parallel with a 0.1µF filter capacitors to stabilize the regulator’s output, reduce noise on the supply line, and improve the supply’s transient response. However, their presence does not eliminate the need for a local 1.1µF tantalum bypass capacitance connected between the PDMAX-LOUT = (VDD)2 / (2π2 RL): Single-ended Mode (9) PDMAX-ROUT = (VDD)2 / (2π2 RL): Single-ended Mode(10) www.national.com (11) 14 (Continued) fc = 1 / (2πRiCi) LM4846’s supply pins and ground. Keep the length of leads and traces that connect capacitors between the LM4846’s power supply pin and ground as short as possible. Connecting a 2.2µF capacitor, CB, between the BYPASS pin and ground improves the internal bias voltage’s stability and improves the amplifier’s PSRR. The PSRR improvements increase as the bypass pin capacitor value increases. Too large, however, increases turn-on time and can compromise the amplifier’s click and pop performance. The selection of bypass capacitor values, especially CB, depends on desired PSRR requirements, click and pop performance (as explained in the section, Proper Selection of External Components), system cost, and size constraints. (15) As an example when using a speaker with a low frequency limit of 150Hz, Ci, using Equation (15) is 0.053µF. The 0.22µF Ci shown in Figure 1 allows the LM4846 to drive high efficiency, full range speaker whose response extends below 40Hz. Bypass Capacitor Value Selection Besides minimizing the input capacitor size, careful consideration should be paid to value of CB, the capacitor connected to the BYPASS bump. Since CB determines how fast the LM4846 settles to quiescent operation, its value is critical when minimizing turn-on pops. The slower the LM4846’s outputs ramp to their quiescent DC voltage (nominally VDD/ 2), the smaller the turn-on pop. Choosing CB equal to 1.0µF along with a small value of Ci (in the range of 0.1µF to 0.39µF), produces a click-less and pop-less shutdown function. As discussed above, choosing Ci no larger than necessary for the desired bandwidth helps minimize clicks and pops. CB’s value should be in the range of 5 times to 7 times the value of Ci. This ensures that output transients are eliminated when power is first applied or the LM4846 resumes operation after shutdown. SELECTING EXTERNAL COMPONENTS Input Capacitor Value Selection Amplifying the lowest audio frequencies requires high value input coupling capacitor (Ci in Figures 1 & 2). A high value capacitor can be expensive and may compromise space efficiency in portable designs. In many cases, however, the speakers used in portable systems, whether internal or external, have little ability to reproduce signals below 150Hz. Applications using speakers with this limited frequency response reap little improvement by using large input capacitor. The internal input resistor (Ri), nominal 20kΩ, and the input capacitor (Ci) produce a high pass filter cutoff frequency that is found using Equation (15). 15 www.national.com LM4846 Application Information LM4846 Application Information (Continued) LM4846 TL DEMO BOARD ARTWORK Top Overlay 20166806 Top Layer 20166805 www.national.com 16 LM4846 Application Information (Continued) Bottom Layer 20166804 17 www.national.com LM4846 Revision History www.national.com Rev Date Description 1.0 8/22/05 1st PDF by copying LM4845 (DS201059) 1.1 8/25/05 Edited Figures 201668 94, 95, and K0. 1.2 8/31/05 Added the clause, N3D1 = 0.......on item #6, below Table 2. 1.3 9/08/05 Fixed Pin Desc table (pg 4), pin 2 1.4 9/20/05 Added the 3 (new) boards. 1.5 9/26/05 Edited the “NATIONAL 3D ENHANCEMENT” paragraph per Allan. 1.6 11/03/05 Edited 201668 K0 and few text edits. 1/7 11/10/05 1st WEB released. 1.8 12/21/05 Edited the X1, X2, and X3 in the mktg ouline, then re-released D/S to the WEB. 18 inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted 25 – Bump micro SMD Order Number LM4846TL NS Package Number TLA25CBA Dimensions are in millimeters X1 = 2.543 ± 0.03 X2 = 2.517 ± 0.03 X3 = 0.600 ± 0.075 National does not assume any responsibility for use of any circuitry described, no circuit patent licenses are implied and National reserves the right at any time without notice to change said circuitry and specifications. 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