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250W into 4Ω;
150W into 8Ω
B+
CON1
IN
47F NP
NRML
R2B
R2A
4.7k
1W
GND
LIFT
LK1
10 K
100k
4.7k
1W
ZD3
5.6V
1W
A
330
INV
1nF
4.3k
68k
RF
R1
R5
LK2
4.7k
VAA
IC2: TLE2071CP
+5.6V (VAA)
+5.6V
7
2
4
100F
25V
L/ESR
CSH
VB
16
15
10k
VB
R4
47k
IN–
560pF
6
IC2
3
3
VAA
100
TP1
850
GND
R6
6.8k
560pF
4
Comp
Ho
22
G
560pF
VR1
2k
2
6
–5.6V (Vss)
1W
R3B
4.7k
1W
ZD4
5.6V
K
VS
13
K
22
S
RUN
LED1
4.7
5
CSD
K
10k
COM
K
G
G
A
CSD
Q4
BS250P
Q2
IRFB561
A
LO 11
COM
D6
1N4004
10
The
CLASSiC-D
D
PROTECT
LED2
100
A
K
2.2k
LK4
A
K
SD
7
VREF
A
D5
1N4148
VCC
1F
MMC
5.6k
Q3
TIP31C
10
V
Pt.1:
By Vcc
John
Clarke
12
REF
R7
8.2k
8
100F
25V
L/ESR
DT
OCSET
9
2012
CLASSic-D AMPLIFIER
E
C
R10
R8
2.2k
1k
1W
4.7k
B–
SC
B
R9
7.5
B–
1N4148
A
K
1N4004, MUR120
A
K
World’s first DIY high-power high-performance
Class-D amplifier: 250W into 4Ω; 150W into 8Ω
You asked for it and now we are finally delivering it! Over the
years we have worked on a number of Class-D amplifiers but
they never saw the light of day because they were simply too
difficult to build and were unreliable. We kept blowing ’em up!
But now we have succeeded and as a bonus, this design has high
power, very low harmonic distortion and is very quiet.
18 Silicon Chip
1F
MM
15V
1W
A
10F
+5.6V
ZD2
D3
MUR120
VSS
VSS
A
220F
10V
L/ESR
IC1
IRS2092
K
100F
25V
L/ESR
GND
1F
MMC
R3A
Q1
IRFB561
14
VS
4.7k
K
A
3.3k
1
4.7k
220F
10V
L/ESR
D4
MUR120
siliconchip.com.au
Z
A
15
B+
F1 5A
9
0V
63V
S
G
+50V
470F
B+ 100nF
P-CHANNEL
D
Vs
Vt
Vo
L1
D
N-CHANNEL
G
D1
1N4004
SPEAKER
S
COMPARATOR
DRIVER
FILTER
LOAD
Fig.1: simplified circuit of a Class-D amplifier. The incoming analog waveform
(Vs) is compared to a high-frequency triangle wave (Vt) and the comparator
then drives a pair of Mosfets to generate a PWM waveform. This then passes
through an LC low-pass filter before being delivered to the speaker.
A
100nF
X2
D
C1
B–
K
S
B–
F
MC
15
CON2
Vo
OUTPUT
CON3
L1 22H 5A
B+
Vs
+
10
D
1W
470nF
150pF
2.2k
100nF
X2
100V
0V
X2
S
K
10
1W
B–
100F
25V
L/ESR
K
C
B–
D2
1N4004
A
A
ZD1–4
K
Vt
F2 5A
470F
100nF
–50V
(CON2)
63V
LOW ESR
LEDS
siliconchip.com.au
TIME
Fig.2: this diagram shows the two input waveforms fed to the circuit of Fig.1,
along with the PWM output (VO). Note how the duty cycle is longer when
Vs is high and shorter when Vs is low. The output of the filter will be quite
similar in shape to Vs.
BS250P
LASS-D OR SWITCHING ampliK
S
D G
areAmade by the
squillions
and used in countless TV sets, home
TIP31C
audio systems
and a host IRFB5615
of other
applications ranging from iPod playC
D
ers and phones
to large
amplifiers in
B
G
C applications.
commercial
D So they are
E
S
obviously reliable when they are mass
produced.
However, in the past when we have
taken a typical Class-D chipset and
tried to adapt it to a do-it-yourself design for publication in SILICON CHIP, we
have been lamentably unsuccessful.
Inevitably the chipsets were surfacemount devices and some employed
quite critical heatsinking for the main
amplifier itself. And inevitably again,
we consistently blew devices as we
tried to devise a reliable DIY design.
So much so, that Leo Simpson,
the publisher of this magazine, had
sworn off attempting another Class-D
amplifier. Time heals all wounds
ZD1
15V fiers
5k
B–
though and eventually he relented
when he saw the details and specs of
this proposed design. Yes, it does use
a surface-mount driver chip but the
pin spacing is quite reasonable for
hand-soldering. More particularly, the
main switching Mosfets are conventional TO-220 devices that are easy
to solder and heatsink. All the other
components are conventional leaded
devices and the result is that this ClassD amplifier is easy to assemble.
That’s its first big advantage. Its second big advantage is ruggedness and
reliability. It delivers heaps of power
and has all sorts of protection built in
so we have not blown up a succession
of devices during development. Well,
back up a minute, we did blow some
in the early stages but those problems
have all been sorted out.
Efficiency is the third big advantage,
in common with all Class-D switching
amplifiers. Typical efficiency is around
90% and that means that this amplifier
will deliver considerably more power
from a given power supply than would
be possible with a typical linear amplifier such as our Ultra-LD design.
High-quality sound is the final advantage of this design and this is its
outstanding feature. Most Class-D amplifiers are only average in this respect
and this applies to the vast majority of
sound equipment used in homes today.
We’ve christened the new module
the CLASSiC-D. Why the CLASSiC-D
moniker? Well, “CLASS” stands for
class (what else?), “SiC” is for SILICON
CHIP and “D” describes the class of
operation.
What is Class-D?
So what is a Class-D amplifier and
how does it differ from a conventional
amplifier? Put simply, conventional
audio amplifiers are either Class-A,
Class-B or Class-AB (a combination
November 2012 19
FEEDBACK
B+
TRIANGLE
GENERATOR
N-Ch
LEVEL SHIFT
& HIGH
SIDE DRIVER
Vt
Vs
+
ERROR
AMP
D
Q1
G
S
SET
DEADTIME
L1
N-Ch D
COMPARATOR
Q2
G
LOW PASS
FILTER C1
SPEAKER
S
B–
Fig.3: a more complete block diagram of a Class-D amplifier. This adds an error amplifier which provides some
feedback from the output, reducing distortion. The output arrangement is improved too, with a pair of N-channel
Mosfets. With this arrangement, the upper Mosfet must be driven from a floating gate supply and a dead-time
generator is used to prevent cross-conduction which would otherwise waste power and increase dissipation.
of the first two). These amplifiers
have their output driver transistors
(or Mosfets) operating linearly and
if you trace the signal through them,
you will find that its shape is unchanged but increased in amplitude
as it passes through successive stages
to the output.
Class-D amplifiers operate in an
entirely different mode whereby the
output Mosfet or bipolar transistors
operate as switches rather than in
their linear region and are either fully
switched on or fully switched off.
When switched on (or off), the power
losses within the Mosfets (or output
transistors) are almost zero. Thus a
Class-D amplifier is far more efficient
and generates much less heat than
linear Class-A, Class-B and Class-AB
designs.
In a Class-D amplifier, the output
Features
•
•
•
•
High efficiency
High power
Low distortion and noise
Bridging option for driving 8Ω loads
with two modules
• Over-current protection
• Over-temperature protection
• Under-voltage switch-off
• Over-voltage switch-off
• DC offset protection
• Fault indicator
• Amplifier running indicator
• Optional speaker protector module
20 Silicon Chip
devices are switched at a very high
frequency and the duty cycle is varied
by the input audio signal. This is called
pulse width modulation (PWM). After
filtering to remove the high-frequency
switching from the output, the result
is an amplified version of the input
signal.
With Class-D it is often (mistakenly)
assumed that “D” stands for digital.
Not true. It was called Class-D because
the previous amplifier classes were A,
B, AB and C. So when switching amplifiers were first devised many decades
ago, it was natural to call them Class-D.
Class-D basics
Fig.1 shows the simplified arrange
ment of a Class-D amplifier. It consists
of a comparator that drives a complementary Mosfet output stage with balanced supply rails (B+ and B-).
The comparator compares a fixedfrequency triangle wave against the
incoming analog signal. Its output
swings low, to B-, when the input
signal voltage is more positive than
the triangle waveform and swings
high, to B+, when the signal voltage
is below. The output stage shown here
is inverting so the common drain (Vo)
has the correct sense, ie, high when
the input signal voltage is above the
triangle voltage and vice versa.
Fig.2 shows the switching waveform
produced by this circuit as well as the
triangle wave input. The triangle wave
(Vt) is at a much higher frequency than
the input signal (Vs) and the resulting
PWM output is shown as Vo.
A second order low-pass filter comprising inductor L1 and capacitor C1
converts the PWM signal to a smoothly
varying voltage. The result is an amplified version of the input signal which is
then applied to the loudspeaker, reproducing the input waveform as sound.
Fig.3 shows a more practical Class-D
audio amplifier. This includes negative feedback from the PWM output
to an error amplifier. The feedback
reduces distortion at the amplifier’s
output and also allows a fixed gain to
be applied. The input signal is applied
to the error amplifier at the summing
junction and its output is applied to
the following comparator which acts
in the same way as in Fig.1, comparing a triangle waveform with the error
amplifier output.
Note that because feedback comes
from before the LC filter, the filter must
be very linear for the output distortion
to be low. In other words, we are assuming that the output filter does not
add much distortion since there is
no feedback around it and therefore
if it does, that distortion will not be
automatically compensated for. We
don’t want to add feedback around
the output filter because it introduces
a significant phase shift to the signal
and that would adversely affect amplifier stability.
Fig.3 employs two N-channel Mosfets and so the driving circuitry is
more complicated. It includes a “deadtime” generator that prevents one
Mosfet switching on before the other
has switched off. Without dead-time,
each time the output switches, there
would be massive current flow as both
Mosfets would simultaneously be in a
state of partial conduction.
siliconchip.com.au
The Mosfet driver also includes a
level shifter and high-side gate supply voltage generator, so that Mosfet
Q1’s gate can be driven with a higher
voltage than its source (as is necessary
to switch on an N-channel device).
N-channel Mosfets are generally more
efficient than P-channel types and
since it can be the same type as Q2, the
switching times are better matched.
It is important that Mosfets Q1 and
Q2 have similar characteristics so that
the switching and dead-time can be optimised. The desirable characteristics
include low on-resistance (RDS(ON))
for minimal dissipation, a low gate
capacitance to reduce switching losses
and minimise switching times, and low
gate resistance and reverse recovery
times. These allow for a fast switching
speed with short dead-times. Increased
dead-time generally means increased
distortion, so the shorter the better.
In practice, our new Class-D amplifier works in a slightly different way
to that depicted in Figs.1, 2 & 3 since
it uses a scheme known as “secondorder delta-sigma modulation”. In
this, the triangle wave is produced by
an integrator which is connected as
an oscillator and its frequency varies
with the output duty cycle.
This integrator also effectively forms
the error amplifier and as with the
simpler scheme described above, its
output is fed to the comparator which
controls the Mosfets. In terms of actual
circuit complexity, the delta-sigma
scheme probably uses less components
and from our tests, it gives surprisingly good performance. So it’s a clear
winner compared to the traditional
approach explained above.
Full circuit details
Fig.4 shows the full circuit of the
SILICON CHIP CLASSiC-D Amplifier.
It’s based on an International Rectifier
IRS2092S Class-D audio amplifier IC
(IC1). This incorporates the necessary
integrator, comparator, Mosfet drivers
and fault protection logic.
It also includes the level shifting and
high-side driver required for the two
N-channel Mosfets (Q1 & Q2).
The over-current protection thresholds for each output Mosfet and the
dead-time delay are set by external
resistors on IC1’s CSH, OCSET and DT
pins. The IC also has a fault input/
output pin (CSD) to allow external
sensing of supply rail under-voltage
and over-voltage conditions, as well
siliconchip.com.au
Specifications
THD+N: typically <0.01%; see Figs.8-10
Power output: up to 150W into 8Ω and 250W into 4Ω, depending on power supply
Power output, bridged, 8Ω only: 450-500W, depending on power supply
Efficiency: typically 90% at full power for 8Ω and 83% for 4Ω
Signal-to-noise ratio: 103dB with respect to full power
Input sensitivity: 2V RMS (4Ω), 2.2V RMS (8Ω)
Frequency response: ±1dB, 10Hz-20kHz
Power requirements: ±40-60VDC, 50-55V nominal
Over-temperature cut-out: 75°C
Under-voltage threshold: +40V
Over-voltage threshold: +75V
DC offset protection threshold: > ±4VDC
Over-current threshold: 29A
Idling (no signal) frequency: ~500kHz (adjustable)
Mosfet dead time: 45ns
as heatsink thermal limiting. This is
used to shut down the amplifier if one
of these fault conditions has occurred.
Other components in the circuit are
included to regulate and filter the various power supplies, while inductor
L1 and a 470nF capacitor form the
low-pass output filter.
As shown on Fig.4, the main ±50V
(nominal) supplies (B+ and B-) are fed
in via fuses F1 and F2. These rails are
then filtered by 470µF low-ESR capacitors that are bypassed with 100nF
capacitors. The B+ rail connects to the
drain of Mosfet Q1 while B- connects
to the source of Q2 and to the common
(COM) of IC1 at pin 10.
There is no direct B+ connection to
IC1. Instead, the Vcc supply at pin 12 is
relative to and derived from the B- supply via zener diode ZD1 and transistor
Q3. In operation, current flows through
ZD1 via a 7.5kΩ resistor (R9), so ZD1’s
cathode is at B- plus 15V. This voltage
is buffered by Q3 and bypassed using
100µF and 1µF capacitors to derive the
Vcc rail (ie, 15V above B-).
This voltage is applied to pin 12 of
IC1 and is the supply rail for the lowside driver inside IC1. This drives Mosfet Q2’s gate via the pin 11 (LO) output.
When pin 11 is low (ie, at COM or
B-), Mosfet Q2 is off. Conversely, when
the LO output goes high to Vcc, Q2’s
gate-source voltage is around +15V
and so Q2 switches on.
Similarly, Q1’s gate must be at least
12V above its source in order to switch
it fully on. Its source is connected directly to the output inductor (L1) and
this can swing up to B+ (or very close
to this) when Q1 is on. Conversely, this
side of the output inductor goes to Bwhen Q1 is off and Q2 is switched on.
This means that the voltage supply
for Q1’s gate drive must “float” on top
of the output rail. Fig.5 shows a simplified version of the basic arrangement.
When the output at the junction of
Q1 & Q2 is low, D3 is forward biased
and this charges the 100µF and 1µF
capacitors in parallel across ZD2 from
the 15V Vcc supply. Conversely, when
this output goes high, D3 is reverse
biased but the two capacitors retain
charge for long enough to keep Q1’s
gate high (via VB and HO of IC1) and
thus Q1 switched on until the next
negative pulse.
When both Mosfets are switched
off (eg, when power is first applied
or during a fault condition), the voltage at Vs (pin 13 of IC1) is held near
ground by current flowing through
the speaker load at CON3 or, if no
speaker is attached, the parallel 2.2kΩ
resistor. Since D3 is reverse-biased in
this condition, resistor R4 (47kΩ) is
included to provide a small amount of
current to keep the capacitors across
ZD2 charged, so that Q1 can be quickly
switched on once conditions have
stabilised.
The current through R4 produces
a small DC offset at the amplifier’s
output but it’s not sufficient to cause
November 2012 21
22 Silicon Chip
siliconchip.com.au
R3A
1W
R3B
4.7k
1W
ZD3
5.6V
R2B
4.7k
1W
B–
220F
10V
L/ESR
100F
25V
L/ESR
3
2
K
A
LK2
INV
2.2k
LED2
PROTECT
D
S
K
A
6
VR1
2k
100
G
SD
K
A
A
D5
1N4148
100
K
560pF
560pF
+5.6V
1
VAA
R7
R8
2.2k
8.2k
VREF
D6
1N4004
10F
1F
MMC
CSD
VSS
8
7
5
6
2
560pF
4
3
IC1
IRS2092
A
K
1N4148
OCSET
VREF
CSD
VSS
GND
Comp
IN–
R1
RF
VAA
68k
4.3k
+5.6V (VAA)
1nF
330
–5.6V (Vss)
TP1
850
GND
+5.6V
ZD4
5.6V
4
IC2
7
4.7k
IC2: TLE2071CP
NRML
Q4
BS250P
LK4
220F
10V
L/ESR
4.7k
100k
47F NP
CLASSic-D AMPLIFIER
1W
4.7k
A
10 K
R2A
4.7k
1W
B+
13
14
15
16
DT
Vcc
COM
VCC
4.7k
5.6k
A
K
1W
1k
C
E
K
A
R10
Q3
TIP31C
10
1F
MMC
B–
4.7
K
A
10k
D3
MUR120
100F
25V
L/ESR
A
K
100F
25V
L/ESR
R6
6.8k
1N4004, MUR120
12
10
9
VS
VB
COM
LO 11
VS
Ho
VB
CSH
3.3k
R5
R4
1F
MMC
B
RUN
LED1
22
10k
G
A
K
A
K
S
D
S
D
ZD1–4
R9
7.5k
G
Q2
IRFB5615
22
15V
1W
K
Q1
IRFB5615
47k
ZD2
A
D4
MUR120
ZD1
15V
B
C
K
A
E
B–
X2
470nF
100nF
B–
1W
10
100V
150pF
100F
25V
L/ESR
B–
L1 22H 5A
X2
100nF
B+ 100nF
63V
470F
TIP31C
C
G
BS250P
(CON2)
D
S
IRFB5615
D
–50V
+
OUTPUT
CON3
0V
+50V
CON2
D G S
F2 5A
D2
1N4004
X2
2.2k
100nF
1W
10
D1
1N4004
LOW ESR
LEDS
A
K
A
K
63V
470F
F1 5A
Fig.4: the main circuit for the CLASSiC-D Amplifier module (without the protection circuitry shown in Fig.6). It’s based on IC1, an IRS2092 Digital Audio
Amplifier which contains the error amplifier/triangle wave generator, comparator, dead time generator, level shifter, Mosfet drivers and protection logic.
Op amp IC2 provides the signal invert option, while Mosfets Q1 & Q2 form the output stage. The main supply rails are B+, GND and B-, while IC1 has four
additional supply rails: +5.6V (VAA), -5.6V (VSS), B- + 15V (VCC) and a 15V floating supply (VB/VS).
2012
SC
LK1
GND
LIFT
IN
CON1
any problems. With no load attached,
the output offset will be +1.56V, due
to current flowing through R4, ZD2
and the 2.2kΩ resistor at the output.
This drops to 5.7mV with an 8Ω loudspeaker load (or half that for a 4Ω load).
Input circuit
The input/analog section of IC1 is
powered from a pair of separate ±5.6V
rails. These are connected to pin 1
(VAA, +5.6V) and pin 6 (VSS, -5.6V) and
are referenced to GND (pin 2). They
power IC1’s internal error amplifier/
integrator and comparator circuits and
they also power op amp IC2.
The ±5.6V rails are derived from the
main B+ and B- rails via paralleled
4.7kΩ resistors and zener diodes ZD3
and ZD4. A 220µF capacitor filters
each supply, while a 100µF electrolytic
and 1µF MMC capacitor in parallel
bypass the total supply between VAA
and VSS.
The amplifier’s signal input is applied to one of the two RCA sockets
at CON1 – one vertical, the other
horizontal so that you have a choice
when it comes to making the connection. Having a second input socket also
allows the input signal to be daisychained to a second amplifier module
if you want to operate two modules in
bridge mode.
The RCA socket shields are either
connected directly to ground via link
LK1 or via a 10Ω resistor. This resistor
is typically included in a multi-channel amplifier and prevents hum by
reducing the current flowing between
the signal ground connections. It can
also improve channel separation.
As shown in Fig.4, the input signal
is fed via a 47µF capacitor to jumper
block LK2. This allows you to select
whether the input is inverted by op
amp IC2 or not. If you are using just one
module, then LK2 would be installed
in the normal (NRML) position.
The invert mode is useful for bridging two amplifier modules. In that
case, the first module is set to normal
mode and the second to invert. The
same input signal is then fed to both
amplifiers and the speaker connected
between the two outputs.
Supply bus pumping
You can also use the invert mode
for one channel of a stereo amplifier.
Basically, it’s a good idea to invert the
output signal of one amplifier relative
to the other. The correct phase is then
siliconchip.com.au
B+
R4 47k
K
D3
A
ZD2
15V
D
VB (15)
K
C1
A
FLOATING
HIGH SIDE
DRIVER
Q1
Ho
(14) G
S
L1 22 H
Vs (13)
SPEAKER
D
Vcc (12)
15V
SUPPLY
(Q3,ZD1)
C2
LOW SIDE
DRIVER
Q2
Lo
(11) G
470nF
2.2k
S
COM (10)
B–
Fig.5: a simplified version of the floating supply arrangement. C1 is charged
to 15V which is limited by ZD2. When the output (Vs) is low, C1 charges
from C2 via D3. C1 partially discharges (due to gate drive current) when Vs
is high and recharges on the next low cycle. R4 charges C1 when both Q1
and Q2 are switched off (eg, when power is first applied).
maintained by swapping the output
terminals of the inverted amplifier
module. This prevents a problem with
Class-D amplifiers whereby the power
supply can be raised above its normal
voltage by a process called “supply
bus pumping”.
Supply bus pumping is caused
by the energy stored in the inductance of the output filter and speaker
winding(s) being fed back into the
supply rail via the output Mosfets.
This is primarily an issue for signal
frequencies below 100Hz, ie, the
ripple frequency of the main supply
capacitors.
When one amplifier is driven out of
phase to the other, the supply pumping
effect is cancelled out, assuming the
low-frequency signal is more or less
evenly split between the two channels.
In bridge mode, this is automatically
the case so the effect doesn’t occur.
From LK2, the signal is fed through
a low-pass filter comprising a 330Ω
resistor and 1nF capacitor which
prevents RF signals from entering the
amplifier. This filter also prevents
high-frequency switching artefacts at
the output from being feed back to the
input via resistors R1 and RF.
Following the low-pass filter, the
audio signal is fed to the inverting input (IN-) at pin 3 of IC1. RF (4.3kΩ) and
R1 (68kΩ) set the gain of the amplifier,
with feedback via the 68kΩ resistor
also applied to the IN- input. The gain
with the component values shown is
68kΩ ÷ (4.3kΩ + 330Ω) = 14.7 or 23dB.
The 560pF capacitor between the
COMP input (pin 4) and GND (pin
2) rolls off the open loop gain of the
amplifier, to ensure stability. Two
more 560pF capacitors between the
COMP and IN- pins, together with a
100Ω resistor and trimpot VR1, set the
oscillator frequency. This RC network
forms the second-order delta-sigma
differentiator.
Output filter
The switching amplifier output is
filtered using 22µH inductor L1 and
a 470nF X2 polypropylene capacitor.
The inductor is a special type chosen
for its linearity, so as to minimise
distortion, especially at higher frequencies.
This type of LC low-pass filter has
second order characteristics, ie, after
the -3dB point it rolls off at around
12dB/octave. The switching frequency
is around 500kHz and the filter’s
-3dB point is set to 1 ÷ (2π x √(22µH
x 470nF)) = 49.5kHz. This gives
log2(500kHz ÷ 49.5kHz) x 12dB + 3dB
= 43dB attenuation of the nominally
50V RMS switching waveform.
Thus, we expect a high-frequency
signal of about 0.4V RMS to remain
after the filter – which is very close to
that measured.
A snubber network comprising a
10Ω resistor and series 100nF capacitor is also connected across the output
following the filter to prevent oscillation. Similarly, there is a 150pF/10Ω
1W snubber at the switching output
to limit the rise and fall times and so
reduce EMI (electromagnetic interferNovember 2012 23
THERMAL CUTOUT (75 °C)
OFFSET
DETECT
TH1
(4.7k <at> 25 °C)
1k
Q7
BC327
E
B
Q5
BC327
E
1k
10 F 100 F
B
C
E
Q8
BC327
B+
K
SD
PROTECT
Q9
BC337
LK3
More protection
B
C
4.7k
TO CON3
OUTPUT
100k
NP
NP
9.1k
C
100k
C
OVER
VOLTAGE
DETECT
10k
A
K
ZD5
68V
1W
ZD6
39V
A
10k
10k
47k
10k
B
E
100nF
BC327, BC337
B
E
Q6
BC337
C
B
UNDER
VOLTAGE
DETECT
E
10k
C
–5.6V
Fig.6: the additional protection circuitry on the amplifier PCB. TH1 provides
over-temperature protection, ZD5, ZD6 & Q6 provide over and under-voltage
protection, and Q7 & Q8 provide DC offset protection. If any of the fault
conditions is met, Q9 turns on and pulls the CSD pin of IC1 to -5.6V via D5
and a 100Ω series resistor (shown in Fig.4).
ence). D1 and D2 clamp any output
excursions that would otherwise go
beyond the B+ and B- supply rails (eg,
due to the speaker coil inductance).
Fault protection
When power is first applied or if a
fault occurs, the shutdown input (CSD)
at pin 5 is held at -5.6V (or close to it).
In that case, Mosfets Q1 and Q2 are
both off and switching is disabled.
And with no gate drive for Q2, LED1
is off too.
IC1 is held in this state until the
VAA, VSS, VCC and VB supplies reach
sufficient voltage for it to operate.
In addition, IC1 can be shut down
by external protection circuitry when
its CSD pin (pin 5) is pulled low via
D5. The additional protection circuitry
on the PCB is shown in Fig.6. When
CSD is low, P-channel small-signal
Mosfet Q4 turns on and this lights
LED2 (PROTECT), provided link LK4
is installed.
Shutdown also occurs if either Q1
or Q2 passes excessive current, eg,
due to a shorted output. In operation,
the output current is measured by
monitoring the voltage across each
Mosfet during the period it is switched
on. The Mosfets specified (IRFB5615)
have a typical on-resistance of 35mΩ
at 25°C.
24 Silicon Chip
the delay between one switching off
and the other switching on) is set by
the two divider resistors (5.6kΩ/4.7kΩ)
on DT (pin 9). For this design, it is set
at 45ns, the second-fastest option out
of four.
In the case of Q2, the current threshold before shutdown is set by resistors
R7 and R8, at pins 7 and 8 of IC1. Pin
7 is the reference (5.1V), while pin 8
(OCSET) is the over-current threshold
input. This is set at 1.08V by the 8.2kΩ
and 2.2kΩ resistors and this in turn
sets the current shutdown at about
30.8A (ie, 1.08V ÷ 0.035Ω) at 25°C (or
slightly less as Q2’s temperature rises
during operation).
The high-side current limit is set by
divider resistors R5 and R6 on IC1’s
CSH input (pin 16). This circuit works
in a different manner to the low-side
current limiting circuit. In this case,
diode D4 provides a reference voltage
that’s about 0.6V above B+. That’s
because VB is 15V above B+ and is applied to D4’s anode via a 10kΩ resistor.
This reference voltage is applied to
the top of the divider, the bottom end
of which goes to the Vs rail (pin 13).
As the current through Q1 increases,
so does the voltage across it and so VS
drops in relation to B+. As a result, the
voltage at the CSH pin rises relative to
VS until there is about 1V across Q1, at
which point the over-current protection kicks in (for more detail on this,
refer to International Rectifier application note AN-1138 at www.irf.com/
technical-info/appnotes/an-1138.pdf).
The dead time for Q1 and Q2 (ie,
Additional protection circuitry (see
Fig.6) is used to prevent the amplifier from running should it overheat
or develop a large DC offset, or if the
supply voltage goes outside the normal operating limits. In any of these
events, transistor Q9 switches on and
pulls IC1’s CSD input low via diode
D5 and a series 100Ω resistor.
Jumper link LK3 provides forced
shut-down of the amplifier. It’s there
to allow the supply voltages to be
checked after construction, before the
amplifier is allowed to run. Once the
supplies have been checked out, LK3
is removed.
The over-temperature cut-out is
provided using thermistor TH1. This
thermistor has a resistance of 4.7kΩ at
25°C, dropping to about 690Ω at 75°C.
Thermistor TH1 is monitored by
transistor Q5. This transistor’s base
is biased to 982mV below ground (ie,
-5.6V x 1kΩ ÷ (4.7kΩ + 1kΩ)), while
its emitter is 1.9V below ground with
TH1 at room temperature.
Q5’s emitter will rise to 0.6V above
its base when TH1’s resistance drops
to 690Ω, ie, when TH1’s temperature
rises above a critical point. At that
point, Q5 switches on and supplies
current to Q9’s base via a 10kΩ currentlimiting resistor, thereby turning on
Q9 and shutting down the amplifier.
Q6 and ZD6 make up the undervoltage detection circuit. If the supply
voltage drops much below 40V, ZD6
no longer conducts and Q6 turns off.
This allows current to flow into Q9’s
base via the 10kΩ pull-up resistor and
a further 10kΩ series resistor and so Q9
turns on and shuts the amplifier down.
By contrast, the over-voltage protection kicks in at around 60V, when ZD5
begins to conduct. This again supplies
current to Q9’s base to shut the amplifier down.
DC offset protection
Q7 and Q8 monitor the amplifier’s
output DC offset. As shown, the amplifier’s output is fed through a lowpass RC filter consisting of two 100kΩ
resistors and a 100µF NP capacitor, to
remove frequencies above 0.3Hz. This
siliconchip.com.au
Parts List: CLASSiC-D Amplifier
1 PCB, code 01108121, 117 x
167mm
1 heatsink, 100 x 33 x 30mm
(eg, Jaycar HH-8566, Altronics
H0560A cut to 30mm)
1 22µH 5A inductor (L1) (ICE
Components 1D17A-220M
[X-ON, Mouser] or Sagami
7G17A-220MR)
1 chassis-mount 45° 6.4mm single
spade terminal (to secure TH1)
3 TO-220 insulating washers &
bushes
1 solder lug
4 M205 PCB-mount fuse clips
1 NTC thermistor 4.7kΩ at 25°C
(TH1)
2 5A fast blow M205 fuses (F1,F2)
1 vertical PCB-mount RCA socket
(Altronics P0131) (CON1) and/or
1 horizontal PCB-mount RCA
socket (Jaycar PS-0279) (CON1)
1 3-way PCB mount screw
terminal (5.08mm pin spacing)
(CON2)
1 2-way PCB mount screw
terminal (5.08mm pin spacing)
(CON3)
2 2-way pin headers (2.5mm
spacing) (LK1,LK3)
1 3-way pin header (2.5mm
spacing) (LK2)
1 polarised 2-way header
(2.54mm spacing) (LK4)
2 3/16-inch x 20mm-long machine
screws (to secure heatsink to
PCB)
5 M3 x 10mm machine screws
11 PC stakes
1 50mm length of 0.7mm tinned
copper wire
4 jumper shunts (shorting links)
4 M3 x 9mm tapped Nylon
spacers
4 M3 x 5mm machine screws
1 8-pin DIL IC socket
1 25-turn 2kΩ trimpot (VR1)
Semiconductors
1 IRS2092S Digital Audio
Amplifier IC [SOIC-16] (IC1)*
1 TLE2071CP op amp (IC2)*
prevents normal AC signal excursions
from tripping the circuit.
A second filter consisting of a 1kΩ
resistor and 10µF capacitor follows.
This is required to prevent false triggering due to high-frequency signals
siliconchip.com.au
2 IRFB5615 150V 25A N-channel
digital audio Mosfets (Q1,Q2)*
1 TIP31C NPN transistor (Q3)
1 BS250P P-channel DMOS FET
(Q4)
3 BC327 PNP transistors
(Q5,Q7,Q8)
2 BC337 NPN transistors (Q6,Q9)
1 3mm blue LED (LED1)
1 3mm red LED (LED2)
3 1N4004 1A diodes (D1,D2,D6)
2 MUR120 super-fast diodes
(D3,D4)
1 1N4148 diode (D5)
2 15V 1W zener diodes (ZD1,ZD2)
2 5.6V 1W zener diodes (ZD3,ZD4)
1 68V 1W zener diode (ZD5)
1 39V 1W zener diode (ZD6)
Capacitors
2 470µF 63V or 100V low-ESR
PCB-mount electrolytic
1 100µF 50V non-polarised
PCB-mount electrolytic
2 220µF 10V low-ESR electrolytic
4 100µF 25V low-ESR electrolytic
1 47µF 50V non-polarised
PCB-mount electrolytic
1 10µF 16V PCB-mount electrolytic
1 10µF non-polarised PCB-mount
electrolytic
3 1µF MMC
1 470nF 250VAC X2 MKP
2 100nF 250VAC X2 MKP
3 100nF 100V MKT
1 1nF 100V MKT
3 560pF MKT (Rockby 35636 or
32733) (supplied with PCB)
1 150pF 100V (minimum) ceramic
or MKT
Resistors (0.25W, 1%)
3 100kΩ
1 68kΩ (R1)
1 47kΩ (R4)
1 47kΩ
7 10kΩ
1 9.1kΩ
1 8.2kΩ (R7)
1 7.5kΩ (R9)
1 6.8kΩ (R6)
1 5.6kΩ
finding their way into Q7 and Q8.
If the amplifier’s output has a positive DC offset, Q7’s emitter is pulled
0.6V above its base (ground). As a
result, Q7 turns on and so Q9 also
turns on and the amplifier shuts down
4 4.7kΩ
4 4.7kΩ 1W 5% (R2A, R2B, R3A,
R3B)
1 4.3kΩ (Rf)
1 3.3kΩ (R5)
2 2.2kΩ
1 2.2kΩ (R8)
1 1kΩ 1W 5% (R10)
2 1kΩ
1 330Ω
2 100Ω
2 22Ω
2 10Ω 1W 5%
2 10Ω
1 4.7Ω
Speaker Protector
1 PCB, code 01108122, 76 x 66mm
2 5-way PCB-mount screw terminal
block or 2 x 2-way and 2 x 3-way
(CON1,CON2)
2 polarised 2-way headers (2.54mm
pitch) (Input1 & Input2)
1 DPDT 24V 10A PCB-mount relay
(RLY1) (Altronics S4313)
1 200mm length of medium-duty
red hookup wire
1 200mm length of medium-duty
black hookup wire
4 M3 x 9mm tapped Nylon spacers
4 M3 x 5mm machine screws
Semiconductors
2 4N28 optocouplers (OPTO1,
OPTO2)
1 STP16NE06 Mosfet (Q10)
2 1N4148 diodes (D6,D7)
1 1N4004 diode (D8)
1 15V 1W zener diode (ZD7)
1 3mm red LED (LED3)
Capacitors
1 4.7µF 16V PC electrolytic
Resistors (0.25W, 1%)
1 1MΩ
3 1kΩ
1 100kΩ
1 820Ω 5W
1 10kΩ
1 22Ω
1 4.7kΩ 1W
* These parts are available from
element14, Mouser and Digi-Key
as before. Similarly, for a negative DC
offset, Q8’s base is pulled 0.6V below
its emitter and Q8 and Q9 turn on.
Speaker protector
Note that even though IC1 turns off
November 2012 25
CLASSiC-D Loudspeaker Protector
R12
1
+
PROTECT
INPUT 1
D6
1N4148
1k
K
K
OPTO1
4N28
100k
A
5
2
ZD7
15V
1W
B+ (50V)
4.7k 1W
820
5W
R11
0V
CON2
RLY1*
K
4
D8
1N4004
A
OUT–
A
1
+
PROTECT
INPUT 2
D7
1N4148
1k
K
IN–
CHANNEL
OUT+ 1
OPTO2
4N28
2
IN+
OUT–
5
IN– CHANNEL
4
OUT+
A
CON1
D
1k
V+
R11
R12
50V
35V
25V
820 5W
4.7k 1W
330 1W
2.7k 0.5W
22 0.5W
22
4.7 F
1.5k 0.5W
G
10k
Q10
STP16NE06
A
S
1M
K
LED
1N4148
A
SC
K
PROTECT
LED3
* RLY1 HAS A 24V/650 COIL
2012
2
IN+
1N4004
A
K
ZD1
A
K
K
A
STP16NE06
G
D
D
S
CLASSiC-D AMPLIFIER – SPEAKER PROTECTOR
Fig.7: the CLASSiC-D speaker protection circuit suits mono, stereo or bridged mono amplifiers. If either fault
input is triggered, it pulls the gate of Q10 low via its associated optocoupler and 1kΩ resistor. This turns off RLY1,
disconnecting the speaker(s) and lights LED3. Once the fault(s) clear, Q10 turns on after a delay, switching RLY1 on
(and LED3 off) and connecting the speaker(s) to the amplifier module(s).
T
HE SPEAKER PROTECTOR makes use
of the fact that whenever the amplifier is
in protection mode, the Protect LED (LED2)
is lit. By monitoring this, the protector
circuit can disconnect the speaker from
the amplifier whenever LED2 lights up.
Since there is a delay after power-up before
LED2 turns off and since it turns back on
for a short time when you switch the unit
off, it also provides a “de-thump” feature.
Fig.7 shows the stereo speaker protector
circuit. For each module, an optocoupler
(OPTO1 & OPTO2) connects in series with
the protect LED of each amplifier module
via LK4, which acts as a connector. When
the protect LED turns on, the relevant optocoupler LED is also lit and this switches
on the internal phototransistor.
This in turn pulls the gate of Mosfet
Q10 low via a 1kΩ resistor and 22Ω gate
resistor. As a result, Q10 turns off and this
turns the relay off, opening its COM and
NO contacts and disconnecting the speaker
from the amplifier.
Conversely, if both phototransistors
26 Silicon Chip
are off (ie, no amplifier protect LED is lit),
Mosfet Q10’s gate is pulled up to 15V via
a 100kΩ resistor. It takes about 4s for the
47μF capacitor to charge, after which
Q10 turns on. This then turns on the
relay which connects the speaker(s)
to the amplifier module(s).
Note that if there is only one amplifier module, the second input on
the Loudspeaker Protector is left
unconnected.
The +15V supply rail for the
optocouplers is derived from the
B+ rail using 15V zener diode
ZD7 and a 4.7kΩ 1W currentlimiting resistor. By contrast,
the 24V relay coil is powered
from the 50V supply via an 820Ω
dropping resistor. This resistor forms a
voltage divider with RLY1’s coil resistance
to limit the coil voltage to about 24V. Diode
D8 is included to quench any back-EMF
spikes that may be generated when the
relay switches off.
LED3 turns on when Q10 and the relay
are off (eg, if there is
a fault condition). Conversely,
when Q10 and the relay are on, there is
virtually no voltage across LED3 and it
turns off.
siliconchip.com.au
1
THD vs Power, 1kHz, 8Ω, 22kHz BW 09/28/12 12:16:20
1
0.5
0.5
normal mode
inverting mode
0.2
0.1
THD+N %
THD+N %
0.05
0.02
0.05
0.02
0.01
0.01
0.005
0.005
0.002
0.002
0.001
.05 .1
x=138.9W
.2
.5
1
2
5 10 20
Power (Watts)
y=0.65784%
0.001
.05 .1
50 100 200
Fig.8: THD+N plotted against power level into an 8Ω
resistive load. The power supply was set at ±55V and we
used an Audio Precision AUX-0025 Switching Amplifier
Measurement Filter in addition to a 20Hz-22kHz
bandpass filter in the Audio Precision System Two.
.5
1
2
5 10 20
Power (Watts)
y=0.74525%
50 100 200
+3
Frequency Response, 10W, 80k BW 09/28/12 12:38:47
+2
8Ω normal mode
4Ω normal mode
8Ω inverting mode
4Ω inverting mode
+1
0
Relative Power (dBr)
0.2
x=228.5W
.2
Fig.9: THD+N plotted against power level into a 4Ω
resistive load (conditions otherwise identical to Fig.8).
Note that in both cases, there is higher distortion across
most of the audio band in inverting mode compared to
normal mode. This is due to op amp IC2.
THD vs Frequency, 10W, 80kHz BW 09/28/12 12:37:20
0.5
0.1
THD+N %
normal mode
inverting mode
0.2
0.1
1
THD vs Power, 1kHz, 4Ω, 22kHz BW 09/28/12 12:23:28
0.05
0.02
0.01
-1
8Ω
4Ω
-2
-3
-4
-5
-6
-7
0.005
-8
0.002
0.001
-9
20
50
100 200
500 1k 2k
Frequency (Hz)
5k
10k 20k
Fig.10: distortion versus frequency at 10W for 4Ω and
8Ω loads. As you would expect, distortion increases
above the baseline for frequencies above about 1kHz.
The 8Ω performance is better than 4Ω below 600Hz and
above 10kHz but they are quite similar otherwise.
its driver outputs should a significant
DC offset occur, this will not necessarily save the connected loudspeaker.
That’s because if one of the output
Mosfets fails and goes short circuit,
IC1 will be unable to turn it off and
the full supply voltage will be applied
to the loudspeaker, causing its voice
coil to overheat and possibly catch fire.
To deal with this possibility, we
have produced an additional small
PCB which acts in conjunction with
one or two CLASSiC-D amplifier modules to protect the speaker(s), even if
an output Mosfet fails. It uses a relay
siliconchip.com.au
-10
10 20
50 100 200 500 1k 2k 5k 10k 20k
Frequency (Hz)
100k
Fig.11: frequency response for the two most common
load impedances. The input signal level and reference
level is identical for both plots so this also demonstrates
the relatively low output impedance of the amplifier.
The difference is due to the output LC filter.
to break the connection between the
failed module and the speaker.
The speaker protector circuit and its
operation are described in the panel on
the previous page (see Fig.7).
Power supply
The CLASSiC-D amplifier module
is designed to operate from nominal
±50V supply rails but will operate over
the range of ±40-60V. For testing, we
used the Ultra-LD Mk.3 Power Supply,
as described in the September 2011
issue. This uses a 300VA 40V-0-40V
toroidal transformer, a 35A bridge
rectifier and 15,000µF filter capacitor
banks across each rail.
While this has a nominal output
of ±57V, it’s perfectly suitable for use
with this amplifier module and will
give higher output power than from a
±50V supply. A supply of ±57V will
give an output power of about 150W
into 8Ω and 250W into 4Ω with 1%
THD + N. On the other hand, you could
quite easily substitute a 35V-0-35V
transformer (which is a bit easier to
obtain) to get close to ±50V from the
same supply module with slightly
reduced output power.
November 2012 27
Fig.12:
waveform
at idle (ie, no signal applied).
Output output
waveform,
idle, post-filter
This
shows
the
switching
frequency
ofΩaround
500kHz
Signal-to-Noise Ratio: 103dB
(8Ω & 4
)
and the residual amplitude of about 0.5V RMS. Note
Inputthe
sensitivity:
RMS the square-wave output
that
filter has~2V
converted
into something resembling a sinewave.
Fig.13:
filtered
the8Ω
amplifier
(yellow,
top)
Yellow: the
1kHz
100Woutput
outputof
into
, post-filter,
22kHz
LPF
along
with 100W
the distortion
residual
(green) at 100W into
Red: 1kHz
output into
8Ω, post-filter
8Ω
(THD+N
0.026%).
The (0.026%
red traceTHD+N)
shows the output of
Green:
distortion
residual
the amplifier after the LC filter but with no additional
filtering; you can just see the high frequency “fuzz”.
Fig.14:
behaviour
at >230W
Clippingclipping
behaviour,
230W into
4Ω into 4Ω (±55V)
Note how the self-oscillation frequency drops at the
output extremes and so the output tends to “bounce”
off the rails when driven this hard. The distortion
waveform is shown in green and is quite similar to that
of a Class-AB design.
Fig.15:
this scope
grab
shows
10kHz output
10kHz
before
& the
afterswitching
LC filter output of
the amplifier with a 10kHz sinewave input (blue) and
the reconstructed waveform after the LC low-pass filter
(red). Again note how the frequency shifts as the duty
cycle changes, with it being highest around the zero
crossing.
We wouldn’t go any higher than
±57V. The filter capacitors on the
CLASSiC-D amplifier module are only
rated for 63V (like the capacitors in the
Ultra-LD Mk.3 Power Supply) and due
to mains voltage variations, they may
already operate close to that limit with
a 40V-0-40V transformer.
If you want to build two (or four!)
modules into one case, you can have
them share a single power supply although that will reduce the continuous
output power available (more so with
4Ω loads than 8Ω loads). It won’t affect
the music power much though.
Alternatively, you can use separate
28 Silicon Chip
power supplies or a bigger transformer
with a larger filter capacitor bank. For
example, if you want to bridge two
CLASSiC-D modules to get 500W into
8Ω and run them off a single power
supply, you will need a transformer
rated at 500VA or more.
If you want to run the module from
a lower voltage supply, you can do so
but it will deliver less power. In addition, several components need to be
changed if the supply voltage will be
below 40V (more on this in Pt.2 next
month).
That’s all for now. Next month, we
will present the two PCB overlays and
give details on how to build, set-up
and test the amplifier module.
References & links
(1). IR Application Note AN-1138 (IRS
2092S) – www.irf.com/technical-info/
appnotes/an-1138.pdf
(2). IRS2092 Data – www.irf.com/product-info/datasheets/data/irs2092.pdf
(3). Introduction to Electroacoustics
and Audio Amplifier Design, Second
Edition – http://users.ece.gatech.edu/
mleach/ece4435/f01/ClassD2.pdf
(4). AN-1071 Class D Amplifier Basics –
www.irf.com/technical-info/appnotes/
SC
an-1071.pdf
siliconchip.com.au
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