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02_Philips TDA1540 DAC 14bit a 16bit 4x ovsampNS
02_Philips TDA1540 DAC 14bit a 16bit 4x ovsampNS
Philips is introducing a new concept in high fidelity audio - Digital Audio on Compact
Disc. The principle behind this important invention is the use of digital recording in which
pulse code modulation (PCM) is employed. with PCM the sound amplitude and frequency
are represented by only 'O' and '1', and then recorded as equal amplitude pulses. On
playback, all that has to be done is to discriminate between the presence and absence of
signals. Thus, PCM enables very superior specifications to be achieved; there are virtually
no effects of distortion or.noise in the transmission and recording of signals.
Digital recording represents a major technological leap forward in sound reproduction from
disc. Bigger even than the advance from the old 78 to the microgroove LP of today. Our
pursuit of the ultimate in high fidelity sound reproduction, even with the best of
conventional analogue systems and their high state-of-the-art, is still limited by a number of
drawbacks in the form of noise and dynamic range limitations. These limitations are
inherent in the master recording tape itself, tape heads, pick-up elements, motors and many
mechanical systems. Although these may be minimised, it is virtually impossible to
eliminate them altogether. The new dimension, digital recording, represents a tremendous
step forward in the audio field which will affect the entire industry.
Although Compact Disc represents a major development in the use of digital audio, other
applications are also taking shape. In the professional field, design engineers are
additionally working in a number of other application areas such as digital audio/video
cassette recorders, digital audio processors, digital audio compact cassette recorders, digital
audio mixing desks, distortion meters and other test equipnent, and direct satellite
broadcasting.
Philips has developed a 16-bit conversion system with a remarkable performance. The
fundamental problem of quantisation noise is solved at source, before D/A conversion,
using a digital oversampling filter and noise shaper. These two techniques give a 13 dB
improvement in signal·to—noise ratio and therefore reduce the conversion requirement by
two bits. They also eliminate the need for large and bulky analogue filters as well as the
resulting phase distortion and problems caused by temperature drift.
The digital oversampling filter, type number SAA7030, consists of three main sections:
oversampling, transversal filter, and noise shaper. In an Audio Compact Disc application,
two 16-bit data streams, one for each channel, having a sampling frequency of 44.1 kHz,
will be fed into the conversion system at a clock rate of 2.1168 MHz. The input signal is
first fed into a shift register where the sampling frequency is increased four times to 176.4
kHz. This results in a frequency spectrum containing multiples of the sampling frequency at
88.2 kHz, 132.3 kHz, 176.4 kHz, and so on. This signal is now applied to a transversal
filter with 96 taps. Here, a shift register delays the incoming samples so that, after
multiplication by 12-bit accurate coefficients and subsequent addition, the weighted
average of a large number of samples is obtained. The filter has a transition region between
20 kHz and 24.3 kHz and, due to oversampling, around 176 kHz. The output from the
transversal filter appears as a digital signal with a word length of 2B bits and a sample
frequency of 176 kHz.
Fig. 3. The role of filtering. Oversampling digital filter cuts out unwanted frequencies (a),
hold function suppresses signal around I76 kHz (b), and analogue filter only passes signals
in audio band (c).
The signal around 176 kHz is subsequently suppressed by the hold function which has a sin
x/x characteristic with a first zero point at 176 kHz, and by the analogue low-pass output
filter which has its -3 dB point between 30 and 40 kHz. The latter may be a 3rd—order
Bessel filter; accurate filter elements are not required. The hold function is provided by
latching a flip-flop in the digital-to-analogue converter which follows the oversampling
filter.
The hold function and the analogue filter give slight attenuation in the overall transfer
characteristic. The digital filter is designed in such a way that this damping is corrected by
a small upswing in its characteristic.
Fig. 4a. OSF. Fig. 4b. Ph-line hold function Fig. 4c. Ph-line analogue filter.
Suppression of quantisation noise
The input signal to the conversion system is quantised with l6—bit accuracy to obtain a 96
dB dynamic range. The conversion system must consequently have 16-bit accuracy and a
96 dB signal/noise ratio in order not to spoil the dynamic range. It will be clear that the
oversampling filter itself does not add any noise because a 28-bit word length is used.
By use of the oversampling technique, it is possible to achieve true 16-bit performance with
only a 14-bit digital-to—analogue converter. How this is accomplished will now be
explained. Nonnally, in rounding—off the 28-bit signal to 14-bits, this truncation would
result in a signal/noise ratio of 84 dB. By oversampling four times, the noise power is not
distributed uniformly over the band G-22 kHz, but over a band four times as wide (0 - 88
kHz), Since only the noise in the audio band is relevant and the rest is filtered away, only
one-quarter of the quantisation noise remains. This gives a further 6 dB improvement in the
perfonnance which results in a signal/noise ratio of 90 dB.
Fig. 5 - Only one-quarter of quantisation noise remains in audio band with oversampling.
In this way, by noise·shaping, the noise in the audio band is further decreased by a further I
dB, and the maximum signal/noise ratio becomes in total 97 dB. The noise contribution of
the Philips conversion system in the audio band is thus superior to a conventional 16-bit
digital-to-analogue conversion system.
Advantages of the Philips 16-bit digital-to-analooue conversion system why should the
Philips 16-bit conversion system be preferred? Isn't a solution with a 16-bit DAC and a
very high order low-pass analogue filter better? The answer will be clear after considering
the following points.
In the HiFi world it is well known that the pulse-shaped character of music tran-sients is
disturbed when the phase response of the amps is not linear. This is one of the reasons why
the bandwidth of good quality amplifiers is made much greater than would be necessary to
accommodate the freq spectrum of the audio signal.
with digital audio and with the design of conversion systems, this has also to be taken into
account. By using the oversampling technique, a phase-linear 'digital bandwidth' of 20 kHz
is realised with a digital filter. The low-pass analogue filter which follows the DAC has
extremely good phase linearity and gives an 'analogue bandwidth' which is considerably
greater than the audio bandwidth. In this way, there is no phase distortion in the conversion
system.
Since oversampling results in a reduction in the height of the steps in the analogue output
signals by a factor of 4, the distortion that would result from slew rate limitations of the
analogue amplifier which follows the DAC becomes less. Furthennore, the frequency
components are kept outside the audio band by going to a higher sampling frequency.
Intennodulation products created by mixing, for example, two components with frequencies
of fs + fa and 2(fs - fa), where fs = sampling frequency and fa = frequency of audio signal,
are also kept outside the audio band. This can easily be understood by assuming fa = 15
kHz and fs = 44 kHz or 176 kHz.
We can thus summarise the advantages of the Philips 16-bit digital-to- analogue conversion
system as follows:
• true 16-bit performance
• linear amplitude and phase response
• negligible noise and distortion
• simple analogue filter
• no temperature and tolerance sensitivity