Bookmark and Share Printer-friendly version Email to a Friend

3V supply delivers 12V p-p to piezo speaker

( 01 Mar 2004 )
Royce Higashi and Tony Doy, Maxim Integrated Products, Sunnyvale, CA


Low-profile piezoelectric speakers can provide quality sound for portable electronic devices, but they require voltage swings greater than 8V p-p across the speaker element. Yet, most portable devices include only a
low-voltage power source, and conventional amplifiers operating from batteries cannot provide enough voltage swing to drive a piezoelectric speaker. One approach to this problem is to use IC1 in Figure 1, which you can configure to drive a piezo-electric speaker with as much as 12V p-p and operate from a single 3V supply. IC1, a MAX4410, combines a stereo-headphone driver with an inverting charge pump that derives a negative Đ3V supply from the positive 3V supply. Thus, providing the drive amplifiers with an internal ±3V supply allows each output of IC1 to swing 6V p-p.

Configuring IC1 as a BTL (bridge-tied load) driver again doubles the maximum swing at the load to 12V p-p. In the BTL configuration, IC1's right channel serves as the master amplifier. It sets the gain of the device, drives one side of the speaker, and provides a signal to the left channel. If you configure IC1 as a unity-gain follower, the left channel inverts the output of the right channel and drives the other leg of the speaker. To ensure low distortion and good matching, you should set the left-channel gain using precision resistors.

We tested the circuit with a Panasonic (www.panasonic.com) WM-R57A piezoelectric speaker, yielding the THD+N (total-harmonic-distortion-plus noise) curves (Figure 2 and Figure 3).

Note that THD+N increases as frequency increases in both graphs. Because the speaker appears to the amplifier as a capacitor, the speaker's impedance decreases as frequency increases, resulting in a larger current draw from the amplifier. IC1 remains stable with the speaker, but a speaker with different characteristics might cause instability (Figure 4). In that case, you can isolate the speaker's capacitance from the amplifier by adding a simple inductor/resistor network in series with the speaker (within the dotted lines on Figure 1). The network maintains stability by maintaining a minimum high-frequency load of approximately 10˝ at the IC's output.




 
Printer-friendly version Email to a Friend
Article Rating 
Average Rate: No rating yet
 
Poor Quite Good Good Very Good Excellent
 
 
Related Content 
 
 
ADVERTISEMENT
 
 
ON-DEMAND WEBCASTS

 
Highest Rated  
 
 
 
 
ADVERTISEMENT
 
 


TECHNOLOGY NEWS
 
 
 
PRODUCT NEWS
 
FEATURED SPONSORS
 
 
 
DESIGN CENTERS
 
ADVERTISEMENT
 
     
CURRENT ISSUE
 
COVER STORY:

Analog design in the 21st century: challenges, tools, and IC advances

We are now more than a decade into the 21st century, and on an ever-accelerating fast track to technological innovation in electronics. The transistor and progression into the IC, or microchip, lit the fuse leading to the explosion of innovations in electronics that is now taking place. Since the wi ...
HIGHLIGHTS:
SPECIAL REPORT
DESIGN FEATURES
 
PULSE
 
 
 
 


 


RSS
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   

POLL
What type of environmental regulation do you think will be most beneficial for the tech industry?
Proper recycling and disposal
Push for power efficiency and energy conservation
Chemical/lead regulation
View results

 
 
 
 
 
 
Power Technology E-newsletter 
Power.org Releases Power Architecture 32-bit Application Binary Interface Supplement
EDNA, May 11
POL Regulators Designed for Energy-efficient Computing
EDNA, March 11
Fairchild Revolutionizes Power Savings
EDNA, January 11
Lattice Transforms Board Power and Digital Management
EDNA, November 10
 
Analog E-newsletter 
12V Dual-channel Synchronous Buck Converter Features Integrated FETs
EDNA, February 10
Power MOSFETs features reduced top-side thermal impedanc
EDNA, January 10
 

 
KNOWLEDGE CENTER
 
Texas Instruments: DaVinci™ Technology
 
Texas Instruments: Safe Bet Series
 
 
INDUSTRY LINKS
 
Photonics Association (Singapore)
Singapore Industrial Automation Association (SIAA)
Taiwan Semiconductor Industry Association (TSIA)
 
 
 
 
OUR SPONSORS
 







Keithley Instruments
With more than 60 years of measurement expertise, Keithley Instruments has become a world leader in advanced electrical test instruments and systems from DC to RF (radio frequency). Our products solve emerging measurement needs in production testing, process monitoring, product development, and research...
 
 
 
     
 

EDN India | EDN Taiwan | EDN Korea | EDN Japan | EDN China | EDN | EDN Europe

 
ABOUT EDN Asia | | CONTACT US
   
© 2012 EDN Asia All rights reserved.