Communication
Contacts
Offering
Investors
Careers
Sesame
Embedded memories
Logic virtual components
Analog virtual components
Test structures
Virtual test & diagnostic
 Hardware/Software Codesign
 Hardware/Software Codesign
Layout verification
Quadrant of skills
SoC Integration
Custom Fabless Supplier
 
 

Search dolphin:

silicium estimator

Flash announcement

CLASS-D vs CLASS-AB FOR HEADPHONE AMPLIFIERS

 

Meylan, February 1, 2008

 

The pressure to lowering the power consumption leads system designers to investigate different architectures for audio amplifiers. They naturally investigate class-D amplifiers as the new El-Dorado for low power operation.
Indeed Class-D technology is usually appraised for its high efficiency.
However, when it comes to high load applications like headphone amplifiers, the benefits from class-D are more misleading and should be carefully assessed: is the power efficiency the same for low output power? Does the Bill-of-Material remain attractive?

Class-D amplifiers: miracle or mirage?

class AB vs class D

 

Efficiency:

A Class-D type output stage (PWM switching) enables a higher efficiency than a class-AB amplifier: no doubt about it. For applications requiring an output power in the Watt range, Class-D limited dissipation is highly appreciated by system engineers.
But headphone amplifiers are specified in the 20 to 40 mW range and actually set in portable devices at about 2 mW. Over such an output range, the efficiency improvement brought by a class-D power stage is in the order of a µW : negligible at system level.

a draw!

Power consumption:

While there is one standard IC with a patented solution offering a really low power consumption over the whole DAC path, embeddable class-D power stages for headphone commonly enable a power consumption around 3 to 4 mA per channel. A stereo power stage then dissipates 6 to 8 mA… for the class-D amplifier only! The power required by the DAC should be added and the real bill therefore easily reaches 30 mW at 3.3 V. For an output power of 20 mW, can it still be considered as low power? This also emphasizes that the overall power efficiency must be considered, not the mere efficiency of the final class-D stage!
SNR being equal, a state-of-the-art class-AB output stage and its DAC enable a power consumption of 20 mW at 3.3 V for a stereo headphone driver. Low power solutions based on class-AB have also been announced at less than 3 mA for a whole stereo headphone path: less than 10 mW at 3.3 V!

Winner: class-AB

Bill-of-Material:

Benchmarks for Efficiency always include a serial inductor. Being specified explicitly or not, since the load can be used as a filter, class-D amplifiers always require the use of reactive passive components to filter the out-of-band energy and preserve the efficiency. For portable applications, bulky inductors or LC filters are definitively not competitive against the filter-less connection enabled by class-AB amplifiers.

Winner: class-AB

pdf Download

< Jazz Vision