12
CS4334/5/8/9
3. GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The CS4334 family of devices offers a complete stereo digital-to-analog system including digital interpolation,
fourth-order delta-sigma digital-to-analog conversion, digital de-emphasis and analog filtering, as shown in
Figure 8. This architecture provides a high tolerance to clock jitter.
The primary purpose of using delta-sigma modulation techniques is to avoid the limitations of resistive laser trimmed
digital-to-analog converter architectures by using an inherently linear 1-bit digital-to-analog converter. The advan-
tages of a 1-bit digital-to-analog converter include: ideal differential linearity, no distortion mechanisms due to resis-
tor matching errors and no linearity drift over time and temperature due to variations in resistor values.
The CS4334 family of devices supports two modes of operation. The devices operate in Base Rate Mode (BRM)
when MCLK/LRCK is 256, 384 or 512 and in High Rate Mode (HRM) when MCLK/LRCK is 128 or 192. High Rate
Mode allows input sample rates up to 100 kHz.
3.1
Digital Interpolation Filter
The digital interpolation filter increases the sample rate, Fs, by a factor of 4 and is followed by a 32× digital
sample-and-hold (16× in HRM). This filter eliminates images of the baseband audio signal which exist at
multiples of the input sample rate. The resulting frequency spectrum has images of the input signal at mul-
tiples of 4 Fs. These images are easily removed by the on-chip analog low-pass filter and a simple external
3.2
Delta-Sigma Modulator
The interpolation filter is followed by a fourth order delta-sigma modulator which converts the interpolation
filter output into 1-bit data at a rate of 128 Fs in BRM (or 64 Fs in HRM).
3.3
Switched-Capacitor DAC
The delta-sigma modulator is followed by a digital-to-analog converter which translates the 1-bit data into a
series of charge packets. The magnitude of the charge in each packet is determined by sampling of a volt-
age reference onto a switched capacitor, where the polarity of each packet is controlled by the 1-bit data.
This technique greatly reduces the sensitivity to clock jitter and provides low-pass filtering of the output.
3.4
Analog Low-Pass Filter
The final signal stage consists of a continuous-time low-pass filter which serves to smooth the output and
attenuate out-of-band noise.
Interpolator
Delta-Sigma
Modulator
DAC
Analog
Low-Pass
Filter
Analog
Output
Digital
Input
Figure 8. System Block Diagram