Philips TEA1112T, TEA1112AT, TEA1112A Datasheet

INTEGRATED CIRCUITS
DATA SH EET
TEA1112; TEA1112A
Low voltage versatile telephone transmission circuits with dialler interface
Product specification Supersedes data of 1996 Feb 16 File under Integrated Circuits, IC03
1997 Mar 26
Philips Semiconductors Product specification
Low voltage versatile telephone transmission circuits with dialler interface
FEATURES
Low DC line voltage; operates down to 1.6 V (excluding polarity guard)
Voltage regulator with adjustable DC voltage
Provides a supply for external circuits
Symmetrical high impedance inputs (64 k) for
dynamic, magnetic or piezo-electric microphones
Asymmetrical high impedance input (32 k) for electret microphones
DTMF input with confidence tone
Mute input for pulse or DTMF dialling (MUTE for
TEA1112 and MUTE for TEA1112A)
Receiving amplifier for dynamic, magnetic or piezo-electric earpieces
AGC line loss compensation for microphone and earpiece amplifiers
LED on-hook/off-hook status indication
Microphone mute function (MMUTE for TEA1112 and
MMUTE for TEA1112A).
APPLICATION
Line powered telephone sets, cordless telephones, fax machines and answering machines.
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The TEA1112; TEA1112A are bipolar integrated circuits that perform all speech and line interface functions required in fully electronic telephone sets. They perform electronic switching between speech and dialling. The ICs operate at a line voltage down to 1.6 V DC (with reduced performance) to facilitate the use of telephone sets connected in parallel.
A current (proportional to the line current and internally limited to a typical value of 19.5 mA) is available to drive an LED which indicates the on-hook/off-hook status.
The microphone amplifier can be disabled during speech condition by means of a microphone mute function.
All statements and values refer to all versions unless otherwise specified.
TEA1112; TEA1112A
QUICK REFERENCE DATA
= 15 mA; VEE=0V; R
I
line
=20Ω; AGC pin connected to VEE; Z
SLPE
= 600 ; f = 1 kHz; T
line
amb
=25°C;
unless otherwise specified.
SYMBOL PARAMETER CONDITIONS MIN. TYP. MAX. UNIT
I
line
line current operating range normal operation 11 140 mA
with reduced performance 1 11 mA
I
LED(max)
V
LN
I
CC
V
CC
G
vtrx
G
vtrx
maximum supply current available I
=18mA 0.5 mA
line
I
>76mA 19.5 mA
line
DC line voltage 3.35 3.65 3.95 V internal current consumption VCC= 2.9 V 1.15 1.4 mA supply voltage for peripherals Ip=0mA 2.9 V typical voltage gain range
microphone amplifier V receiving amplifier V
gain control range for microphone and
= 2 mV (RMS) 38.8 51.8 dB
MIC
= 6 mV (RMS) 19.2 31.2 dB
IR
I
=85mA 5.8 dB
line
receiving amplifiers with respect to I
=15mA
line
G
vtxm
microphone amplifier gain reduction 80 dB
1997 Mar 26 2
Philips Semiconductors Product specification
Low voltage versatile telephone transmission circuits with dialler interface
ORDERING INFORMATION
TYPE
NUMBER
TEA1112 DIP16 TEA1112A DIP16 TEA1112T SO16 TEA1112AT SO16
BLOCK DIAGRAM
handbook, full pagewidth
NAME DESCRIPTION VERSION
plastic dual in-line package; 16 leads (300 mil) plastic dual in-line package; 16 leads (300 mil) plastic small outline package; 16 leads; body width 3.9 mm plastic small outline package; 16 leads; body width 3.9 mm
9
IR
V I
PACKAGE
GAR
QR
15 14 8
MUTE
or
MUTE
TEA1112; TEA1112A
SOT38-4
SOT38-4 SOT109-1 SOT109-1
V
CC
16
DTMF
MMUTE MMUTE
MIC
MIC
or
V I
7
ATT.
V I
12
V I
11
6
V
EE
MICRO
MUTE
AGC
CIRCUIT
AGC
LOW VOLTAGE
CIRCUIT
DRIVER
I
LED
LED
CURRENT
REFERENCE
TEA1112
TEA1112A
1
5
4
231013 SLPE
LN
GAS
REG
MBE793
Fig.1 Block diagram.
1997 Mar 26 3
Philips Semiconductors Product specification
Low voltage versatile telephone
TEA1112; TEA1112A
transmission circuits with dialler interface
PINNING
SYMBOL
TEA1112 TEA1112A
LN 1 1 positive line terminal SLPE 2 2 slope (DC resistance) adjustment I
LED
3 3 available output current to drive a LED REG 4 4 line voltage regulator decoupling GAS 5 5 sending gain adjustment MMUTE 6 microphone mute input MMUTE 6 microphone mute input (active LOW) DTMF 7 7 dual-tone multi-frequency input MUTE 8 mute input to select speech or dialling mode MUTE 8 mute input to select speech or dialling mode (active LOW) IR 9 9 receiving amplifier input AGC 10 10 automatic gain control/line loss compensation MIC 11 11 inverting microphone amplifier input MIC+ 12 12 non-inverting microphone amplifier input V
EE
13 13 negative line terminal QR 14 14 receiving amplifier output GAR 15 15 receive gain adjustment V
CC
16 16 supply voltage for speech circuit and peripherals
PIN
DESCRIPTION
handbook, halfpage
LN
SLPE
I
LED
REG GAS
MMUTE
DTMF MUTE
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
TEA1112
MBE791
V
16
CC
15
GAR
14
QR
13
V
EE
12
MIC+
11
MIC
10
AGC
9
IR
Fig.2 Pin configuration (TEA1112).
1997 Mar 26 4
handbook, halfpage
Fig.3 Pin configuration (TEA1112A).
LN
SLPE
I
LED
REG
GAS
MMUTE
DTMF MUTE
1 2 3 4
TEA1112A
5 6 7 8
MBE790
V
16
CC
15
GAR
14
QR
13
V
EE
12
MIC+
11
MIC
10
AGC
9
IR
Philips Semiconductors Product specification
Low voltage versatile telephone transmission circuits with dialler interface
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
All data given in this chapter are typical values, except when otherwise specified.
Supply (pins LN, SLPE, V
The supply for the TEA1112; TEA1112A and their peripherals is obtained from the telephone line.
The ICs generate a stabilized reference voltage (V between pins LN and SLPE. This reference voltage is equal to 3.35 V, is temperature compensated and can be adjusted by means of an external resistor (RVA). It can be increased by connecting the RVA resistor between pins REG and SLPE (see Fig.5), or decreased by connecting the RVA resistor between pins REG and LN. The voltage at pin REG is used by the internal regulator to generate the stabilized reference voltage and is decoupled by a capacitor (C
) which is connected to VEE. This
REG
capacitor, converted into an equivalent inductance (see Section “Set impedance”), realizes the set impedance conversion from its DC value (R in the audio-frequency range). The voltage at pin SLPE is proportional to the line current. Figure 4 illustrates the supply configuration.
The ICs regulate the line voltage at pin LN, and can be calculated as follows:
V
I
V
LN
SLPEIlineICC
refRSLPEISLPE
==
×+=
Ip– I∗– I
and REG)
CC
SLPE
LED
)
ref
) to its AC value (R
I+
sh
CC
TEA1112; TEA1112A
Where:
= line current
I
line
ICC= current consumption of the IC Ip= supply current for peripheral circuits I* = current consumed between LN and V I
= supply current for the LED component
LED
Ish= the excess line current shunted to SLPE (and VEE) via LN.
The preferred value for R
is 20 . Changing R
SLPE
affect more than the DC characteristics; it also influences the microphone and DTMF gains, the LED supply current characteristic, the gain control characteristics, the sidetone level and the maximum output swing on the line.
The internal circuitry of the TEA1112; TEA1112A is supplied from pin VCC. This voltage supply is derived from the line voltage by means of a resistor (RCC) and must be decoupled by a capacitor C
. It may also be used to
VCC
supply peripheral circuits such as dialling or control circuits. The VCC voltage depends on the current consumed by the IC and the peripheral circuits as shown by the formula (see also Figs.6 and 7). R internal impedance of the voltage supply point, and I the current consumed by the output stage of the earpiece amplifier.
V
CC
V
CC0
V
CC0RCCintIpIrec
VLNR
×=
CCICC
()×=
CCint
EE
is the
SLPE
rec
will
is
R
line
handbook, full pagewidth
R
I
line
exch
V
exch
I
LED
TEA1112
TEA1112A
I
LED
LED
DRIVER
I
SLPE
I
sh
SLPE
LN
R
SLPE
20
R
15.5 k
V
d
p
45.5 k
Fig.4 Supply configuration.
1997 Mar 26 5
R
R
d
R
619
GASint
69 k
CC
from pre amp
I*
REG
C
REG
4.7 µF
V
CC
I
CC
V
EE
C
VCC
100 µF
peripheral
circuits
MBE789
I
P
Philips Semiconductors Product specification
Low voltage versatile telephone transmission circuits with dialler interface
RVA ()
MGD176
10
7
6.0
handbook, halfpage
V
ref
(V)
5.0
4.0
(1)
(2)
3.0
4
10
(1) Influence of RVA on V (2) V
without influence of RVA.
ref
5
10
.
ref
6
10
Fig.5 Reference voltage adjustment by RVA.
TEA1112; TEA1112A
For line currents higher than a threshold, I current increases proportionally to the line current (with a ratio of one third). The I
current is internally limited to
LED
19.5 mA (see Fig.9). If no LED device is used in the application, the I
For 17 mA < I
pin should be shorted to pin SLPE.
LED
I
17
line
=
< 77 mA:
line
I
LED
---------------------­3
This LED driver is referenced to SLPE. Consequently, all the I
supply current will flow through the R
LED
The AGC characteristics are not disturbed (see Fig.4).
Microphone amplifier (pins MIC+, MIC and GAS)
The TEA1112; TEA1112A have symmetrical microphone inputs. The input impedance between pins MIC+ and MIC is 64 k (2 × 32 k). The voltage gain from pins MIC+/MIC to pin LN is set at 51.8 dB (typ). The gain can be decreased by connecting an external resistor R between pins GAS and REG. The adjustment range is 13 dB. A capacitor C
connected between pins GAS
GAS
and REG can be used to provide a first-order low-pass filter. The cut-off frequency corresponds to the time constant C
GAS
× (R
GASint
// R
GAS
). R
GASint
resistor which sets the gain with a typical value of 69 k.
, the I
LEDstart
resistor.
SLPE
is the internal
LED
GAS
The DC line current flowing into the set is determined by the exchange supply voltage (V resistance (R (R
) and the reference voltage (V
line
), the DC resistance of the telephone line
exch
), the feeding bridge
exch
). With line currents
ref
below 7.5 mA, the internal reference voltage (generating V
) is automatically adjusted to a lower value. This means
ref
that more sets can operate in parallel with DC line voltages (excluding the polarity guard) down to an absolute minimum voltage of 1.6 V. At currents below 7.5 mA, the circuit has limited sending and receiving levels. This is called the low voltage area.
Set impedance
In the audio frequency range, the dynamic impedance is mainly determined by the R
resistor. The equivalent
CC
impedance of the circuits is illustrated in Fig.8.
LED supply (pin I
LED
)
The TEA1112; TEA1112A give an on-hook/off-hook status indication. This is achieved by a current made available to drive an LED connected between pins I
and LN. In the
LED
low voltage area, which corresponds to low line current conditions, no current is available for this LED.
Automatic gain control is provided on this amplifier for line loss compensation.
Microphone mute (pin MMUTE; TEA1112)
The microphone amplifier can be disabled by activating the microphone mute function. When MMUTE is LOW, the normal speech mode is entered, depending on the level on MUTE (see Table 1). When MMUTE is HIGH, the microphone amplifier inputs are disabled while the DTMF input is enabled (no confidence tone is provided). The voltage gain between LN and MIC+/MIC is attenuated; the gain reduction is 80 dB (typ).
Microphone mute (pin
MMUTE; TEA1112A)
The microphone amplifier can be disabled by activating the microphone mute function. When MMUTE is LOW, the microphone amplifier inputs are disabled while the DTMF input is enabled (no confidence tone is provided). The voltage gain between LN and MIC+/MIC is attenuated; the gain reduction is 80 dB (typ). When MMUTE is HIGH, the normal speech mode is entered, depending on the level on MUTE (see Table 1).
1997 Mar 26 6
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