Philips TEA1114AT-C2, TEA1114AT-C1, TEA1114A-C2, TEA1114A-C1 Datasheet

DATA SH EET
Product specification Supersedes data of 1999 Sep 14 File under Integrated Circuits, IC03
2000 Mar 21
INTEGRATED CIRCUITS
TEA1114A
2000 Mar 21 2
Philips Semiconductors Product specification
Low voltage telephone transmission circuit with dialler interface and regulated strong supply
TEA1114A
FEATURES
Low DC line voltage; operates down to 1.45 V (excluding voltage drop over external polarity guard)
Line voltage regulator with adjustable DC voltage
3.3 V regulated strong supply point for peripheral
circuits compatible with: – Speech mode – Ringer mode – Trickle mode.
Transmit stage with: – Microphone amplifier with symmetrical high
impedance inputs
– DTMF amplifier with confidence tone on receive
output.
Receive stage with: – Receive amplifier with asymmetrical output – Earpiece amplifier with adjustable gain (and gain
boost facility) for all types of earpieces.
MUTE input for pulse or DTMF dialling
AGClinelosscompensationformicrophoneandreceive
amplifiers.
APPLICATIONS
Line powered telephone sets with LCD module
Cordless telephones
Fax machines
Answering machines.
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The TEA1114A is a bipolar integrated circuit that performs all speech and line interface functions required in fully electronic telephone sets. It performs electronic switching between speech and dialling. The IC operates at a line voltage down to 1.45 V DC (with reduced performance) to facilitate the use of telephone sets connected in parallel.
When the line current is high enough, a fixed amount of current is derived from the LN pin in order to create a strong supply point at pin VDD. The voltage at pin VDD is regulated to 3.3 V to supply peripherals such as dialler, LCD module and microcontroller.
ORDERING INFORMATION
TYPE
NUMBER
PACKAGE
NAME DESCRIPTION VERSION
TEA1114A DIP16 plastic dual in-line package; 16 leads (300 mil) SOT38-4 TEA1114AT SO16 plastic small outline package; 16 leads; body width 3.9 mm SOT109-1 TEA1114AUH bare die; on foil
2000 Mar 21 3
Philips Semiconductors Product specification
Low voltage telephone transmission circuit with dialler interface and regulated strong supply
TEA1114A
QUICK REFERENCE DATA
I
line
= 15 mA; VEE=0V;R
SLPE
=20Ω;AGC pin connected to VEE;Z
line
= 600 ; f = 1 kHz; measured according to test
circuits given in Figs 15, 16 and 17; T
amb
=25°C for TEA1114A(T); Tj=25°C for TEA1114AUH; 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
V
LN
DC line voltage 4.05 4.35 4.65 V
I
CC
internal current consumption VCC= 3.6 V 1.25 1.5 mA
V
CC
supply voltage for internal circuitry (unregulated)
IP=0mA 3.6 V
V
DD
regulated supply voltage for peripherals
speech mode I
DD
= 3 mA 3.0 3.3 3.6 V
ringer mode I
DD
= 75 mA 3.0 3.3 3.6 V
I
DD
available supply current for peripherals −−−3mA
G
v(TX)
typical voltage gain for microphone amplifier
V
MIC
= 4 mV (RMS) 43.2 44.2 45.2 dB
G
v(RX)
typical voltage gain for receiving amplifier VIR= 4 mV (RMS) 32.4 33.4 34.4 dB
G
v(QR)
gain setting range for earpiece amplifier RE1= 100 kΩ−14 +12 dB
G
v(trx)
gain control range for microphone and receive amplifiers with respect to I
line
=15mA
I
line
=85mA 6.0 dB
G
v(trx)(m)
gain reduction for microphone and receive amplifiers
MUTE = LOW 80 dB
2000 Mar 21 4
Philips Semiconductors Product specification
Low voltage telephone transmission circuit with dialler interface and regulated strong supply
TEA1114A
BLOCK DIAGRAM
handbook, full pagewidth
MGK804
VI
VI
VI
VI
CURRENT AND
VOLTAGE
REFERENCE
LOW VOLTAGE
CIRCUIT
AGC
CIRCUIT
V
DD
REGULATOR
ATTENUATOR
0.5V
CC
TEA1114A
48IR
MUTE
13 14
MIC+
6DTMF
MIC
10
5
V
EE
AGC
1211RX
GAR
9QR
3 REG
1LN
7
V
DD
16
V
CC
SLPE
2
Fig.1 Block diagram.
2000 Mar 21 5
Philips Semiconductors Product specification
Low voltage telephone transmission circuit with dialler interface and regulated strong supply
TEA1114A
PINNING
SYMBOL
PIN PAD
DESCRIPTION
TEA1114A(T) TEA1114AUH
LN 1 1, 19 positive line terminal SLPE 2 2 slope (DC resistance) adjustment REG 3 3 line voltage regulator decoupling IR 4 4 receiving amplifier input AGC 5 5 automatic gain control/ line loss compensation DTMF 6 6 dual-tone multi-frequency input V
DD
7 7 regulated supply for peripherals MUTE 8 8 mute input to select speech or dialling mode (active LOW) QR 9 9 earpiece amplifier output n.c. 10 not connected V
EE
10 11 negative line terminal n.c. 12 not connected GAR 11 13 earpiece amplifier gain adjustment RX 12 14 receive amplifier output MIC+ 13 15 non-inverting microphone amplifier input MIC 14 16 inverting microphone amplifier input n.c. 15 not connected V
CC
16 17 supply voltage for internal circuit n.c. 18 not connected
handbook, halfpage
TEA1114A
MGK803
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
16 15 14 13 12 11 10
9
LN
SLPE
REG
IR
AGC
DTMF
V
DD
MUTE
QR
V
EE
GAR
RX
MIC+
MIC
V
CC
n.c.
Fig.2 Pin configuration.
2000 Mar 21 6
Philips Semiconductors Product specification
Low voltage telephone transmission circuit with dialler interface and regulated strong supply
TEA1114A
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
All data given in this chapter are typical values, except when otherwise specified.
Supply (pins LN, SLPE, REG, VCCand VDD)
The supply for the TEA1114A and its peripherals is obtained from the telephone line (see Fig.3).
T
HE LINE INTERFACE (PINS LN, SLPE AND REG)
The IC generates a stabilized reference voltage (V
ref
)
between pins LN and SLPE. V
ref
is temperature compensated and can be adjusted by means of an external resistor (RVA). V
ref
equals 4.15 V and can be increased by connecting RVA between pins REG and SLPE or decreased by connecting R
VA
between pins REG and LN. The voltage at pin REG is used by the internal regulator to generate V
ref
and is decoupled by
C
REG
, which is connected to VEE. This capacitor, converted into an equivalent inductance (see Section “Set impedance”)realizesthesetimpedance conversion from its DC value (R
SLPE
) to its AC value (RCCin the audio-frequency range). The voltage at pin SLPE is proportional to the line current.
The voltage at pin LN is:
where:
I
line
= line current ICC= current consumption of the IC IP= supply current for external circuits I
SUP
= current consumed between LN and VEE by the
VDD regulator.
Thepreferredvalue for R
SLPE
is 20 .ChangingR
SLPE
will affect more than the DC characteristics; it also influences the microphone and DTMF gains, the gain control characteristics, the sidetone level and the maximum output swing on the line.
The DC line current flowing into the set is determined by the exchange supply voltage (V
EXCH
), the feeding bridge
resistance (R
EXCH
), the DC resistance of the telephone
line (R
line
) and the reference voltage (V
ref
). With line currents below 9 mA, the internal reference voltage (generatingV
ref
)isautomatically adjusted to a lower value. This means that more sets can operate in parallel with DC line voltages (excluding the polarity guard) down to an absolute minimum voltage of 1.45 V. At currents below 9 mA, the circuit has limited sending and receiving levels. This is called the low voltage area.
V
LN
V
refRSLPE
I×+
SLPE
=
I
SLPE
I=
line
ICC– IP– I
SUP
handbook, full pagewidth
C
REG
4.7 µF
R
SLPE
20
I
SLPE
MGK805
I
line
R
line
V
CC
V
EE
REG SLPE
LN
V
DD
C
VCC
100 µF
C
VDD
220 µF
TEA1114A
R
CC
I
CC
I
LN
I
P
I
DD
I
SUP
R
EXCH
V
EXCH
peripherals
external
circuits
from preamplifier
V
DD
REGULATOR
internal
circuitry
Fig.3 Supply configuration.
2000 Mar 21 7
Philips Semiconductors Product specification
Low voltage telephone transmission circuit with dialler interface and regulated strong supply
TEA1114A
THE INTERNAL SUPPLY POINT (PIN VCC) The internal circuitry of the TEA1114A is supplied from
pin V
CC
. This voltage supply is derived from the line
voltage by means of a resistor (R
CC
) and must be
decoupled by a capacitor C
VCC
. It may also be used to
supply some external circuits. The V
CC
voltage depends
on the current consumed by the IC and the peripheral circuits as:
(seealso Figs 4 and 5). I
rec
isthe current consumed by the
output stage of the earpiece amplifier.
V
CC0
VLNR
CCICC
×=
V
CC
V
CC0RCCIPIrec
+()×=
handbook, halfpage
MGK806
I
rec
EXTERNAL
CIRCUITS
I
P
V
EE
V
CC
V
CC0
R
CC
Fig.4 VCC used as supply voltage for external
circuits.
handbook, halfpage
0
3
2
1
0
12 43
MGL827
I
P
(mA)
VCC (V)
(2) (1)
1.9 mA
1.6 mA
Fig.5 Typical current IP available from VCC for
peripheral circuitry.
VCC≥ 2.5 V; VLN= 4.35 V at I
line
= 15 mA; RCC= 619 ;
R
SLPE
=20Ω.
Curve (1) is valid when the receiving amplifier is driven: V
QR(rms)
= 150 mV; RL1= 150 .
Curve (2) is valid when the receiving amplifier is not driven.
THE REGULATED SUPPLY POINT (PIN VDD) The V
DD
regulator delivers a stabilized voltage for the peripherals in transmission mode (nominal VLN) as well as in ringer mode (VLN= 0 V). The regulator (see Fig.6) consistsofa sense input circuit, a current switchandaV
DD
output stabilizer. The regulator operates as a current source at the LN input in transmission mode; it takes a constant current of 4.3 mA (at nominal conditions) from pin LN. The current switch reduces the distortion on the line at large signal swings. Output VDD follows the DC voltage at pin LN (with typically 0.35 V difference) up to VDD= 3.3 V. The input current of the regulator is constantwhiletheoutput(source)currentis determined by the consumption of the peripherals. The difference betweeninputand output current is shunted bytheinternal V
DD
stabilizer.
Inringer mode, the stabilizer operates as ashunt stabilizer to keep V
DD
at 3.3 V. In this mode, the input voltage VLN= 0 V while the input current into pin VDD is delivered by the ringing signal. VDD has to be decoupled by a capacitor C
VDD
.
2000 Mar 21 8
Philips Semiconductors Product specification
Low voltage telephone transmission circuit with dialler interface and regulated strong supply
TEA1114A
handbook, full pagewidth
MGK807
I
line
R
line
V
CC
V
EE
LN
V
DD
C
VCC
100 µF
C
VDD
220 µF
TEA1114A
R
CC
I
CC
I
DD
I
LN
R
EXCH
V
EXCH
peripherals
SENSE
SWITCH
VDD regulator
I
SUP
Fig.6 VDD regulator configuration.
Set impedance
In the audio frequency range, the dynamic impedance is mainly determined by the RCC resistor. The equivalent impedance of the circuit is illustrated in Fig.7.
Transmit stage (pins MIC+, MICand DTMF)
MICROPHONE AMPLIFIER (PINS MIC+ AND MIC) The TEA1114A has symmetrical microphone inputs.
The input impedance between pins MIC+ and MIC is 64 k(2 × 32 k). Thevoltage gain from pins MIC+/MIC to pin LN is set at 44.2 dB (typically).
Automatic gain control is provided on this amplifier for line loss compensation.
DTMF AMPLIFIER (PIN DTMF) When the DTMF amplifier is enabled, dialling tones may
be sent on line. These tones are also sent to the receive output RX at a low level (confidence tone).
The TEA1114A has an asymmetrical DTMF input. The input impedance between DTMF and VEE is 20 k. The voltage gain from pin DTMF to pin LN is set at 26 dB.
Automatic gain control has no effect on the DTMF amplifier.
handbook, halfpage
LN
V
EE
SLPE
R
SLPE
C
REG
REG V
CC
R
CC
4.7 µF
100 µF
C
VCC
619
20
R
P
V
ref
L
EQ
MBE788
Fig.7 Equivalent impedance between LN and VEE.
LEQ=C
REG
× R
SLPE
× RP. RP= internal resistance. RP= 17.5 k.
2000 Mar 21 9
Philips Semiconductors Product specification
Low voltage telephone transmission circuit with dialler interface and regulated strong supply
TEA1114A
Receiving stage (pins IR, RX, GAR and QR)
The receive part consists of a receive amplifier and an earpiece amplifier.
THE RECEIVE AMPLIFIER (PINS IR AND RX) The receive amplifier transfers the receive signal from
input IR to output RX. The input impedance of the receive amplifier, between pins IR and VEE,is20kΩ. The voltage gain from pin IR to RX is set at 33.4 dB. RX output is intended to drive high ohmic (real) loads. Automatic gain control is provided on the receive amplifier.
THE EARPIECE AMPLIFIER (PINS GAR AND QR) The earpiece amplifier is an operational amplifier having
its output (QR) and inverting input (GAR) available. It can be used in conjunction with two resistors to get someextra gain or attenuation.
In an usual configuration (see Fig.8), output RX drives the earpiece amplifier by means of RE1 connected between RX and GAR. Feedback resistor RE2 of the earpiece amplifier is connected between QR and GAR. Output QR drives the earpiece.
The gain of the earpiece amplifier (from RX to QR) can be set between +12 and 14 dB by means of resistor RE2.
The preferred value of RE1 is 100 k. The earpiece amplifier offers a gain boost facility relative
to the initial gain. Resistor RE2 has to be replaced by the network of R
E21
, R
E22
and R
E23
as shown in Fig.8. The initial gain is defined by: which corresponds to R
E23
= . The gain boost is realized
by a defined value of R
E23
and is:
Two external capacitors C
GAR
(connected between GAR
and QR) and C
GARS
(connected between GAR and VEE)
ensure stability. The C
GAR
capacitor provides a first-order low-pass filter. The cut-off frequency corresponds to the time constant C
GAR
× RE2. The relationship
C
GARS
=10×C
GAR
must be fulfilled to ensure stability.
The output voltages of both amplifiers are specified for continuous wave drive. The maximum output swing depends on the DC line voltage V
LN
, the RCCresistor, the ICC current consumption of the circuit, the IP current consumption of the peripheral circuits and the load impedance.
R
E21RE22
+
R
E1
-------------------------------
R
E21RE22
+
R
E1
-------------------------------
1
R
E21
// R
E22
R
E23
----------------------------------
+


×
handbook, full pagewidth
MGK808
I
line
R
line
V
CC
V
EE
V
EE
0.5V
CC
QRLN GAR
C
GAR
C
GAR
C
GARS
RX
C
VCC
100 µF
10 µF
EARPIECE AMPLIFIER
TEA1114A
R
CC
R
E2
R
E1
I
CC
R
EXCH
V
EXCH
R
E23
R
E21
R
E1
100 k
R
E22
RX
GAR
QR
Addition for gain boost of earpiece amplifier
C
GARS
Fig.8 Earpiece amplifier configuration.
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