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Delta sigma modulation: An option for isolated digital power
Ross Fosler, Cypress Semiconductor
2/27/2013 7:50 AM EST
So why would this be useful for power designs? Ok, let me build up to that. If you take a look around your home or office you can find any number of electrical systems and most of them, maybe all of them, will have a power supply to transform the higher AC voltage provided to you to a lower DC voltage. For safety, this conversion process is heavily isolated. Thus if you consider this dilemma a bit, most switching power supplies have to regulate an output across a gap where no DC current flows. How can the output be regulated then? A common and pretty classical approach to this problem is to combine an error amplifier and compensation network with a biased optocoupler as shown in Figure 1 to bridge the safety gap. Ok, so this is a pretty simplified example and doesn’t exactly depict all possible isolated designs, but it gets the point across.

Digital isolators have an advantage over an ordinary optocoupler; the input to output relationship is basically always one to one, and it doesn’t change. Plus information is transferred at a considerably higher rate. The technical hurdle with the digital isolator is the binary nature of the digital isolator versus the example shown in Figure 1. The digital isolator favors passing data rather than a raw analog signal. This is where the sigma-delta modulator idea can play quite nicely.
Fundamentally the sigma-delta modulator simply translates an analog signal bounded to a certain range into a high speed stream of bits, a density stream, which represents the analog signal. Keep in mind that this is not packets of data; this is a raw stream of bits. Figure 2 shows an example. Note that I have drawn the figure right to left to make life a little easier; it follows the control signal flow of all the other diagrams in this brief article. An analog signal is driven into the modulator. The sigma-delta modulator transforms the signal into a high speed stream of ones and zeros that have an average weighting proportional to the input signal. The original signal can then be reconstructed on the other end through digital processing (IIR, decimation, or some other filtering) or even simple analog filtering.

Thus the analog idea in Figure 1 is transformed into a digital idea shown in Figure 3. The optocoupler is replaced with a digital isolator where there are minimal concerns about biasing or part variations, at least not in the digital isolators that I have worked with. The biasing circuitry is eliminated. The sigma-delta modulator is integrated with analog compensation and programmable reference generation to form a compact, mixed digital and analog control strategy for power applications. The beauty of all of this is that the functionality is integrated on a single programmable SoC. And, the integration doesn’t stop here, with a programmable SoC there includes the digital processing capability as well as the programmable digital.

Of course, it is unlikely that using the combination sigma-delta modulator and digital isolator to pass analog information is ideal for all designs, especially on the extreme end of cost sensitive applications with relatively low performance requirements. However, the continuing proliferation of digital techniques and the constant drive for integration makes such an idea far more attractive in certain systems. This is especially true for dense and complex systems such as server power supplies and microinverters. In these systems more than one channel is necessary for passing a combination of digital and analog information across the isolation boundary. Thus individual optocouplers can be completely eliminated in favor of a single multi-channel digital isolator to pass a mix of analog and digital information. Figure 4 generalizes this with a four channel isolator passing two higher speed sigma-delta transformed analog signals and a pair of signals for full-duplex UART communications.

About the Author
Ross M. Fosler is an Applications Engineer and Member of the Technical Staff at Cypress Semiconductor Corporation, a leading supplier of innovative Programmable System on Chip technology. He has more than 12 years of diverse professional experience covering a wide variety of applications including embedded systems and firmware design, digital design, and power systems control and management design. For over 20 years he has been programming small processors and microcontrollers and has lead teams and personally developed many successful solutions for 8-bit and 16-bit embedded systems in the power, industrial, and consumer markets. Mr. Fosler’s research interest resides in control theory, power electronics, and high performance real-time embedded processing. Mr. Fosler has 8 patents credited to him. He is also a veteran of the US Air force as well as a member of IEEE, HKN, AOC, and other organizations.

