SBOU259 October   2021 PGA2505

 

  1.   Trademarks
  2. 1Product Overview
  3. 2Features
  4. 3Getting Started
    1. 3.1 Electrostatic Discharge Caution
    2. 3.2 Unpacking the EVM
    3. 3.3 Absolute Maximum Operating Conditions
  5. 4Setup Guide
    1. 4.1 Analog and Digital Power Supplies
    2. 4.2 Microphone Input
    3. 4.3 Phantom Power Connections
    4. 4.4 DC Blocking Capacitors
    5. 4.5 Protection Network
    6. 4.6 Configurable Input Circuitry
    7. 4.7 Configurable Output Circuitry and Preamp Output Connector
  6. 5Software Operation
    1. 5.1 Applications Software Overview
    2. 5.2 Using the GUI
  7. 6Schematic, PCB Layout, and Bill of Materials
    1. 6.1 Schematic
    2. 6.2 PCB Layout
    3. 6.3 Bill of Materials

Protection Network

Resistors R4 and R14, along with Schottky diodes D5, D6, D7 and D9, provide input protection for the PGA2505 preamplifier when using phantom power, or when the input voltage exceeds the VA+ or VA− power supplies by more than 350 mV (the approximate turn-on voltage of the Schottky diodes).

A common fault condition is for either the hot (+) or cold (−) input of the preamplifier to be shorted to ground. With phantom voltage applied, this causes the blocking capacitors to discharge, with a large surge current presented at the PGA2505 input pins. Without the protection network, the PGA2505 can be permanently damaged by the surge current, which can reach several amperes in peak magnitude.

The Schottky diodes are forced into conduction during this fault condition, steering most of the charge away from the PGA2505 device and towards the power supplies. The series resistors can be set to a value that helps limit the input current; however, take care to avoid adding too much resistance because the added noise can degrade the overall performance of the preamplifier. The Schottky diodes add a nonlinear capacitance to the input circuit, which can result in additional distortion. However, with the relatively small input voltage swing present when the preamplifier is set to gains between 9 dB and 60 dB, the effect on the THD+N of the PGA2505 is small or negligible. For unity-gain applications, where the voltage swing may become large enough in magnitude to transition over a greater portion of the diodes nonlinear capacitance, the THD+N ratio may degrade by as much as 3 dB from the published typical performance specifications.