SCDA049 April   2024 TMUX4827

 

  1.   1
  2.   Abstract
  3.   Trademarks
  4. 1Introduction
  5. 2The Three Types of Beyond the Supply Operation
    1. 2.1 Negative Beyond the Supply
    2. 2.2 Positive Beyond the Supply
    3. 2.3 Negative and Positive Beyond the Supply
  6. 3Summary
  7. 4References

Negative Beyond the Supply

Negative beyond the supply is defined as the capability of a device to pass a voltage signal below ground and less than the power supply. One common application for this feature originates from the audio industry. In audio systems, the power supply is usually in the range of 1.8V to 5V. In these types of applications, at times there is a requirement to pass a signal below ground, or for example a negative signal. That is where the Negative Beyond the Supply comes in, where it allows the device to pass a negative signal while being powered by a single positive supply. This capability is shown in Table 2-1 where the TS5A22364 signal path voltage can be negative, while the supply is positive.

Table 2-1 Recommended Operation Conditions of the TS5A22364
MIN MAX UNIT
VCC Supply Voltage 2.3 5.5 V

VNC

VNO Signal path voltage

VCOM

VCC - 5.5 VCC V

Figure 2-1 is an example of a use case, showing the TS5A22364 switching between two input signals of -1.8V to output speakers, while being powered by a positive supply of 3.3V.

GUID-20240326-SS0I-XB3V-XNLF-WQMPR598VGKP-low.pngFigure 2-1 TS5A22364 a 2:1 2-Channel Multiplexer Powered by a Positive Supply, Passing Negative Signals