Design of an Audio Amplifier

Abstract

The main objective of this project is to design and audio amplifier. Low voltage audio power amplifier LM386 is used for this purpose. An audio amplifier is designed to amplify frequencies between 15 Hz and 20 kHz. Any amplifier that is designed for this entire band of frequencies or any band of frequencies contained in the audio range is considered to be an audio amplifier.

Introduction

An amplifier is an electronic device that amplifies the voltage, current or power of a signal. Amplifiers are classified in two main ways: The first classification is by function and other is by frequency response [1]. The functional op-amps are voltage amplifiers and power amplifiers. In these op-amps output voltage and power gets amplified respectively. Frequency response of an amplifier refers to the band of frequencies that the amplifier can be designed to amplify. The components of an amplifier respond differently at different frequencies hence selected components of the amplifier can amplify certain range or band of frequencies [2]. An audio amplifier is one, which can amplify a band of frequencies. LM386 audio power amplifier chip is used in this project.

LM386: The LM386 is an audio power amplifier that is designed for use in low voltage applications. The gain for this amplifier is usually 20 but can go up to 200 by introducing components like resistor and capacitors at appropriate pins [3]. Since the gain can be adjusted anywhere from 20 to 200 using external circuitry, this audio power amplifier becomes an ideal choice for most of the applications. It has applications in AM-FM radio amplifiers, ultrasonic drivers, power converters etc., The pin diagram of an LM386 power amplifier is shown in fig (1).

Fig (1): Pin Diagram of LM386

Method

An audio power amplifier of gain around 50 is designed using different resistors and capacitors. The circuit diagram of an audio amplifier is shown in Fig (2).

Fig (2): Audio Amplifier Circuit Diagram

Circuit Description: In the audio power amplifier circuit, power input is given to non-inverting terminal through a 10K pot resistor. The inverting terminal is grounded along with the pin 4. DC voltage between +5 to +15 V is applied to pin 6 through a resistor, capacitor combination. This combination forms a High pass filter configuration so that the only frequencies in required band can be allowed to pass. By connecting a resistor of 1K in series with 10f capacitor from pin 1 to pin 8 the gain of the circuit can be further increased. Without this combination the gain will be limited to 20. A Bypass capacitor is connected to pin 7 of the amplifier. The output of the circuit is obtained from pin 5. The output from pin 5 is connected to speaker through a combination of resistor and capacitors in order to obtain an output that is free from noise. A 10  resistor, 220f, 0.05f capacitors are used for this purpose.

Circuit Connections:

  1. Make all the connections as per the circuit diagram.
  2. Supply input to the non-inverting terminal from any audio source.
  3. Ground the inverting terminal.
  4. Supply a DC source voltage between +5 V to +15 V to the pin 6 and ground pin 4.
  5. Receive the output from a speaker connected to pin 5 of the amplifier.
  6. The result obtained is free from noise and is an amplified signal.

Bill of Materials:

Part

/

Cost ($)

/

Description

R1 / 0.15 / 10 Resistor
C1 / 0.15 / 220f Electrolytic Capacitor
R2 / 0.15 / 1k Resistor
C2 / 0.10 / 10f Electrolytic Capacitor
R3 / 0.15 / 10k Pot Resistor
Bypass / 0.10 / 100pf Ceramic Capacitor
R4 / 0.15 / 10 Resistor
C4 / 0.10 / 0.05f Ceramic Capacitor
C3 / 0.15 / 220f Electrolytic Capacitor
U1 / 0.55 / LM386 Audio Power Amplifier Chip
O/P / Speaker

From the bill of materials it is evident that the total cost involved in building an audio amplifier circuit is around $1.75.