Amplifier removes common-mode noise on RGB differential-video-transmission line
Tamara Papalias and Mike Wong, Intersil Corp; Edited by Brad Thompson and Fran Granville -- 4/13/2006
Comprising four twisted pairs within a durable external sheath, Category 5 network cable offers a common and cost-effective choice for transmitting component-video signals. Three of the pairs can carry RGB video signals, and the fourth pair carries audio, synchronization, and other transmissions. Unfortunately, Category 5 cable lacks shielding, and thus it's somewhat vulnerable to common-mode coupling that induces equal voltages in each of the cable's conductors. As a first line of defense against common-mode problems, you can configure RGB signals as differential voltages, but any voltage difference between the ground references of the twisted-pairs' drivers and receivers results in a common-mode signal on each of the received lines.
Common-mode-noise voltages limit transmission quality of video signals. This Design Idea shows how you can use a single operational amplifier to minimize common-mode signals' effects on differential-component-video receivers. In Figure 1, the receiver circuits' ground terminals (in red) show that the ground-reference voltages of each of the RGB differential signals differ from those present at the drivers. To maintain signal quality and minimize reflections, each video-signal twisted-pair transmission line terminates in 100Ω. For example, resistors R35 and R37 terminate the R+ line, and R36 and R38 terminate the R– line. Meanwhile, the G and B termination circuits are identical. Any common-mode voltage on the R-signal pair appears at the junction of R37 and R38 and across R39.
To create a common-mode cancellation voltage, operational amplifier IC1 sums and inverts the signals on all three or four signal-line pairs. For example, adding the R+ and R– signals cancels their differential-voltage components and doubles the common-mode voltage that each line contributes. Capacitors C1 and C2 provide ac coupling for the circuit's input and output, respectively. The output from IC1 applies a common-mode bias voltage through a matched pair of 30-kΩ resistors, R42 and R43, to the R+ and R- receiver network. Close tolerances for R42 and R43 ensure that the differential voltages delivered at ROUT +and ROUT–closely balance with respect to the inputs' common-mode voltage. Capacitors C11 and C12 provide equalization to boost the differential-video signal's higher frequency components.
Before applying cancellation, the signals at the circuit's outputs ROUT+and ROUT–would appear as: ROUT+=VDIFF/2+VCM, and ROUT–=–VDIFF/2+VCM, where VDIFF represents the desired differential signal, and VCMexists with respect to the circuit's local ground. After applying cancellation, the output signals appear as: ROUT+=+VDIFF/2+VCM–VCMS=+VDIFF/2, and ROUT–=–VDIFF/2+VCM–VCMS=–VDIF/2, where VCMS represents the summed and inverted common-mode voltage at IC1's output.
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