8Output
7V+
6Gnd
5V-
4Sym
3Ec-
2Ec+
1Input
Pin NumberPin Name
Table 1. Pin assignments
Figure 1. 2180-series equivalent circuit diagram
FEATURES
Wide Dynamic Range: >120 dB
Wide Gain Range: >130 dB
Exponential (dB) Gain Control
Low Distortion: < 0.01 % (2180A)
Wide Gain-Bandwidth: 20 MHz
Dual Gain-Control Ports (pos/neg)
Pin-Compatible with 2150-Series
APPLICATIONS
Faders
Panners
Compressors
Expanders
Equalizers
Filters
Oscillators
Automation Systems
THAT 2180A, 2180B, 2180C
THAT 2180 Series integrated-circuit voltage
controlled amplifiers (VCAs) are very high-
performance current-in/current-out devices
with two opposing-polarity, voltage-sensitive
control ports. They offer wide-range exponen-
tial control of gain and attenuation with low
signal distortion. The parts are trimmed at
wafer stage for low THD and control-voltage
feedthrough without further adjustment.
The VCA design takes advantage of a fully
complementary dielectric isolation process
which offers closely matched NPN/PNP pairs, to
deliver discrete performance at IC prices. The
parts are available in three grades, selected for
factory trimmed distortion, allowing the user to
optimize cost vs. performance. The 2180 Series
is available in an 8-pin single-in-line (SIP)
package.
Description
Blackmer® Pre-Trimmed IC
V
oltage Controlled Amplifiers
THAT Corporation; 45 Sumner
Street; Milford, MA 01757-1656; US
A
Tel: +1 508 478 9200; Fax: +1 508 478 0990; Web: www.thatcorp.com
Copyright © 2008, THAT Corporation Document 600029 Rev 02
2180CL08-U0.05%
2180BL08-U0.02%
2180AL08-U0.01%
Plastic SIP
Max THD @ 1V,
1 kHz, 0 dB
Table 2. Ordering information
BIAS CURRENT
COMPENSATION
Vbe
MULTI-
PLIER Output
Sym
Iset
V-
Vcc
Ec+
Ec-
Iadj
Input
Gnd
7
2
3
8
4
5
1
6
2k
25
Document 600029 Rev 02 Page 2
of 12 THAT 2180 Series
Blackmer® Pre-trimmed IC VCAs
THAT Corporation; 45 Sumner Street; Milford, MA 01757-1656; USA
Tel: +1 508 478 9200; Fax: +1 508 478 0990; Web: www.thatcorp.com
Copyright © 2008, THAT Corporation
Positive Supply Voltage (VCC)+20 V
Negative Supply Voltage (VEE) -20 V
Supply Current (ICC) 10 mA
Maximum EC EC+ - (EC-) ± 1 V
Power Dissipation (PD) (TA = 75 ºC) 330 mW
Operating Temperature Range (TOP) 0 to +70 ºC
Storage Temperature Range (TST) -40 to +125 ºC
Absolute Maximum Ratings2,3
SPECIFICATIONS1
2180A 2180B 2180C
Parameter Symbol Conditions Min Typ Max Min Typ Max Min Typ Max Units
Supply Current ICC No signal 2.4 4 2.4 4 2.4 4 mA
Equiv. Input Bias Current IB No Signal 2 10 2 12 2 15 nA
Input Offset Voltage VOFF(IN) No Signal ±5 ±5 ±5 mV
Output Offset Voltage VOFF(OUT) Rout = 20 k
0 dB gain 0.5 1 1 2 1.5 3 mV
+15 dB gain 1 3 1.5 4 3 10 mV
+30 dB gain 3 12 5 15 9 30 mV
Gain Cell Idling Current IIDLE —20 —20 —20 µA
Gain-Control Constant TA =25°C (TCHIP35°C)
-60 dB < gain < +40 dB
EC+ /Gain (dB) Pin 2 (Fig. 14) 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.0 6.1 6.2 mV/dB
EC- /Gain (dB) Pin 3 -6.2 -6.1 -6.0 -6.2 -6.1 -6.0 -6.2 -6.1 -6.0 mV/dB
Gain-Control TempCo EC /TCHIP Ref TCHIP = 27°C +0.33 +0.33 +0.33 %/°C
Gain-Control Linearity -60 to +40 dB gain 0.5 2 0.5 2 0.5 2 %
1 kHz Off Isolation EC+= -360mV,EC-=+360mV 110 115 110 115 110 115 dB
Output Noise en(OUT) 20 Hz ~ 20 kHz
Rout = 20k
0 dB gain -98 -97 -98 -96 -98 -95 dBV
+15 dB gain -88 -86 -88 -85 -88 -84 dBV
Voltage at V- VV- No Signal -3.1 -2.85 -2.6 -3.1 -2.85 -2.5 -3.1 -2.85 -2.6 V
Electrical Characteristics2
1. All specifications are subject to change without notice.
2. Unless otherwise noted, TA=25ºC, VCC=+15V, VEE= -15V.
3. Stresses above those listed under “Absolute Maximum Ratings” may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only; the functional operation of
the device at these or any other conditions above those indicated in the operational sections of this specification is not impli ed. Exposure to absolute maximum rating condi-
tions for extended periods may affect device reliability.
2180A 2180B 2180C
Parameter Symbol Conditions Min Typ Max Min Typ Max Min Typ Max Units
Positive Supply Voltage VCC +4 +15 +18 +4 +15 +18 +4 +15 +18 V
Negative Supply Voltage VEE -4 -15 -18 -4 -15 -18 -4 -15 -18 V
Bias Current ISET VCC - VEE = 30 V 1 2.4 5 1 2.4 5 1 2.4 5 mA
Signal Current IIN + IOUT ISET = 2.4 mA 0.35 1.5 0.35 1.5 0.35 1.5 mArms
Recommended Operating Conditions
THAT 2180 Series Page 3
of 12 Documen
t
600029
Rev 02
Blackmer® Pre-trimmed IC VCAs
THAT Corporation; 45 Sumner Street; Milford, MA 01757-1656; USA
Tel: +1 508 478 9200; Fax: +1 508 478 0990; Web: www.thatcorp.com
Copyright © 2008, THAT Corporation
2180A 2180B 2180C
Parameter Symbol Conditions Min Typ Max Min Typ Max Min Typ Max Units
Total Harmonic Distortion THD 1 kHz, No External Trim
VIN = 0 dBV, 0 dB gain 0.005 0.010 0.010 0.020 0.030 0.050 %
VIN = +10 dBV, -15 dB gain 0.020 0.030 0.030 0.040 0.040 0.070 %
VIN = -5 dBV, +15 dB gain 0.020 0.030 0.030 0.040 0.040 0.070 %
Slew Rate RIN = ROUT = 20 k—12 —12 —12 —V/µs
Gain at 0 V Control Voltage EC- = 0 mV -0.1 0.0 +0.1 -0.15 0.0 +0.15 -0.2 0.0 +0.2 dB
Electrical Characteristics (con’t)2
Vcc Ec-
IN
10u 20k
5.1k
Vee
OUT
22p
20k
OUT
OP275
73
8
4
2
6
5
1V+
-IN Ec-
Ec+
SYM
GND
V-
2180
Series
VCA
Power Supplies
Vcc = +15 V
Vee = -15 V
-
+
NC
Figure 2. Typical Application Circuit
Figure 3. 2180-series Frequency Response vs. Gain Figure 4. 2180-series Noise (20kHz NBW) vs. Gain
The THAT 2180 Series VCAs are designed for
high performance in audio-frequency applications
requiring exponential gain control, low distortion,
wide dynamic range and low control-voltage
feedthrough. These parts control gain by converting
an input current signal to a bipolar logged voltage,
adding a dc control voltage, and reconverting the
summed voltage back to a current through a bipolar
antilog circuit.
Figure 5 presents a considerably simplified inter-
nal circuit diagram of the IC. The ac input signal
current flows in pin 1, the input pin. An internal
operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) works
to maintain pin 1 at a virtual ground potential by
driving the emitters of Q1 and (through the Voltage
Bias Generator) Q3. Q3/D3 and Q1/D1 act to log the
input current, producing a voltage, V3, which repre-
sents the bipolar logarithm of the input current. (The
voltage at the junction of D1 and D2 is the same as
V3, but shifted by four forward Vbe drops.)
Gain Control
Since pin 8, the output, is usually connected to a
virtual ground, Q2/D2 and Q4/D4 take the bipolar
antilog of V3, creating an output current which is a
precise replica of the input current. If pin 2 (Ec+)
and pin 3 (Ec-) are held at ground, the output
current will equal the input current. For pin 2
positive or pin 3 negative, the output current will be
scaled larger than the input current. For pin 2
negative or pin 3 positive, the output current is
scaled smaller than the input.
In normal operation, the output current is
converted to a voltage via an opamp-based I-V
converter, as shown in Figure 2, where the conver-
sion ratio is determined by the feedback resistor
connected between the output and inverting input.
The signal path through the VCA and the output
opamp is non-inverting.
The scale factor between the output and input
currents is the gain of the VCA. Either pin 2 (Ec+) or
pin 3 (Ec-), or both, may be used to control gain.
Gain is exponentially proportional to the voltage at
pin 2, and exponentially proportional to the negative
of the voltage at pin 3. Therefore, pin 2 (Ec+) is the
positive control port, while pin 3 (Ec-) is the
Document 600029 Rev 02 Page 4
of 12 THAT 2180 Series
Blackmer® Pre-trimmed IC VCAs
THAT Corporation; 45 Sumner Street; Milford, MA 01757-1656; USA
Tel: +1 508 478 9200; Fax: +1 508 478 0990; Web: www.thatcorp.com
Copyright © 2008, THAT Corporation
Figure 5. Simplified Internal Circuit Diagram
Figure 6. Gain vs. Control Voltage (EC+, Pin 2) at 25°C
Theory of Operation4
Figure 7. Gain vs. Control Voltage (EC-, Pin 3) at 25°C
Figure 8. Gain vs. Control Voltage (EC-) with Temp (°C)
4. For more details about the internal workings of the 2180 Series of VCAs, see An Improved Monolithic Voltage-Controlled
A
mplifier, by Gary K. Hebert (Chief Technology Officer, for THAT Corporation), presented at the 99th convention of the
A
udio Engineering Society, New York, Preprint number 4055
.
negative control port. Because of the exponential
characteristic, the control voltage sets gain linearly
in decibels. Figure 6 shows the decibel current gain
of a 2180 versus the voltage at Ec+, while Figure 7
shows gain versus the Ec-.
Temperature Effects
The logging and antilogging in the VCA depends
on the logarithmic relationship between voltage and
current in a semiconductor junction (in particular,
between a transistor's Vbe and Ic). As is well known,
this relationship is temperature dependent. There-
fore, the gain of any log-antilog VCA depends on its
temperature.
Figure 8 shows the effect of temperature on the
negative control port. (The positive control port behaves
in the same manner.) Note that the gain at Ec = 0 V is
0 dB, regardless of temperature. Changing temperature
changes the scale factor of the gain by 0.33%/°C, which
pivots the curve about the 0 dB point.
Mathematically, the 2180's gain characteristic is
, Eq. 1
Gain =EC+EC
(0.0061)(1+0.0033T)
where T is the difference between room
temperature (25°C) and the actual temperature,
and Gain is the gain in decibels. At room
temperature, this reduces to
, Eq. 2
Gain =EC+EC
0.0061
If only the positive control port is used, this
becomes
, Eq. 3
Gain =EC+
0.0061
If only the negative control port is used, this
becomes
, Eq. 4
Gain =EC
0.0061
DC Bias Currents
The 2180 current consumption is determined by
the resistor between pin 5 (V-) and the negative
supply voltage (VEE). Typically, with 15V supplies, the
resistor is 5.1 k, which provides approximately
2.4 mA. This current is split into two paths: 570 μA
is used for biasing the IC, and the remainder
becomes Icell as shown in Figure 5. Icell is further
split in two parts: about 20 μA biases the core
transistors (Q1 through Q4), the rest is available for
input and output signal current.
DC Feedthrough
Normally, a small dc error term flows in pin 8
(the output). When the gain is changed, the dc term
changes. This control-voltage feedthrough is more
pronounced with gain; the –A version of the part
produces the least feedthrough, the –C version the
most. See Figure 9 for typical curves for dc offset vs.
gain
Audio Performance
The 2180-Series VCA design, fabrication and
testing ensure extremely good audio performance
when used as recommended. In particular, the 2180
maintains low distortion over a wide range of gain,
cut and signal levels. Figures 10 through 12 show
typical distortion performance for representative
samples of each grade of the part. Figure 13 shows
the harmonic content of the distortion in a typical
B-grade part.
THAT 2180 Series Page 5
of 12 Documen
t
600029
Rev 02
Blackmer® Pre-trimmed IC VCAs
THAT Corporation; 45 Sumner Street; Milford, MA 01757-1656; USA
Tel: +1 508 478 9200; Fax: +1 508 478 0990; Web: www.thatcorp.com
Copyright © 2008, THAT Corporation
Figure 9. Representative DC Offset vs. Gain
Document 600029 Rev 02 Page 6
of 12 THAT 2180 Series
Blackmer® Pre-trimmed IC VCAs
THAT Corporation; 45 Sumner Street; Milford, MA 01757-1656; USA
Tel: +1 508 478 9200; Fax: +1 508 478 0990; Web: www.thatcorp.com
Copyright © 2008, THAT Corporation
Figure 13. FFT of THD, 0dB gain, 1kHz, 0dBV, Typ. 2180B
Figure 12. 1 kHz THD+Noise vs. Input Level, -15dB gainFigure 10. 1 kHz THD+Noise vs. Input Level, 0dB gain
Figure 11. 1 kHz THD+Noise vs. Input Level, +15dB gain
Input
As mentioned above, input and output signals are
currents, not voltages. While this often causes some
conceptual difficulty for designers first exposed to
this convention, the current input/output mode
provides great flexibility in application.
The Input pin (pin 1) is a virtual ground with
negative feedback provided internally (see Figure 5,
Page 4). The input resistor (shown as 20 k in
Figure 2, Page 3) should be scaled to convert the
available ac input voltage to a current within the
linear range of the device. Generally, peak input
currents should be kept under 1 mA for best distor-
tion performance.
Figures 10 through 12 show distortion vs. signal
level for the three parts in the 2180 Series for 0 dB,
+15 dB and -15 dB gain. The circuit of Figure 2,
Page 3 was used to generate these curves.
For a specific application, the acceptable distor-
tion will usually determine the maximum signal
current level which may be used. Note that, with
20 k current-to-voltage converting resistors, distor-
tion remains low even at 10 V rms input at 0 dB or
-15 dB gain, and at 1.7 V rms input at +15 dB gain
(~10 V rms output). This is especially true in the –A
and –B grades of the part.
Distortion vs. Noise
A designer may trade off noise for distortion by
decreasing the 20 k current-to-voltage converting
resistors used at the input and output in Figure 2,
Page 3. For every dB these resistor values are
decreased, the voltage noise at the output of the
OP275 is reduced by one dB. For example, with
10 k resistors, the output noise floor drops to
–104 dBV (typical) at 0 dB gain — a 6 dB reduction
in noise because 10 k is 1/2 of (6 dB lower than)
20 k.
Conversely, if THD is more important than noise
performance, increasing these resistors to 40 k will
increase the noise level by 6 dB, while reducing
distortion at maximum voltage levels. Furthermore, if
maximum signal levels are higher (or lower) than the
traditional 10 V rms, these resistors should be
scaled to accommodate the actual voltages prevalent
in the circuit. Since the 2180 handles signals as
currents, these ICs can even operate with signal
levels far exceeding the 2180's supply rails, provided
appropriately large resistors are used.
High-Frequency Distortion
The choice of input resistor has an additional,
subtle effect on distortion. Since the feedback imped-
ances around the internal opamp (essentially Q1/D1
and Q3/D3) are fixed, low values for the input resis-
tor will require more closed-loop gain from the
opamp. Since the open-loop gain naturally falls off at
high frequencies, asking for too much gain will lead
to increased high-frequency distortion. For best
results, this resistor should be kept to 10 k or
above.
Stability
An additional consideration is stability: the inter-
nal op amp is intended for operation with source
impedances of less than 60 k at high frequencies.
For most audio applications, this will present no
problem
DC Coupling
The quiescent dc voltage level at the input (the
input offset voltage) is approximately +0 mV, but, as
in many general-purpose opamps, this is not well
controlled. Any dc input currents will cause dc in the
output which will be modulated by gain; this may
cause audible thumps. If the input is dc coupled, dc
input currents may be generated due to the input
offset voltage of the 2180 itself, or due to offsets in
stages preceding the 2180. Therefore, capacitive
coupling is almost mandatory for quality audio appli-
cations. Choose a capacitor which will give accept-
able low frequency performance for the application.
Summing Multiple Input Signals
Multiple signals may be summed via multiple
resistors, just as with an inverting opamp configura-
tion. In such a case, a single coupling capacitor may
be located next to pin 1 rather than multiple capaci-
tors at the driven ends of the summing resistors.
However, take care that the capacitor does not pick
up stray signals.
Output
The Output pin (pin 8) is intended to be
connected to a virtual ground node, so that current
flowing in it may be converted to a voltage (see
Figures 2 & 14). Choose the external opamp for good
audio performance. The feedback resistor should be
chosen based on the desired current-to-voltage
conversion constant. Since the input resistor deter-
mines the voltage-to-current conversion at the input,
THAT 2180 Series Page 7
of 12 Documen
t
600029
Rev 02
Blackmer® Pre-trimmed IC VCAs
THAT Corporation; 45 Sumner Street; Milford, MA 01757-1656; USA
Tel: +1 508 478 9200; Fax: +1 508 478 0990; Web: www.thatcorp.com
Copyright © 2008, THAT Corporation
Applications
the familiar ratio of Rf /Ri for an invertin
g
opamp will
determine the overall voltage gain when the 2180 is
set for 0 dB current gain. Since the VCA performs
best at settings near unity gain, use the input and
feedback resistors to provide design-center gain or
loss, if necessary.
A small feedback capacitor around the output
opamp is needed to cancel the output capacitance of
the VCA. Without it, this capacitance will destabilize
most opamps. The capacitance at pin 8 is typically
15 pF.
Power Supplies
Positive
The positive supply is connected directly to V+
(pin 7). No special bypassing is necessary, but it is
good practice to include a small (~1 μF) electrolytic
or (~0.1 μF) ceramic capacitor close to the VCA IC
on the PCB. Performance is not particularly depend-
ent on supply voltage. The lowest permissible supply
voltage is determined by the sum of the input and
output currents plus ISET , which must be supplied
through the output of the internal transconductance
amplifier and down through the core and voltage bias
generator. Reducing signal currents may help accom-
modate low supply voltages. THAT Corporation
intends to publish an application note covering
operation on low supply voltages. Please inquire for
its availability.
The highest permissible supply voltage is fixed by
the process characteristics and internal power
consumption. +18 V is the nominal limit.
Negative
The negative supply terminal is V- (pin 5). Unlike
normal negative supply pins, this point is intended to
be connected to a current source ISET (usually simply
a resistor to VEE), which determines the current avail-
able for the device. As mentioned before, this source
must supply the sum of the input and output signal
currents, plus the bias to run the rest of the IC. The
minimum value for this current is 570 μA over the
sum of the required signal currents. Usually, ISET
should equal 2.4 mA for most pro audio applications
with ±15 V supplies. Higher bias levels are of limited
value, largely because the core transistors become
ineffective at logging and antilogging at currents over
1 mA.
Mathematically, this can be expressed as
ICELL Peak (IIN) + Peak (IOUT) + 220 μA; and
ICELL
= ISET
- 350 μ
A
. Therefore,
ISET Peak (IIN) + Peak (IOUT) + 570 μA.
The voltage at V- (pin 5) is four diode drops
below ground, which, for the 2180, is approximately
-2.85 V. Since this pin connects to a (high
impedance) current supply, not a voltage supply,
bypassing at pin 5 is not normally necessary.
Ground
The GND pin (pin 6) is used as a ground refer-
ence for the VCA. The non-inverting input of the
internal opamp is connected here, as are various
portions of the internal bias network. It may not be
used as an additional input pin.
Voltage Control
Negative Sense
EC- (pin 3) is the negative voltage control port.
This point controls gain inversely with applied
voltage: positive voltage causes loss, negative voltage
causes gain. As described on Page 5, the current gain
of the VCA is unity when pin 3 is at 0 V with respect
to pin 2, and varies with voltage at approximately
-6.1 mV/dB, at room temperature.
Positive Sense
As mentioned earlier, EC+ (pin 2) is the positive-
sense voltage control port. A typical circuit using this
approach is shown in Figure 14. EC- (pin 3) should be
grounded, and EC+ (pin 2) driven from a
low-impedance voltage source. Using the opposite
sense of control can sometimes save an inverter in
the control path. In order to maintain the wafer level
adjustment which minimizes THD, leave pin 4 open.
Document 600029 Rev 02 Page 8
of 12 THAT 2180 Series
Blackmer® Pre-trimmed IC VCAs
THAT Corporation; 45 Sumner Street; Milford, MA 01757-1656; USA
Tel: +1 508 478 9200; Fax: +1 508 478 0990; Web: www.thatcorp.com
Copyright © 2008, THAT Corporation
Figure 14. Positive control port using Pin 2 (EC+)
Vcc
Ec+
IN
10u 20k
5.1k
Vee
OUT
22p
20k
OUT
OP275
73
8
4
2
6
5
1
V+
-IN Ec-
Ec+
SYM
GND
V-
2180
Series
VCA
Power Supplies
Vcc = +15 V
Vee = -15 V
-
+
NC
Positive and Negative
It is also possible (and sometimes advantageous)
to drive both control ports, either with differential
drive (in which case, the control sensitivities of each
port are summed), or through two different control
signals. There is no reason why both control ports
cannot be used simultaneously.
Control Port Drive Impedance
The control ports (pins 2 through 4) are
connected directly to the bases of the logging and/or
antilogging transistors. The accuracy of the logging
and antilogging is dependent on the EC+ and EC-
voltages being exactly as desired to control gain. The
base current in the core transistors will follow the
collector currents, of course. Since the collector
currents are signal-related, the base currents are
therefore also signal-related. Should the source
impedance of the control voltage(s) be large, the
signal-related base currents will cause signal-related
voltages to appear at the control ports, which will
interfere with precise logging and antilogging, in turn
causing distortion.
The 2180 Series VCAs are designed to be
operated with zero source impedance at pins 2 and
3, and an infinite source impedance at pin 4. (pin 4
should be left open.) To realize all the performance
designed into a 2180, keep the source impedance of
the control voltage driver well under 50.
This often suggests driving the control port
directly with an opamp. However, the closed-loop
output impedance of an opamp typically rises at high
frequencies because open loop gain falls off as
frequency increases. A typical opamp's output imped-
ance is therefore inductive at high frequencies.
Excessive inductance in the control port source
impedance can cause the VCA to oscillate internally.
In such cases, a 100 resistor in series with a
1.5 nF capacitor from the control port to ground will
usually suffice to prevent the instability.
Noise Considerations
It is second nature among good audio designers
to consider the effects of noisy devices on the signal
path. As is well known, this includes not only active
devices such as opamps and transistors, but extends
to the choice of impedance levels as well. High value
resistors have higher inherent thermal noise, and the
noise performance of an otherwise quiet circuit can
be easily spoiled by the wrong choice of impedance
levels.
Less well known, however, is the effect of noisy
circuitry and high impedance levels in the control
path of voltage-control circuitry. The 2180 Series
VCAs act like multipliers: when no si
g
nal is presen
t
at the signal input, noise at the control input is
rejected. So, when measuring noise (in the absence
of signal – as most everyone does), even very noisy
control circuitry often goes unnoticed. However,
noise at the control port of these parts will cause
noise modulation of the signal. This can become
significant if care is not taken to drive the control
ports with quiet signals.
The 2180 Series VCAs have a small amount of
inherent noise modulation because of its class AB
biasing scheme, where the shot noise in the core
transistors reaches a minimum with no signal, and
increases with the square root of the instantaneous
signal current. However, in an optimum circuit, the
noise floor rises only to -94 dBV with a 50 μA rms
signal at unity gain — 4 dB of noise modulation. By
contrast, if a unity-gain connected, non-inverting
5534 opamp is used to directly drive the control
port, the noise floor will rise to 92 dBV — 6 dB of
noise modulation.
To avoid excessive noise, one must take care to
use quiet electronics throughout the control-voltage
circuitry. One useful technique is to process control
voltages at a multiple of the eventual control constant
(e.g., 61 mV/dB — ten times higher than the VCA
requires), and then attenuate the control signal just
before the final drive amplifier. With careful attention
to impedance levels, relatively noisy opamps may be
used for all but the final stage.
Stray Signal Pickup
It is also common practice among audio design-
ers to design circuit boards to minimize the pickup
of stray signals within the signal path. As with noise
in the control path, signal pickup in the control path
can adversely effect the performance of an otherwise
good VCA. Because it is a multiplier, the 2180
produces second harmonic distortion if the audio
signal itself is present at the control port. Only a
small voltage at the control port is required: as little
as 10 μV of signal can increase distortion to over
0.01%. This can frequently be seen at high frequen-
cies, where capacitive coupling between the signal
and control paths can cause stray signal pickup.
Because the signal levels involved are very small,
this problem can be difficult to diagnose. One useful
technique is to temporarily bypass the control port to
ground via a modest-sized capacitor (e.g., 10 μF). If
the distortion diminishes, signal pickup in the
control path is the likely cause.
Temperature Sensitivity
As shown by the equation for AV (Page 5), the gain
of a 2180 VCA is sensitive to temperature in
THAT 2180 Series Page 9
of 12 Documen
t
600029
Rev 02
Blackmer® Pre-trimmed IC VCAs
THAT Corporation; 45 Sumner Street; Milford, MA 01757-1656; USA
Tel: +1 508 478 9200; Fax: +1 508 478 0990; Web: www.thatcorp.com
Copyright © 2008, THAT Corporation
proportion to the amount of
g
ain or loss
commanded. The constant of proportionality is
0.33% of the decibel gain commanded, per degree
Celsius, referenced to 27°C (300°K). This means that
at 0 dB gain, there is no change in gain with tempera-
ture. However, at -122 mV, the gain will be +20 dB
at room temperature, but will be 20.66 dB at a
temperature 10°C lower.
For most audio applications, this change with
temperature is of little consequence. However, if
necessary, it may be compensated by a resistor
embedded in the control voltage path whose value
varies with temperature at the same rate of 0.33%/°C.
Such parts are available from RCD Components, Inc,
www.rcd-comp.com, and KOA/Speer Electronics,
www.koaspeer.com
Closing Thoughts
THAT Corporation welcomes comments,
questions and suggestions regarding these devices,
their design and application. Our engineering staff
includes designers who have decades of experience in
applying our parts. Please feel free to contact us to
discuss your applications in detail.
Document 600029 Rev 02 Page 10
of 12 THAT 2180 Series
Blackmer® Pre-trimmed IC VCAs
THAT Corporation; 45 Sumner Street; Milford, MA 01757-1656; USA
Tel: +1 508 478 9200; Fax: +1 508 478 0990; Web: www.thatcorp.com
Copyright © 2008, THAT Corporation
The THAT 2180-series is available in a 8-pin SIP
package. Package dimensions are shown in Figure 15
below; Pinouts are given in Table 1 on page 1. Order-
ing information is provided in Table 2 also on
page 1.
The 2180-series package is entirely lead-free.
The lead-frame is copper, plated with successive
layers of nickel, palladium, and gold. This approach
makes it possible to solder these devices using lead-
free and lead-bearing solders.
Neither the lead-frame nor the plastic mold
compound used in the 2180-series contains any
hazardous substances as specified in the European
Union's Directive on the Restriction of the Use of
Certain Hazardous Substances in Electrical and
Electronic Equipment 2002/95/EG of January 27,
2003.
THAT 2180 Series Page 11
of 12 Documen
t
600029
Rev 02
Blackmer® Pre-trimmed IC VCAs
THAT Corporation; 45 Sumner Street; Milford, MA 01757-1656; USA
Tel: +1 508 478 9200; Fax: +1 508 478 0990; Web: www.thatcorp.com
Copyright © 2008, THAT Corporation
Parameter Symbol Conditions Min Typ Max Units
Package Style See Fig. 15 for dimensions 8 Pin SIP
Thermal Resistance θJA SIP package soldered to board 100 ºC/W
Environmental Re
g
ulation Com
p
lianc
e
Com
p
lies with Januar
y
27, 2003 RoHS re
q
uirement
s
Package Characteristics
I
K
L
G
E TYP.
F
B
D
C
1
A
N
M
H
N 17.78 ±0.3 0.700 ±0.012
J
MILLIMETERS
19.5 +0.2/-0
1.25
0.65
0.85
2.54 ±0.2
0.9
1.2
5.8 +0.2/-0
2.8 +0.1/-0
10.5 ±0.5
1.3
0.3
3.5 ±0.5
INCHES
0.77 +0.008/-0
0.049
0.026
0.033
0.100 ±0.008
0.04
0.05
0.23 +0.008/-0
0.11 +0.004/-0
0.413 ±0.02
0.05
0.012
0.14 ±0.02
ITEM
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
Package Information
Figure 15. -L (SIP) version package outline drawing
Document 600029 Rev 02 Page 12
of 12 THAT 2180 Series
Blackmer® Pre-trimmed IC VCAs
THAT Corporation; 45 Sumner Street; Milford, MA 01757-1656; USA
Tel: +1 508 478 9200; Fax: +1 508 478 0990; Web: www.thatcorp.com
Copyright © 2008, THAT Corporation
Notes