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| United States Patent | 5528695 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/5528695.html |
| Inventor(s) | Klippel; Wolfgang (Altenberger Str. 11, Dresden, D01277, DE) |
| Abstract | This invention relates to an arrangement (14) for protecting a transducer
(2) which converts an electric signal into an acoustic or a mechanic
signal against overload and destruction. The arrangement is connected to
the electric terminals of the transducer and changes the electric input
signal under overload condition. This protection arrangement comprises a
controller (15), a monitor (16) and an envelope detector (17). The monitor
(16) provides a signal indicating the electric or mechanic load of the
transducer (2). The peak value of the signal is anticipated by using a
predictive filter in the envelope detector (17) or a delay element in the
controller (15). If the predicted peak value exceeds an defined limit an
attenuation element in the controller (15) is activated and the input
signal is changed in time to prevent an overload of the transducer. This
invention provides protection of the loudspeaker with a minimum of signal
distortion and allows to reduce the head room of the transducer and to
convert signals with a higher amplitude. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 5528695 |
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Predictive protection arrangement for electroacoustic transducer |
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| Publication Date |
June 18, 1996 |
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| Filing Date |
September 26, 1994 |
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| Priority Data |
Oct 27, 1993[DE]43 36 609.0 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A protection arrangement coupled to the electric input of a transducer
which converts an electric signal into an acoustic or a mechanic signal
for protecting said transducer against destruction at high signal
amplitudes, comprising
a monitor having a monitor output for providing a monitored signal
corresponding with the instantaneous load of said transducer;
a nonlinear predictive filter having said monitored signal as a filter
input and generating a filter output signal corresponding to the
instantaneous envelope of said monitored signal as a filter output, said
filter output signal anticipating the peak value of said monitored signal
and allowing the prediction of an overload condition of the transducer in
time; and
a controller having a signal input connected to the input of said
protection arrangement, a controller output connected to said electric
input of said transducer and a control input connected to said filter
output, said controller attenuating said electric signal supplied to said
transducer if the anticipated peak value of said monitored signal exceeds
a defined limit to prevent an overload state of the transducer.
2. The invention according to claim 1 wherein said nonlinear predictive
filter comprises:
a first static nonlinear circuit having an input connected with said filter
input and an output for providing a rectified signal;
a linear circuit having an input connected with said filter input and
generating an output signal which is orthogonal to said monitored signal
by shifting the phase of the components of the monitored signal by
90.degree., approximately, in phase lead or phase lag direction;
a second static nonlinear circuit having an input connected with the output
of said linear circuit and an output for providing a rectified signal; and
a summer having an input connected to the output of said first static
nonlinear circuit and an input connected to the output of said second
static nonlinear circuit and an output connected with said detector output
for providing the predicted peak value.
3. The invention according to claim 2 wherein said linear circuit is a
Hilbert transformer for providing the conjunctive signal of the monitored
signal to generate the analytic continuation of the monitored signal.
4. The invention according to claim 2 wherein said linear circuit is a
first-order differentiator for providing the derivative of said monitored
signal to perform a linear prediction of the peak value about an
instantaneous displacement.
5. The invention according to claim 2 wherein said first static nonlinear
circuit and said second static nonlinear circuit are squarers for squaring
the input signal and for providing the squared signal to said summer.
6. The invention according to claim 2 wherein said first static nonlinear
circuit and said second static nonlinear circuit are two-ways rectifiers
for providing the absolute value of the input signal to said summer.
7. The invention according to claim 1 wherein said monitor comprises a
low-pass filter having a filter input and a filter output; said filter
output being connected to said monitor output; the transfer response of
said filter being related to the transfer response of said transducer
between the electric input signal and said monitored signal.
8. The invention according to claim 7 wherein said filter input is
connected to said signal input of said controller forming a feed-forward
arrangement.
9. The invention according to claim 7 wherein said filter input is
connected to said controller output forming a feedback arrangement.
10. The invention according to claim 1 wherein said monitor comprises a
sensor having a sensor output connected to said monitor output for
providing said monitored signal.
11. A protection arrangement coupled to the electric input of a transducer
which converts an electric signal into an acoustic or a mechanic signal
for protecting said transducer against destruction at high signal
amplitudes, comprising:
a monitor having a monitor output for providing a monitored signal
corresponding with the instantaneous load of said transducer;
an envelope detector having a detector input connected to said monitor
output and a detector output for providing the peak value of said
monitored signal, said envelope detector comprising a nonlinear predictive
filter for anticipating the peak value of said monitored signal; and
a controller having a signal input connected to the input of the said
protection arrangement, a controller output connected to said electric
input of said transducer and a control input connected to said detector
output, said controller attenuating said electric signal supplied to said
transducer if the anticipative peak value of said monitored signal exceeds
a defined limit, said controller comprising:
an attenuation element having an input connected to said signal input, an
output connected to said controller output and an attenuation control
input for attenuating the signal at the output of said attenuation
element;
a static nonlinear circuit having an input connected to said control input
and an output for providing a signal if the signal at the input of said
static nonlinear circuit exceeds a defined threshold; and
an integrator having an input connected to the output of said static
nonlinear system and an output connected to the said attenuation control
input for realizing a time characteristic of the controller matching
psychoacoustic requirements.
12. A protection arrangement coupled to the electric input of a transducer
which converts an electric signal into an acoustic or a mechanic signal
for protecting said transducer against destruction at high signal
amplitudes, comprising:
a monitor having a monitor output for providing a monitored signal
corresponding with the instantaneous load of said transducer;
an envelope detector having a detector input connected to said monitor
output and a detector output for providing the peak value of said
monitored signal; and
a controller having a signal input connected to the input of the said
protection arrangement, a controller output connected to said electric
input of said transducer and a control input connected to said detector
output, said controller attenuating said electric signal supplied to said
transducer if the anticipative peak value of said monitored signal exceeds
a defined limit, said controller comprising:
a delay element having an input connected to said signal input and a delay
output for providing the time delayed input signal;
an attenuation element having an input connected to said delay output, an
output connected to said controller output and an attenuation control
input for attenuating the signal at the output of said attenuation
element;
a static nonlinear circuit having an input connected to said control input
and an output for providing a signal if the signal at the input of said
static nonlinear circuit exceeds a defined threshold; and
an integrator having an input connected to the output of said static
nonlinear system and an output connected to the said attenuation control
input for realizing a time characteristic of the controller matching
psychoacoustic requirements.
13. The invention according to claim 12 wherein said envelope detector
comprises
a static nonlinear circuit having an input connected with said detector
input and an output for rectifying said monitored signal;
an integrator having an input connected to the output of said static
nonlinear system and an output connected to said detector output for
providing said peak value of the monitored signal.
14. A protection arrangement coupled to the electric input of a transducer
which converts an electric signal into an acoustic or a mechanic signal
for protecting said transducer against destruction at high signal
amplitudes, comprising:
a filter having a filter input connected with the input of said protection
arrangement and a filter output for providing a monitored signal
corresponding with the instantaneous load of said transducer; the transfer
response of said filter being related to the transfer response of said
transducer between the electric input signal and said monitored signal;
a time delay element having an input connected with the input of said
protection arrangement and an output for providing the time delayed input
signal;
an envelope detector having an input connected to said filter output and a
detector output for providing a signal related with the envelope of said
monitored signal; and
a controller having a signal input connected to the output of said time
delay element, a controller output connected to said electric input of
said transducer and a control input connected to said detector output,
said controller attenuating said delayed electric input signal if peak
value of said monitored signal exceeds a defined limit, said time delay
element allows to activate the controller in time to prevent an overload
state of the transducer.
15. The invention according to claim 14 wherein said controller comprises:
an attenuation element having an input connected to said signal input, an
output connected to said controller output and an attenuation control
input for attenuating the signal at the output of said attenuation
element;
a static nonlinear circuit having an input connected to said control input
and an output for providing a signal if the signal at the input of said
static nonlinear circuit exceeds a defined threshold; and
an integrator having an input connected to the output of said static
nonlinear system and an output connected to the said attenuation control
input for realizing a time characteristic of the controller matching
psychoacoustic requirements.
16. The invention according to claim 15 wherein said envelope detector
comprises:
a static nonlinear circuit having an input connected with said detector
input and an output for rectifying said monitored signal; and
an integrator having an input connected to the output of said static
nonlinear system and an output connected to said detector output for
providing said peak value of the monitored signal. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The invention is related to an arrangement coupled to a transducer which
converts an electric signal into an acoustic or a mechanic signal. The
arrangement is used to protect the transducer against destruction caused
by high signal amplitudes. The arrangement is connected to the electric
terminals of the transducer and changes the electric input signal under
overload conditions.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Transducers converting an electric signal into an acoustic or mechanic
signal (loudspeakers, headphones and actuators) can be endangered to
malfunction or permanent destruction when a electric or mechanic variable
of the transducer exceeds an allowed limit value. For example, the
displacement of the voice coil of an electrodynamic transducer is limited
by the geometry of the suspension and the motor structure.
Overloading the transducer can be prevented by operating the transducer
with an amplifier supplying a maximal output power lower than the power
handling capacity of the transducer. Input signals with high amplitude
will always be limited by the amplifier and will not endanger the
transducer. However, unpleasant distortions are generated if the amplifier
is limiting.
Protecting the transducer by amplifier limiting is unacceptable in
professional sound enhancement and initialized the development of special
protection systems as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,490,770 by H. R.
Phillimore entitled OVERLOAD PROTECTION OF LOUDSPEAKERS, U.S. Pat. No.
4,330,686 by R Stephen entitled LOUDSPEAKER SYSTEMS, U.S. Pat. No.
4,301,330 by T. Bruce entitled LOUDSPEAKER PROTECTION CIRCUIT, U.S. Pat.
No. 4,296,278 by S. B. Cullison entitled LOUDSPEAKER OVERLOAD PROTECTION
CIRCUIT and U.S. Pat. No. 3,890,465 by Y. Kaizu entitled CIRCUIT
ARRANGEMENT FOR PROTECTION OF A SPEAKER SYSTEM. These systems protect the
transducer against thermal overload related to the electric power supplied
to the transducer successfully but fail in the protection of transducers
against mechanical destruction caused by high amplitudes of mechanical
variables.
If the displacement of the voice coil exceeds an allowed maximal value the
loudspeaker works under mechanic overload and is endangered to permanent
destruction. The amplitude of the displacement depends from the spectral
power density of the electric signal as well as from the transfer
characteristic of the transducer. While the temperature of the voice coil
changes slowly with time constants about 1 s, the displacement is a
low-pass filtered signal with a spectral power density decreasing by 12 dB
per octave above the resonance frequency. These spectral components make
high demands to the control system to reduce the electric input signal of
the transducer in time.
The protection systems of prior art as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,864,624
to Tichy, in U.S. Pat. No. 4,583,245 to Gelow and as described by Klippel
entitled The Mirror filter--a New Basis for Reducing Nonlinear Distortion
Reduction and Equalizing Response in Woofer Systems, J. Audio Eng. Soc. 32
(9), pp. 675-691, (1992) have deficiencies in protecting the transducer
against transient input signals of high amplitudes. If the protection
system is activated at a defined threshold value, the final peak value of
the displacement always exceeds the threshold value due to the reaction
time inherent in the control system. Therefore, the threshold value must
be set lower than the allowed limit to ensure protection against transient
singles. However, this low threshold value limits the amplitude of steady
state signals unnecessarily and reduces the output signal of the
transducer in cases where no attenuation is required.
Thus, there is a need for a protection system for loudspeakers which can
provide an improved protection of the transducer against overload caused
by an arbitrary electric signal such as music, speech or secondary sound
in active noise control.
A protection circuit is required which has a very short reaction time for
coping with transient signals with high amplitude and for attenuating the
electric signal at the transducer input in time.
Another object of the invention is to provide protection of the loudspeaker
while causing a minimal change of the transducer's input signal.
Therefore, a minimal amount of linear and nonlinear distortions are
generated by the protection circuit.
SUMMARY
This invention protects a transducer, which converts an electric signal
u.sub.L (t) into an acoustic or a mechanic signal, against overload and
destruction. The protection circuit consists of a controller, a monitor
and an envelope detector.
The monitor provides a relevant signal of the transducer (e.g.
displacement) indicating the mechanic or electric load of the transducer.
According to the invention the peak value of the signal is anticipated by
using a predictive filter in the envelope detector or by implement a delay
element in the controller. If the peak value exceeds a defined limit the
controller is activated and the transducer input signal is attenuated in
time to ensure that the monitored signal will not exceed the defined
limit. The predictive liter contains a Hilbert transformer or a simple
differentiator to estimate the envelope of the signal.
This invention allows to provide reliable protection of the loudspeaker
with a minimum of signal distortion generated by the protection system.
The electric signal supplied to the loudspeaker is only changed in
critical situations when the loudspeaker is endangered. The protection
system has a linear transfer characteristic for signals with a stationary
time characteristic.
This invention provides an improved protection, requires a few number of
elements and can be implemented in a digital signal processing system at
low costs.
The head room of the transducer, which is required without or insufficient
protection can be reduced. Driving the loudspeaker at a higher amplitude
without exposing the transducer to danger results in a higher output
amplitude (e.g. increased sound pressure level). Thus, a transducer with a
smaller volume of the enclosure and a smaller weight can produce the
required amplitude of the mechanic or acoustic output signal.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a schematic flow diagram showing the protection system with
feed-forward control.
FIG. 2 shows the schematic flow diagram of the protection circuit with
feedback control.
FIG. 3 is a protection system using feedback of a sensed acoustic signal.
FIG. 4 is an embodiment of a protection system with envelope estimation.
FIG. 5 is an embodiment of the feed-forward protection circuit.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
The protection arrangement can be realized either in a feedback or in a
feed-forward structure. FIG. 1 shows a feed-forward protection arrangement
1 which is connected to the electric terminals of the transducer 2. The
protection system 1 comprises a linear filter 3, an envelope detector 4
and a controller 5.
The controller 5 has a signal input 7 connected with input 6 of the
protection arrangement 1, an output 9 connected via output 11 of the
protection arrangement 1 to transducer 2 and a control input 8 for
changing the transfer characteristic of the controller 5. If the signal at
the control input 8 is constant than the transfer characteristic of the
controller between input 7 and output 9 is linear and constant.
The input of the linear filter 3 is connected to the input 6 of the
protection arrangement. This filter 3 provides a signal at the output 10
which is equivalent to the monitored signal. Monitoring the displacement
of a woofer loudspeaker system is described as an example. However, this
protection arrangement can also be applied to other kinds of transducer
where different variables (stress, force, velocity) have to be monitored.
In the case of a woofer system comprising a driver in a closed box system
the filer 3 has a second-order low-pass characteristic and the cut-off
frequency corresponds to the resonance frequency of the transducer. This
filter provides a signal at the output 10 which is equivalent to the
displacement x(t). The output 10 is connected via envelope detector 4 with
the control input 8 of the controller 5.
The output of the envelope detector 4 provides a signal A(t) which
corresponds with the peak value of the displacement x(t). If the amplitude
signal A(t) exceeds a defined limit S then the controller 5 is activated
and the input signal u.sub.L (t) is changed in time to ensure that the
resulting displacement will not exceed the limit.
FIG. 2 shows an alternative embodiment of the invention based on a feedback
structure which shows some advantages in comparison to the feed-forward
structure depicted in FIG. 1. The embodiment 14 in FIG. 2 comprises a
controller 15, a filter 16 and an envelope detector 17. The input 12
providing the input signal u(t) is connected via the controller 15 with
the input of the filter 16 and via output 13 with the loudspeaker 2. The
filter 16 has the transfer characteristic of the loudspeaker 2 between the
terminal voltage and the displacement and provides the monitored signal
x(t). The output of the filter 16 is connected via the envelope detector
17 with the control input 20 of the controller 15.
FIG. 3 shows a third embodiment of the invention which has also a feedback
structure but uses instead of the filter 16 an additional sensor 21. The
input 24 of the protection system is connected via the input 25 and the
output 26 of the controller 22 with the loudspeaker 2. The sensor 21
measures a mechanic or acoustic signal at the loudspeaker and supplies a
displacement signal x(t) via the envelope detector 23 to the input 27 of
the controller 22.
In order to improve the protection of the loudspeaker reproducing transient
signals the controller should be activated in case of approaching overload
as early as possible to compensate for the additional reaction time
inherent in the controller. According to the invention the peak value of
the monitored signal is anticipated by two different approaches:
1. If the monitored signal is a low-pass filtered signal, like the
displacement x(t) in the discussed example, then the instantaneous
envelope can be anticipated by a nonlinear, predictive filter implemented
in the envelope detector 4, 17 and 23 of the feed-forward and feedback
control, respectively. Anticipating the peak value in the zero crossing of
the monitored signal gives the controller one quarter of a period more
time for the attenuation of the transducer input signal.
2. Only the feed-forward structure depicted in FIG. 1 allows an alternative
approach. The electric signal at the controller input 7 is delayed in
respect to the envelope signal at input 8. The envelope detector can
implemented as a simple peak detector without any anticipation. However,
the protection system causes an additional time delay in the electric
signal according to the attenuation time.
The predictive filter in the first approach determines the instantaneous
envelope A(t) of monitored signal by generating the analytic continuation
x.sub.a (t)=x(t)+jx.sub.i (t)=A(t)e.sup.j.phi.(t) (1)
from the monitored signal x(t) with the time varying amplitude
##EQU1##
The conjugated signal x.sub.i (t) is produced from the real signal by
using a Hilbert transformer 28. The Hilbert transformation in the time
domain
##EQU2##
and in the frequency domain
X.sub.i (j.omega.)=-jsgn(.omega.)X(j.omega.) (5)
shows the relationship between the time signals x(t) and x.sub.i (t) and
Fourier transformed signals X(j.omega.) and X.sub.i (j.omega.),
respectively. The used sign function sgn(n) is defined by sgn(n)=1 for
n>0, sgn(0)=0 and sgn(n)=-1 for n<0. A Hilter-Transformer can be realized
by a time-discrete transveral filter (FIR-Filter) as shown by A. Oppenheim
and R. W. Schafer: Discrete-time Signal Processing, Prentice Hall,
Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1989. The transfer characteristic of the filter
has the required 90.degree.-phase shift, a constant amplitude response but
an additional phase shift growing with the frequency linearly. This
additional phase shift is caused by a constant time delay which is
required to realize the Hilbert-transformer in a FIR-filter as a casual
system. Especially at low frequencies the time delay becomes substantial
due to the long filter length. This time delay reduces the time between
the recognition of an overload-situation and the start of the actual
event. Therefore, it is more convenient to approximate the Hilbert
transformer by one or more recursive, time-discrete IIR-Filter as shown in
I. J. Gold, et al.: Theory and Implementation of the Discrete Hilbert
Transform, Proc. Symp. Computer Processing in Communications, vol. 19,
Polytechnic Press, N.Y., 1970.
According to Eq. (2) the envelope detectors 4, 17 and 23 contain a
Hilbert-transformer, two squarers, a summer and a static nonlinear system
which performs the root extraction of the summed signal. However, the
embodiment in FIG. 4 contains only one nonlinear element 36 which takes
into account the threshold S as well as the root extraction. The input 32
of the envelope detector 17 is connected to the input of the first squarer
and via the Hilbert-transformer 28 to the input of the second squarer 30.
The outputs of both squarers 29 and 30 are connected via the summer 31
with the output 33 of the envelope detector 17.
Alternatively, the conjunctive signal x.sub.i (t) in Eq. (1) can be
replaced by the time derivative of the monitored signal x(t). In this case
the element 28 in FIG. 4 is a simple differentiator. In the discussed
example the time derivative of x(t) can be interpreted as velocity v(t).
It has also the 90.degree.-phase shift as the conjunctive signal x.sub.i
(t) but the amplitude increases by 6 dB/octave. Taking v(t) and x(t) as
the real imaginary part of a complex signal the envelope can be
approximated by the instantaneous magnitude
##EQU3##
where f.sub.R is the resonance frequency of the loudspeaker.
The differentiator causes an error in the amplitude estimation. Supplying a
sinusoidal at the resonance frequency f.sub.R to the loudspeaker the
signal at the output of filter 16 is
x(t)=X.sub.0 sin(2.pi.f.sub.R t) (7)
and the output of the predictor corresponds with the true amplitude X.sub.0
according to Eq. (6). However, for a sinusoidal tone with f.noteq.f.sub.R
the predicted amplitude A(t) consist of a constant value and a
superimposed sinusoidal tone with the frequency 2f. At the positive and
negative peaks of x(t) where v(t)=0 the estimated value A(t) equals
X.sub.0 but there is no prediction. At the zero crossing where x(t)=0 the
predictor anticipates the maximal displacement for the next quarter of the
period and the error in the predicted amplitude in percent comes up to
##EQU4##
In spite of this error the implementation of a simple differentiator is
useful because spectral components below the resonance frequency
(f<f.sub.R) have a longer period and the predictive filter can activate
the controller in time despite the increased prediction error. Spectral
components above the resonance frequency f>f.sub.R) contribute to a
smaller extent to the displacement due to the decay in spectral power
density at higher frequencies.
In an alternative embodiment it is possible to approximate the
square-root-calculation to determine the magnitude of the complex in Eq.
(2) and Eq. (6) by the sum of the absolute values of the real and
imaginary signal
##EQU5##
respectively. Eq. (10) shows that the prediction is based on a linear
prediction about the instantaneous displacement using the gradient of x(t)
and a time constant.
The determination of the magnitude value can be performed by an
two-way-rectification using a network of diodes. The differentiator can be
realized in a digital signal processor with a sufficient low constant
delay time so that the whole prediction time T=1/2.pi.f.sub.R in Eq. (10)
is available for adjusting the control system.
FIG. 4 shows also the embodiment of the controller 15 in the protection
system 14. The controller 15 contains a attenuation element 34, an
integrator 35 and a static, nonlinear transfer element 36. The attenuation
element 34 is connected between the input 18 and the output 19 of the
controller 15. For a loudspeaker (e.g. sub-bass woofer) which is part of a
multi-speaker-system and radiates only band-limited signals the
attenuation element 34 can be realized as a controllable amplifier as
shown in FIG. 4. The output signal of the amplifier 34
u.sub.L (t)=(1-u.sub.S (t))u(t) (11)
can be attenuated by the signal u.sub.S (t) at control input 37.
However, a broadband loudspeaker system requires a filter with controllable
transfer characteristic (e.g. high-pass with variable cut-off frequency)
to attenuate only the amplitude of the frequency components which
contribute to the resulting displacement.
The system 36 has a nonlinear transfer characteristic without memory. This
nonlinear system 36 can simply embodied by a diode-network. It realizes
the threshold value where the protection starts and the optimal
characteristic of the controller. The output signal is zero as long as the
input signal is lower than the threshold value S but if the signal at the
input 20 exceeds the threshold S system 36 supplies a signal via the
integrator 35 to the control input 37 of the amplifier 34. The integrator
35 performs a leakage integration using a short time constant for rising
slopes (usually below 1 ms) and a long time constant for the decay
(usually above 1 s) to avoid modulations of the audio signals by the
control signal.
The feed-forward structure depicted in FIG. 1 can be implemented by the
alternative approach using an additional delay element instead of a
predictive filter in the envelope detector 4. The embodiment depicted in
FIG. 5 shows the controller 5 and the envelope detector 4 in detail. The
envelope detector 4 is connected via squarer 42 and integrator 43 with the
output 45. The integrator 43 has a short time constant for rising slopes
and long time constant for the decay to hold the peak value of the squared
amplitude. The controller 5 comprises a time delay element 38 with a
transfer function H(s)=e.sup.-ts, a controllable amplifier 39 for
attenuating the transducer signal and a nonlinear transfer element 41 for
realizing an optimal control characteristic. The input 7 is connected via
the delay element 38 and the amplifier 39 to the output 9 of the
controller. The squared envelope signal at the input 8 is supplied via the
nonlinear element 41 to the control input 40 of the amplifier 39.
The above description shall not be construed as limiting the ways in which
this invention may be practiced but shall be inclusive of many other
variations that do not depart from the broad interest and intent of the
invention.
* * * * *
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Description  |
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