Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/14996
metadata.ojs.dc.title: Review of digital emulation of Vacuum-tube audio amplifiers and recent advances in related virtual analog models
metadata.ojs.dc.creator: Oliveira, Thomaz Chaves de A.
Barreto, Gilmar
Pasqual, Alexander Mattioli
metadata.ojs.dc.subject: Virtual analog digital model
Digital audio signal processing
Vacuum tubes
Electric guitar
Applied computing
metadata.ojs.dc.publisher: Editora UFLA
metadata.ojs.dc.date: 1-Jun-2013
metadata.ojs.dc.identifier.citation: OLIVEIRA, T. C. de A.; BARRETO, G.; PASQUAL, A. M. Review of digital emulation of Vacuum-tube audio amplifiers and recent advances in related virtual analog models. INFOCOMP Journal of Computer Science, [S.l.], v. 12, n. 1, p. 10-23, June 2013.
metadata.ojs.dc.description.abstract: Although semiconductor devices have progressively replaced vacuum tubes in nearly all applications, vacuum-tube amplifiers are still in use by professional musicians due to their tonal characteristics.  Over the years, many different techniques have been proposed with the goal of reproducing the timbral characteristics of these circuits.  This paper presents a review on the methodologies  that have been used to emulate tube circuits  over the last 30 years for musical applications.  The first part of the paper introduces the basic principles of tube circuits, with a common cathode triode example.  The remainder of the paper reviews the tube sound simulation devices.  The first of these emulations used analog  operational amplifier circuits with the negative feedback designed to reproduce tube transfer. As DSP became more popular over the last decades for audio applications, efforts towards digital tube circuit simulation algorithms were initiated. Simulation of these devices are basically divided into linear models with digital filters that correspond to IIR analog filters and nonlinear digital models that corresponds to the tube circuit itself.  The simulation of the first is straightforward, normally accomplished by the use of FIR digital filters.  The last can be either accomplished approximation equations, that are known as digital waveshapers and their variants or by circuit derived techniques, such as the resolution of circuit ordinary differential equations solvers.  Wave digital filter models are also variants of circuit simulation techniques that are also treated in this paper.  The circuit derived techniques yield more precise simulations over the waveshapers but are always computationally more expensive so that a compromise between accuracy and  efficiency is needed for real-time simulation of these devices.
metadata.ojs.dc.language: eng
Appears in Collections:Infocomp



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