Sound chip
A sound chip is an integrated circuit designed to produce audio signals through digital, analog or mixed-mode electronics. Sound chips are typically fabricated on metal–oxide–semiconductor mixed-signal chips that process audio signals. They normally contain audio components such as oscillators, envelope controllers, samplers, filters, amplifiers, and envelope generators.
History
A number of sound synthesis methods for electronically producing sound were devised during the late 20th century. These include programmable sound generators, wavetable synthesis, and frequency modulation synthesis. Such sound chips were widely used in arcade game system boards, video game consoles, home computers and digital synthesizers.Since the late-1990s, pulse-code modulation sampling has been the standard for many sound chips, as used in the Intel High Definition Audio standard of 2004. The PCM sampling method is used in many mobile phones and sound cards for personal computers. This widespread use is part of the digital sound revolution that started in the 1980s.
Types
There are multiple types of sound chips, which are divided based on their use.- Programmable sound generators
- Synthesis
- * Wavetable synthesis
- * Frequency modulation synthesis
- Sampling
- * Pulse-code modulation sampling
| Type | Core features |
| One-time programmable voice chips |
|
| Flash voice chips | |
| MP3 voice chips | |
| Text-to-speech voice chips | |
| Voice dialog chips |