The invention is related to an apparatus and a method for detecting fluorescent lighting in a room. In particular, the present invention is related to apparatus according to claim 1 and a method according to claim 4.
The deployment of sensor based systems offers many opportunities for providing new services and applications in the home. In particular, in the area of home networking, a Wi-Fi home gateway platform may include an interface with an advanced search and recommendation engine allowing home users to access their preferred or personalized content. In addition to that, background algorithms may utilize additional information which is collected in the home of the user to improve recommendations for media consumption or other purposes. Such kind of information includes e.g. time, date, and ambient temperature. It has been found useful to have information about the lighting in a room, if it is turned on or off. In the following this information is called operational status of the lighting. In conjunction with calendar and time information, the information about the status of lighting enables an adapted algorithm to provide more insight into the living habits inside a home.
Information about the operational status of the lighting is also interesting information with regard to improving the management of power consumption in homes. In this context, there is an increasing demand for data about energy consuming devices. The lighting of rooms in homes and buildings is one factor that has to be taken into account in this general consideration. Energy disaggregation is a common keyword for this kind of research activities.
Combining the data collection in the home of a user with a residential gateway makes sense because the residential gateway provides an interface between a home network and a public network such as the Internet. The residential gateway comprises the full interaction between services and devices supported by the residential gateway which provides a number of additional enablers for supporting the home user. Multiple home devices are able to handle multiple media streams and the flows are directed to the most appropriate devices while other devices are informed about the incoming stream. Recording of media information is supported if needed. Thus, in the gateway there is already plenty of information available to generate recommendations to users with regard to media consumption. Consequently, it also makes sense for the gateway to capture context information such as information about the lighting in the home.
Modern gateways already support algorithms generating user recommendations based on a database about user preferences. Typically the database is built up over a long term. More advanced technologies also utilize the context information related to the user preferences and habits.
The context information includes e.g. the location of the user, activity, ambient temperature, lighting and others. Such kind of information can include for example at what time of the date the lighting is turned on and where.
Today the presence or absence of lighting is detected in consumer products with photo sensors, e.g. photodiodes or photovoltaic cells. A typical application is the detection of ambient light to adjust the brightness of a display.
Taking this as a starting point the present invention aims at an alternative approach for detecting fluorescent lighting.
According to a first aspect the present invention suggests an apparatus for detecting the operation status of a fluorescent light source. The apparatus comprises an antenna for receiving and sending electromagnetic waves. The antenna is coupled with the receiver device. The antenna is also coupled with a correlator circuit configured to detect the presence of a modulation in the received electromagnetic wave. If the correlator circuit detects the presence of a modulation in the received electromagnetic wave then the correlator circuit causes a signal generator to generate an indication signal.
An embodiment of the inventive apparatus comprises an amplitude detector which advantageously can be a narrowband amplitude detector.
Advantageously the apparatus can be communicatively coupled by the antenna to other wireless communication devices. In this case the coupling the apparatus and the other wireless communication devices can be accomplished by electromagnetic waves in the 2.4 GHz or 5 GHz band transmitted between the antenna and at least one antenna connected to the other wireless communication devices.
According to a second aspect the present invention suggests a method for detecting the operation status of a fluorescent light source, wherein the method comprises the following steps:
Advantageously an embodiment of the inventive method can comprise further the step of utilizing the indication signal as input information for enhancing the functionality of a consumer electronic devices.
The invention proposes a cost effective implementation of the method in any wireless device by direct coupling to existing radio modules. The invention exploits the interaction of electromagnetic waves with fluorescent light tubes or compact fluorescent light bulbs during the propagation of the electromagnetic wave. The interaction is based on the working principle of fluorescent lighting and gives rise to amplitude modulation of the electromagnetic wave at twice the frequency of the AC voltage supply and its harmonics. The presence absence of 100 Hz frequency harmonics in the received signal of the electromagnetic wave due to the interaction with fluorescent light is used as an indicator of the operation status of the fluorescent lighting and enables to detect whether the lighting is on or off.
In the drawing, an embodiment of the present invention is shown. The same or similar components are labeled with same or similar reference numbers.
The fluorescent light tube 101 is filled with a gas at low-pressure, e.g. mercury vapor, argon, xenon, neon or krypton. The inner surface of the tube is coated with a fluorescent coating (not shown). The light tube 101 comprises at its ends two electrodes (not shown) made of coiled tungsten.
During operation of the light tube 101 the electrodes are heated and emit free electrons into the gas filled inner volume of the light tube 101. Once the electrons have left the electrodes into the inner volume of the light tube 101, an electric field generated by a voltage applied between the two electrodes accelerates the electrons. The electrons travel with an increasing speed from the one electrode to the other electrode until they collide with a gas atom inside the light tube. If an electron has accumulated sufficient energy to excite an atom, the atom emits invisible ultraviolet light. The ultraviolet light is absorbed by the coating which finally emits visible light.
The accelerating electric field is generated by the AC mains voltage and therefore fluctuates at the mains frequency, e.g. 50 Hz in Europe. It is noted, however, that the invention does not depend on the mains frequency. The specific value of 50 Hz has only exemplary character. During one full period of the AC mains supply voltage, the mains voltage takes on a positive and negative maximum value. At the same time the AC current flowing between the electrodes of the light tube 101 takes on two maximum values. But the two maximum currents flow in opposite directions in the light tube because of the reversal of the polarity of the mains supply voltage. The current is carried by the free electrons traveling inside the light tube 101. When the current through the light tube 101 is maximum then there is also a maximum number of electrons inside the light tube and at the same time there is maximum light emission. When the current through the light tube is minimum then there is a minimum number of electrons inside the light tube 101 and there is minimum light emission. In consequence, the light emission fluctuates at a frequency of 100 Hz between the maximum and minimum values in synchronism with the number of free electrons and current flow inside the light tube 101. In compliance with usual terminology, the number of free electrons in the gas volume is described as electron density.
Electromagnetic waves impinging from the outside onto the light tube 101 will interact with an electron density inside the light tube 101 fluctuating at a frequency of 100 Hz between the maximum value and the minimum value. Consequently, the reflective properties of the light tube 101 for external electromagnetic waves change at the same frequency of 100 Hz from being a good reflector (reflective phase) to being almost transparent (transparent phase). The fluctuation of the reflective properties of the light tube 101 gives rise to an amplitude and phase modulation of electromagnetic waves impinging on the light tube 101. This will be explained in greater detail in conjunction with a simple 2-wave-propagation model which is laid out in
As it is illustrated in
Tc=D+Rc
where D is the portion of the direct signal and Rc is the portion of the component reflected by the ceiling 102.
In the reflective phase of the light tube 101, the total signal level of the electromagnetic wave is equal to
Tf=D+Rf
where D is the portion of the direct signal and Rf is the portion of the component reflected by the light tube 101.
Thus, as shown in
As shown in
The principles of the present invention work in the same way for elongated fluorescent light tubes and for compact fluorescent light tubes.
In
For the sake of brevity, the invention is only described in connection with elongated fluorescent light tube.
The present invention will make use of this modulation of the signal level of the received signal in order to detect if the fluorescent lighting is in its on or off state in a room where electromagnetic waves are propagating.
Compact fluorescent light bulbs are frequently operated at high frequencies like 10 kHz. However, measurements only showed a 100 Hz modulation of the radiofrequency electromagnetic waves. For the sake of completeness it is also mentioned that no modulation of the radiofrequency electromagnetic waves could be found when light emitting diodes where used as light source. In conclusion, the 100 Hz modulation of the radiofrequency electromagnetic waves is caused by the physical effects inherently linked with the light generation in fluorescent light sources.
The connection of the gateway to external networks is symbolized with arrow 108 interfacing with a MIMO device 501. One output 502 of the MIMO device 501 is connected with a power amplifier 503. By means of a selection switch 504, the power amplifier 503 is connected to the antenna 104 when the gateway 103 is in a sending mode. When the gateway 103 is in a receiving mode to receive electromagnetic waves (RF signal), then the selection switch 504 changes its state and connects the antenna 104 with a low noise amplifier 505. The output of the low noise amplifier 505 is provided to an RF coupler 506. The RF coupler 506 provides an output signal on the one hand to a narrow band amplitude detector 507 and on the other hand to an input 508 of the MIMO device 501. The MIMO device forwards the received input signal to perform conventional signal processing in the gateway 103. The narrow band amplitude detector 507 filters the electromagnetic wave which is received by the antenna 104. The output of the narrowband amplitude detector 507 is provided to a frequency correlator 508 which detects if there is a modulation of the received RF (radio frequency) signal which is correlated with a reference frequency signal. The reference frequency signal is generated from a frequency signal provided at input 509 of the frequency correlator 508. In the present embodiment of the invention, the reference frequency is the second harmonic of the mains AC frequency of 50 Hz, i.e. the reference frequency is 100 Hz. The frequency correlator 508 communicates an output signal to a signalization stage 510 which generates an indication signal if the frequency correlator 508 has detected that the RF signal level has a modulation which is correlated with the reference frequency. Then the signalization stage 510 produces an indication signal 511 for further usage in the gateway 103. The group of components comprising the RF coupler 506, the narrow band amplitude detector 507, the frequency correlator 508, and the signalization stage 510 form together a detection and signalization unit 512.
In countries having a mains frequency of 60 Hz the received signal level of the electromagnetic wave is modulated with a frequency of 120 Hz. Again, the modulation frequency is the second harmonic of the mains frequency.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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12305884.4 | Jul 2012 | EP | regional |