The present invention relates to efficient allocation of energy usage in lighting and other systems including electrical appliances that is achieved by flexible control and two-way communication with the lighting fixtures or other appliances of the system. In more detail, the present invention relates to apparatus and methods utilizing point of use laser, infrared (IR), and/or radio frequency (RF) control of lighting fixtures or other appliances in which the control commands communicated to the fixtures and appliances do not necessarily elicit a particular response from the fixtures or appliances to which it is transmitted depending upon such factors as the time of day, the amount of ambient light, the number of other fixtures or appliances, and many other factors.
The need for energy efficiency has driven innovation in the development of lamps for light fixtures and control systems for lighting fixtures. Fluorescent fixtures have been retrofit to many buildings in place of metal halide fixtures to reduce energy consumption. Although fluorescents have been improved by development of so-called T5 or T5HO fluorescent lamps and “quick start” ballasts and ballasts with electronic controls and significant energy savings have been achieved as a result of such developments, the improvement achieved by development of such lamps and ballasts has been only incremental over the many years that fluorescents have been in widespread use.
Remote switching systems are available for switching a ceiling fan and/or light in a room or building. So far as is known, however, systems capable of distinguishing between multiple electrical appliances are characterized by operational limitations, complication, and/or high installation cost. One such system is available from Sensor Switch, Inc. (Wallingford, Conn. and Port Perry, Ontario, www.sensorswitch.com), which markets a so-called “Hospital Bed Light Controller” that is retrofit to existing “pull chain” hospital bed wall lights and operated by an infrared (IR) receiver/controller and an IR transmitter with a range of 8-10 feet. The advertising for the Hospital Bed Light Controller claims that a nurse with one remote can control all the wall lights on the ward or floor of the hospital. Though useful for a small room, the range limitations of this system do not allow for effective use unless the operator is close to the wall lights.
U.S. Patent Publication No. US2005/0025480 describes a laser-activated photoresistor for on/off switching, but a photoresistor is too slow acting for many applications and merely switches on/off with no operating flexibility. Further, the laser-activated photoresistor is susceptible to ambient light such that switching can occur as a result of, for instance, a flashing light or even incident sunlight. The slow response of the photoresistor severely limits the useful range of the remote for this system due to incremental laser movements resulting from shaking or natural movements in hand held operations. U.S. Pat. No. 6,252,358 (and many other systems) use radio frequency (RF) control to switch fixtures, but such systems are complicated and therefore not well suited for use in commercial installations in which many fixtures must be controlled. Further, RF systems are not targeted to specific fixtures and/or individual lamps or groups of lamps such that in the absence of encoding of the RF signal (and the resulting complexity of operation), fixtures are switched that are not intended to be switched.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,897,883 and 6,828,733 disclose handheld IR transmitters said to be capable of switching individual fixtures. However, the systems described in those patents utilize encoded IR signals and pre-programmed, separately addressable IR receivers mounted to the fixtures controlled from the handheld transmitter to switch the fixtures, requiring increased operational complexity and cost of installation, especially in installations with many fixtures. So-called DALI (digital addressable lighting interface) systems are available (for instance, from Specialized Lighting Solutions, Beaverton, Oreg., and Complete Technology Integrations Pty Ltd, North Ryde, NSW). Although impressive in their capabilities and operational flexibility, such systems are expensive to purchase and install, may require specialized programming or re-programming when changes are needed in a particular installation, and are operationally complex. Other systems require calibration processes at the time of installation and complex operating instructions that are programmed into a central controller such that they cannot be operated by anyone other than trained operators and must be re-programmed, often requiring on-site visits by the installer, when changes are made in the manner in which the space lighted by such systems is used for a different purpose.
Many existing controls elicit a specific response for a specific command. Therefore, by using existing control systems, large groups of fixtures can be turned on or off as a response to an on or off command. Some such systems control groups of fixtures that are on the same circuit. This method is fast, but lacks the ability to customize the control of fixtures on the same circuit, thereby losing possible energy savings from customization. By using technology such as DALI, custom lighting arrangements can be achieved through issuance of commands to individually addressed fixtures or ballasts. RF wireless networks that have the capabilities of addressing commands to an individual appliance through an addressable RF module are also available. Although wireless, these systems have similar operational limitations as DALI. They are characterized by the complexity of programming, commissioning, and operation and have longer response times for customized settings when controlling large numbers of fixtures.
Another problem that has arisen has been created by financial incentives and/or regulatory requirements of energy conservation and consumption. Many public utilities offer favorable rates and other incentives to power purchasers, especially large purchasers, that agree to limit consumption during times of peak demand and/or that agree to decrease consumption upon receipt of notification from the power producer and/or carrier. Further, electrical rate charges for commercial purchasers are sometimes based on peak consumption such that a purchaser may be able save money by decreasing peak consumption and tax incentives are also offered to some purchasers. In some areas, power consumers are actually limited in the amount of electricity, or load, they can utilize at any given time. All of these supply, contract, and/or governmental factors act as incentives for limiting and/or reducing consumption and create a demand for control systems capable of reducing total and peak power consumption, and it is an object of the present invention to provide such systems.
It is also an object of the present invention to provide a system for controlling lighting fixtures and other electrical appliances that is capable of documenting, or verifying, that power consumption has been limited and/or reduced as required for such purposes as qualifying for favorable electrical rates and/or tax incentives.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an apparatus for monitoring the operational status of the fixtures in a lighting system for maintenance planning and/or to switch different lamps and/or fixtures on or off in the event inappropriate readings that might indicate failure or other problems are reported from a fixture.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an apparatus and method for controlling lighting fixtures and other electrical appliances that reduces, and in some instances, even eliminates the need for operator intervention for some inputs that affect operating status by providing a set of operating rules that are implemented by a controller for, for instance, over-riding a signal from an ambient light sensor that is received during night-time hours such that essential night-time lighting is not switched off.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a lighting control system, and a system for controlling other electrical appliances, in which the lighting fixtures and/or electrical appliances respond to signals from a hand-held remote control, external inputs that do not require operator intervention, or a system controller in accordance with a pre-programmed set of operating rules so that a simple commands such as “select operating state 6” can be used to control some or all the fixtures and/or appliances in the system.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a lighting control system, and a system for controlling electrical appliances other than lighting systems, in which multiple fixtures and/or appliances can be set to a selected operating state (“select operating state 6”) in accordance with pre-programmed operating rules and/or by an operator that then assumes subsequent operating states in accordance with the pre-programmed operating rules in accordance with certain external inputs, for instance, the system assumes “operating state 7” at 7:00 am and/or, if system power consumption is limited and certain ventilating fans, for instance, that are included in the system are switched on by an operator while the system is in “operating state 7,” selected lighting fixtures (selected by the pre-programmed operating rules) are switched off so as to maintain system power consumption below the system limit.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a control system for lighting and other electrical appliances that is “self-learning” in that individual fixtures and/or appliances can be set to desired operating status by an operator and their operating status sampled and saved by a system controller for recall in accordance with pre-programmed operating rules and/or at the operator's command to cause individual fixtures and/or appliances to assume the operating status to which the fixtures/appliances were set.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus that switches electrical appliances to limit consumption in accordance with pre-programmed rules for insuring compliance with conservation, financial, and/or regulatory incentives for efficient power consumption, reduction of peak consumption, and/or conservation.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a system for switching electrical appliances in a wireless or wired control network as described in co-pending International Application Nos. PCT/US2009/001734, MODULAR, ADAPTIVE CONTROLLER FOR LIGHT FIXTURES, filed Mar. 19, 2009, and PCT/US2009/005272, POINT OF USE AND NETWORK CONTROL OF ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES AND METHOD, filed Sep. 22, 2009, both commonly owned with the present application.
This listing of several objects of the present invention is intended to be illustrative, and is not intended to be a complete listing of all objects of this invention; instead, this listing of several objects of the present invention is intended to be illustrative in the sense that the invention addresses many needs and solves many problems, not all listed here. Other objects, and the many advantages of the invention, will be clear to those skilled in the art from the detailed description of the embodiment(s) of the invention and from the drawings appended hereto. Those skilled in the art will recognize, however, that the embodiment(s) of the present invention described herein are only examples of specific embodiment(s), set out for the purpose of describing the making and using of the present invention, and that the embodiment(s) shown and/or described herein are not the only embodiment(s) of a control system for light fixtures and other electrical appliances constructed in accordance with the present invention.
Referring now to the figures,
The present invention provides what is referred to herein as Smart Demand Limits (SDL). This feature allows authorized system users to set consumption and demand limits for the energy use of devices controlled by the system. This limit can be changed by an authorized administrator as a response to, for instance, changes in building use or incentives for energy conservation. Many such governmental and energy company incentives exist, such as EPACT, to encourage installation of energy saving lighting systems capable of reducing consumption as well as, demand during peak demand emergencies. This feature allows for the allocation of lighting in areas where it is most needed by limiting consumption in areas of less need through the individual step dimming controls of the present invention. Upon determination of the maximum wattage available at a given time, the method and apparatus of the present invention limit consumption in accordance with the following method.
A system coordinator, shown schematically in
A repeater, or point of use network control, feature is limited to prevent exceeding the pre-selected limit for the installation. In this example, each fixture only executes repeater commands up to four lamps, therefore effectively limiting system use in that modality to 160 lamps. Each receiver is equipped with a target green LED that serves both as a target and an indication that there is available capacity in system and a red LED that is energized when the SDL ceiling is reached. The operator must then shed demand in another area to free up capacity in the desired area. Through this and other logic steps, the system prevents inadvertent or intentional power consumption that exceeds the established limits. Rules are operative in the individual fixtures as well as in the coordinator and are therefore enforced even in the absence of a properly functioning coordinator. When using actual measured consumption, either by submeter or current sensing devise on individual fixture, controls operate on the same logic, i.e., Max watts=11000−Current Usage 10,000 watts=1,000 watts available.
The advantages of this new level of control are far reaching. As a result of the SDL routine 196 (see
In a second embodiment, the present invention provides what is referred to herein as a Custom Response Feature that allows for rapid control of many fixtures, each going to a custom setting (that may be different from other fixtures wired in the same circuit) upon issuance of a single command. In seconds, thousands of fixtures can go to individually customized settings on a single command from the centralized controller or with a point of use remote transmitter. This feature allows for maximum energy savings through custom lighting arrangements and can extend the useful life of the equipment, thereby reducing the environmental impact of premature equipment disposal. The advantages of this enabling technology are far reaching. For example, on a single command, hundreds of luminaries can be dimmed, HVAC systems load reduced, or exhaust fans slowed as an immediate, appliance-specific, custom response to a single demand response command. Another advantage of this new method is ease of programming, commissioning, and change of custom settings as a response to environmental changes, facility use changes, or for normal lumen degradation of luminaries. This capability addresses major problems associated with the commissioning and operation of systems with daylight harvesting, occupancy or vacancy sensing, and other forms of control inputs. A common problem with existing lighting systems and controls is that the programming and commissioning of the system is so complex that users bypass the controls to operate the fixtures manually. When they do so, intended energy savings are lost because the operator(s) are unable to adjust, calibrate, and re-commission the system. This Custom Response Feature, which works through a process of data storage and logic that is fixture controller centered, solves this problem.
In one embodiment, this Custom Response Feature is implemented by switching individual fixtures/appliances to optimize lighting and energy savings through point of use or centralized control. The operating state and other data of each fixture/appliance records to a specific memory address on command originating from a centralized controller (coordinator) or hand-held transmitter with programming capabilities. During automatic control, the control command for each fixture is read and the data stored at a specified memory address. Each fixture controller reads, interprets, and executes based on the data recorded at that specific memory address. An example of the resulting simplicity and effectiveness is shown by a custom setting that safely and immediately reduces consumption for peak demand response, If, for instance, an installation has contracted with a utility to shed 50,000 watts of peak demand on instruction, that decrease in consumption is achieved, for instance, by dimming fixtures to a level that achieves the reduction without compromising safety (and/or by reducing the speed of ventilating fans or other appliances) to a level that achieves the reduction called for by contract. The system user sets the lighting at the desired safe level, sets other appliances at energy saving settings, and issues the command for the fixtures/appliances to record the settings to a specific memory address, for instance, address D1. Upon subsequent receipt of the Demand Response Command (DRC) from the utility company or governmental agency, the system issues the Custom Response Feature command “read D1,” and each fixture/appliance reads the data found at that memory address and responds accordingly, and the facility safely sheds the required demand within seconds. Of course those skilled in the art will recognize from this disclosure that other situations may be present in which it is useful to issue a DRC such that in one embodiment, multiple DRCs for use in multiple circumstances and/or operating conditions (for instance, a “lamps full on” DRC upon receipt of an input from an electronic security system), each causing individual lamps and/or fixtures in the network to switch on, switch off, or maintain their current operating state, are stored in the memory of the system coordinator. Calibrating or re-commissioning is achieved by making changes to the operating state of individual fixtures in the network and then issuing a new command to store data to D1, overriding the previous recorded data at that address, or to other DRCs stored in memory.
Calibration and re-commissioning is an important aspect of lighting system design and the present invention is utilized to particular advantage for these processes, and can be done by different operators and at different levels, with testing and compliance at each level. Calibration and commissioning uses point of use control and experiential measurements for each level of decision makers/operators. For example, the lighting designer, building owner, tenant, safety manager, sustainability manager, and other personnel may all have input as to the lighting needs (or the needs of other electrical systems) for a particular installation, and the programmer can make changes at the point of use that can be immediately evaluated for safety concerns, operational preferences, and such issues as whether energy savings objectives/limitations are met.
An additional aspect of the present invention is the ability to establish group affiliations in control programming from point of use. In facilities where there are a large many fixtures, or in facilities where there are dynamic controls during operation, i.e. motion sensing, daylight harvesting, etc., broadcasting the standard custom programming command to all fixtures may present difficulties because the fixtures may switch during the programming process such that undesired configurations could be recorded to memory. Using the programming hand-held transmitter 32 (see
Referring to the figures,
Referring to
The control logic for the operating software for the microcontroller 38 of each switch controller 28 is shown in
If data read at step 76 by the IR sensor(s) is an IR pulse that can be decoded as at step 78 such that data is present at step 80, data is checked 82 to see that it meets program parameters. If program parameters are met, microcontroller 38 sends and/or receives and stores configuration data to memory 84 and the method cycles back through counter/timer 72. If user-selected parameters are not met at 82, the program queries 190 all fixtures in a group (as selected and identified by user input) and sends a group request to the coordinator 192 or ascertains whether the decoded IR pulse is for the same group at step 194. If not for the same group, the method cycles back through counter/timer 72 as described above. If for the same group, the output from the SDL routine is sampled at step 196 and the method cycles back through counter/timer 72.
Referring to
The subroutine for the measure temperature step 186 of the main program is shown in
Referring now to
Those skilled in the art who have the benefit of this disclosure will recognize that changes can be made in the specifics of the operation of the present invention that do not change the manner in which the objects and advantages of the invention as described herein are accomplished. All such changes are intended to fall within the scope of the following, non-limiting claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2011/000847 | 5/12/2011 | WO | 00 | 9/3/2013 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12800288 | May 2010 | US |
Child | 13261728 | US |