Architecture of ballast with integrated RF interface

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6636005
  • Patent Number
    6,636,005
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, November 14, 2001
    22 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, October 21, 2003
    20 years ago
Abstract
The invention is a new architecture for a high frequency (HF) ballast with wireless communication interface. The new architecture integrates the RF wireless interface into the ballast. A user control transmits an RF control signal to a second antenna at the ballast site which provides the RF signal to the ballast which activates the fluorescent lamp. The ballast includes a transceiver/receiver, a communication decoder, a power control stage and a power stage. The transceiver/receiver receives the RF signal and communicates it to the communication decoder which acts as an interface to the power stage control. The power stage control controls the power stage that activates the fluorescent lamp. The communication decoder, power control stage, power stage and transceiver/receiver are located within the ballast enclosure which is an important part of the invention. If the power stage control is digital it may be combined with the communication decoder into one microprocessor or digital controller such as an ASIC. The communication decoder may be a serial interface. The transceiver/receiver is an RF integrated circuit. The ballast further includes an isolator to isolate the transceiver/receiver from the first antenna. The isolator may be capacitive.
Description




BACKGROUND OF INVENTION




1. Field of the Invention




The invention relates to a ballast architecture with wireless communication for activating a fluorescent lamp. More specifically, the invention relates to a ballast which includes a communication decoder, a lamp driver and a transceiver/receiver within the ballast enclosure.




2. Description of the Related Art




Lighting control in an office or commercial building has gone through several stages. The traditional control approach uses a separate control box outside the ballast, as shown in FIG.


1


. The central control management for the whole building can also control the lighting through the network.




With the recent advancements in RF and semiconductor technology, wireless control is attracting more and more attention from people in the lighting industry. Currently there are some wireless control systems available in the market. A typical RF wireless control structure is shown in FIG.


2


. As can be seen in the figure, the wires between the wall unit and the control box in

FIG. 1

are replaced by a transmitter and receiver. This eliminates the vertical wiring and brings wireless advantages. However, the control box is still outside of the ballast.




An additional problem with prior art RF systems is isolation. For safety reasons, when the RF receiver/transceiver is wired to the ballast, there has to be some interface for high voltage isolation. This adds cost and complexity to the whole system.

FIG. 3

shows the problem. The current state of the art uses a transformer or opto-isolation.

FIG. 3

also shows the structure of the ballast. The digital decoder is used to decode the control command coming from the control box, it can be a microprocessor. The lamp driver consists of the power stage and the control IC. The power stage includes the high voltage driver, protection circuits, power storage and filter elements. The state-of-the-art for the control IC is the Alpha-based analog IC for controlling the power stage. Reference for Alpha IC is U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,680,017 and 5,559,395.




The current approach of lighting control faces the following challenges:




1. Cost: adding a separate box connected to the ballast increases the cost.




2. Power savings: if the power consumption information can be fed back from ballasts, the central management can easily improve the energy utilization. However, with the analog ballast, it is not easy to build a two-way communication link without extra cost.




3. Resolving the high voltage isolation problem described previously.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The invention is a new architecture for a high frequency (HF) ballast with wireless communication interface. The new architecture integrates the RF wireless interface into the ballast. A user control transmits an RF control signal to a second antenna at the ballast site which provides the RF signal to the ballast which activates the fluorescent lamp. The ballast includes a transceiver/receiver, a communication decoder, a power control stage and a power stage. The transceiver/receiver receives the RF signal and communicates it to the communication decoder which acts as an interface to the power stage control. The power stage control controls the power stage that activates the fluorescent lamp. The communication decoder, power stage control (analog or digital), power stage and transceiver/receiver are located within the ballast enclosure which is an important part of the invention. If the power stage control is digital it may be combined with the communication decoder into one microprocessor. The communication decoder may be a serial interface. The transceiver/receiver is an RF integrated circuit. The ballast further includes an isolator to isolate the transceiver/receiver from the second antenna. The isolator may be capacitive.











DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a prior art traditional control approach using a separate control box outside the ballast.





FIG. 2

shows a typical prior art RF wireless control structure.





FIG. 3

shows a prior art RF wireless system with isolation.





FIG. 4

shows a new inventive architecture for high frequency (HF) digital ballast with wireless communication interface.





FIG. 4



a


shows a block diagram of the operation of the inventive architecture of FIG.


4


.





FIG. 5

shows a functional block diagram of a working implementation of the inventive ballast with an integrated RF interface.





FIG. 6

shows a detailed schematic diagram of the working implementation of FIG.


5


.





FIG. 7

shows an embedded antenna on a printed circuit board.





FIG. 8

shows how RF signals travel through the plastic ballast case and plastic light fixture cover.





FIG. 9

is a half wavelength slot antenna for a metal cased ballast.





FIG. 10

is a functional block diagram of a handheld remote control for the inventive architecture of FIG.


4


.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION





FIG. 1

is a prior art traditional control approach using a separate control box outside the ballast. The control box


10


is wired to one or more ballasts


12


. It is also connected with a wall unit


14


that acts as a network interface to communicate with the central control manager for the whole building through the wired network


16


as shown in FIG.


1


. The control box


10


normally has a microcontroller


18


with a digital to analog converter (DAC)


20


inside. It can turn on/off and dim the ballast for fluorescent (TL) lamps. The central control management for the whole building can also control the lighting through the network.




In

FIG. 2

, the wires between the wall unit


14


and the control box


10


in

FIG. 1

are replaced by a transmitter


24


and receiver


26


. This eliminates the vertical wiring and brings wireless advantages. However, the control box


28


is still outside of ballast


12


.





FIG. 3

shows an additional problem of isolation with current state of the art RF wireless systems. For safety reasons, in

FIG. 3

when the control box


28


containing RF receiver


26


is wired to the ballast


30


, there has to be some interface for high voltage isolation from lamp driver


34


. The isolation comes from the use of a transformer or opto-isolation


32


as the signals go through the interface as low frequency digital signals. This adds cost and complexity to the whole system.





FIG. 4

shows a new inventive architecture for a high frequency (HF) ballast with wireless communication interface. RF signals are transmitted from a user control


96


having a first antenna


97


to a second antenna


112


in the new architecture. User control


96


may include a wall unit


98


and first antenna


97


or a handheld remote control


150


(FIG.


10


). The new architecture integrates the RF wireless interface into the ballast


100


. The ballast consists of an isolator


102


, a transceiver/receiver


104


which is an RF integrated circuit (IC), a communication decoder


105


and a lamp driver


106


. The lamp driver consists of power stage


107


and power stage control IC


108


. The communication decoder


105


is digital. The power stage control IC


108


can be a digital or analog IC. If a digital power stage control IC is used, the communication decoder


105


and the digital power stage control IC


108


can be combined into one digital controller


110


such as a microprocessor or an ASIC. If the power stage control


108


is analog, then it is separate from communication decoder


105


. They may be on separate IC's or they could be combined on a mixed signal ASIC. The communication decoder


105


may be a serial interface. Digital controller


110


may be a digital controller such as a, P6LV IC, developed at Philips Research USA in Briarcliff Manor, N.Y., or any other microcontroller that has the required peripherals such as ADC and PWM, or the resources that allow the users to build these peripherals by themselves. Second antenna


112


needs to be isolated from the rest of the circuit, therefore, isolator


102


provides isolation between second antenna


112


and transceiver/receiver


104


. Isolator


102


may be a capacitive network


116


made up of a pair of capacitors. The isolation can be built with a simple capacitive network since the signals are at Radio Frequency. In addition, in the case that a plastic enclosure is used for a ballast and the antenna does not have to stick outside of the ballast can, this isolation can be avoided. This is in contrast to the previously referred to prior art where the transceiver/receiver is outside the ballast and is hardwired to the ballast. In that case there needs to be high voltage isolation between the ballast and the transceiver/receiver which adds complexity and cost.




Transceiver/receiver


104


is used as a front end to modulate/demodulate baseband signals. It interfaces with digital controller


110


, through communication decoder


105


. Since communication decoder


105


and power stage control IC


108


(if digital) can be combined into one microprocessor instead of two separate microprocessors, this eliminates any extra components. The P6LV IC is a 8051-based dedicated microcontroller designed for lighting. It not only has the capability of a standard 8051 microcontroller, but also the peripherals needed for controlling the lamp gear. Another alternative, the P8XC51 microcontroller is also from the 8051 family. The baseband signals coming out of the transceiver/receiver


104


are processed by the digital controller IC


110


and provided to power stage


107


having a high voltage output to energize a fluorescent lamp.




The new architecture has the following features: All the modules for control are in one ballast box


118


. No separate control box is needed. This results in significant cost reduction. In addition, with wireless control, the cost of wiring is eliminated and makes it a much better solution for retrofit market. Also because the communication decoder and power stage control (or digital controller


110


) are in the ballast, more control features can be implemented, such as binding a group of lamps into one remote controller. The communication can also be made bi-directional. The information on the lamp operation, such as the power consumption, can be fed back in real-time. This leads to effective power utilization and savings. In addition, the isolation


102


can be built with a simple capacitive network since the signals that go through are high frequency. With the RF section


104


inside the ballast, the isolation interface can be much simplified.





FIG. 4



a


shows a block diagram of the operation of FIG.


4


. The operational block diagram of

FIG. 4



a


contains three sections: Radio transceiver


104


, microcontroller


110


and lamp driver


106


. Radio transceiver


104


receives/transmits data from second antenna


112


through the air interface. In the receiving mode, it passes the demodulated data to the microcontroller


110


for processing. In the transmitting mode, it modulates the data from the microcontroller


110


and passes on the data to the second antenna


112


and the air interface. Microcontroller


110


controls the radio and does the baseband processing. On top of the communication protocol, it also contains the application program that tells the ballast to operate the lamp in a certain way. The other responsibility for the microcontroller


110


is to control the lamp driver


106


, which drives the high voltage stage of the ballast. The high voltage portion is directly connected to the lamps (not shown).





FIG. 5

shows a functional block diagram of the implementation of a digital addressable ballast with RF interface. It contains two boards, the main board


116


and the RF interface board


118


. The main board


116


contains the lamp driver


106


(from

FIG. 4

) which includes filter and rectifier


120


, up-converter


122


, half-bridge


124


and lamp current detection circuit


126


. The output of half bridge rectifier


124


goes to fluorescent lamp


127


. The interface board


118


, HF-R digital module, is composed of RF transceiver


128


, a microprocessor


130


and an EEPROM


132


.





FIG. 6

shows the detailed schematic and block diagram of the implementation of the interface between the RF transceiver


128


and the ballast controller


130


. As seen in the figure, U


1


(TR1001) is the radio transceiver


128


by RF Monolithics, and IS


2


(P8XC51-QFP) is the microcontroller


130


by Philips Semiconductors which serves as the ballast controller and controls the RF transceiver


128


. The control signals from microcontroller


130


(pin


9


,


10


,


40


, and


43


) also go to the lamp driver


106


that is not shown in the figure. A memory


132


used for microcontroller


130


is also shown. The antenna is set at ANT


1


and ANT


2


that are connected to the R_IO pin of the transceiver (U


1


).




For the ballast with integrated RF interface, one important issue is how to get the radiation outside the ballast. There are several ways to design the antenna.

FIG. 7

shows the embedded antenna


140


, which is a metal trace put on the printed circuit board (PCB)


142


. This works because the RF signals go through the plastic case


144


of ballast


100


and the plastic cover


144


of the light fixture, as shown in FIG.


8


. Another option is a halfwavelength slot antenna


146


shown in FIG.


9


. This is a solution for metal cased ballast.




The proposed ballast with RF interface can be used together with a handheld remote control in a wireless lighting control system. The handheld remote control should contain the same RF transceiver and communicate with the ballast using a wireless communication protocol the same as user control


96


in FIG.


4


.

FIG. 10

shows the block diagram of the remote control


150


. It consists of the RF transceiver


152


, a microprocessor


154


or other type of digital control IC, and a user interface


156


such as key pads for user request in and certain type of display (e.g. LEDs) to give indications of the operating status.




While the preferred embodiments of the invention have been shown and described, numerous variations and alternative embodiments will occur to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention be limited only in terms of the appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. An RF wireless architecture for activating a fluorescent lamp, the RF wireless architecture including a second antenna which receives an RF control signal and provides it to a ballast, the ballast comprising,a power stage providing a high voltage signal to activate said fluorescent lamp, a power control stage for controlling said power stage, a communication decoder acting as an interface to said power stage control a transceiver/receiver receiving said RF control signal and providing said RF control signal to said communication decoder; said communication decoder, said power stage control, said power stage and said transceiver/receiver located within said ballast.
  • 2. The apparatus of claim 1 in which said communication decoder is a serial interface.
  • 3. The apparatus of claim 1 in which said transceiver/receiver is an RF integrated circuit.
  • 4. The apparatus of claim 1 in which said ballast further includes an isolator circuit to isolate said transceiver/receiver from said second antenna.
  • 5. The apparatus of claim 4 in which said isolator circuit is capacitive.
  • 6. The apparatus of claim 1 including a user control which transmits an RF control signal from a first antenna to said second antenna.
  • 7. The apparatus of claim 6 in which said communication decoder is a serial interface.
  • 8. The apparatus of claim 6 in which said transceiver/receiver is an RF intergrated circuit.
  • 9. The apparatus of claim 6 in which said ballast further includes an isolator circuit to isolate said transceiver/receiver from said second antenna.
  • 10. The apparatus of claim 9 in which said isolator circuit is capacitive.
  • 11. The apparatus of claim 1 in which said RF transceiver/receiver, said communication decoder, said power stage control and said power stage are integrated into one single IC.
  • 12. An RF wireless architecture for activating a fluorescent lamp, the RF wireless architecture including a second antenna which receives an RF control signal and provides it to a ballast, the ballast comprising,a power stage providing a high voltage signal to activate said fluorescent lamp, a digital controller for controlling said power stage, a transceiver/receiver receiving said RF control signal and providing said RF control signal to said digital controller; said digital controller, said power stage and said transceiver/receiver located within said ballast.
  • 13. The apparatus of claim 12 in which said digital controller has a communication decoder and a digital power stage control, said communication decoder communicating with said transceiver/receiver and acting as an interface to said power stage control.
  • 14. The apparatus of claim 13 in which said communication decoder is a serial interface.
  • 15. The apparatus of claim 14 in which said transceiver/receiver is an RF integrated circuit.
  • 16. The apparatus of claim 15 in which said ballast further includes an isolator circuit to isolate said transceiver/receiver from said second antenna.
  • 17. The apparatus of claim 16 in which said isolator circuit is capacitive.
  • 18. The apparatus of claim 13 in which said digital controller is integrated into one single IC.
  • 19. The apparatus of claim 12 including a user control which transmits an RF control signal from a first antenna to said second antenna.
  • 20. An RF wireless architecture for activating a fluorescent lamp, the RF wireless architecture including a second antenna which receives an RF control signal and provides it to a ballast, the ballast comprising,a lamp driver for providing an activating signal to said fluorescent lamp, a communication decoder, acting as an interface to said lamp driver, a transceiver/receiver communicating with said communication decoder for receiving said RF control signal and providing said RF control signal to said communication decoder; said communication decoder, said lamp driver and said transceiver/receiver located within said ballast.
  • 21. The RF wireless architecture of claim 20 in which said lamp driver has a power stage control and a power stage, said power stage control receiving the output of said communication decoder and providing a control signal to said power stage to activate said fluorescent lamp.
  • 22. The apparatus of claim 21 in which said communication decoder is a serial interface.
  • 23. The apparatus of claim 21 in which said transceiver/receiver is an RF integrated circuit.
  • 24. The apparatus of claim 21 in which said ballast further includes an isolator circuit to isolate said transceiver/receiver from said second antenna.
  • 25. The apparatus of claim 24 in which said isolator circuit is capacitive.
  • 26. The apparatus of claim 20 including a user control which transmits an RF control signal from a first antenna to said second antenna.
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Number Name Date Kind
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5489827 Xia Feb 1996 A
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Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number Date Country
WO0076034 Dec 2000 WO