1. Field of Invention
The aspects of the present disclosure relate generally to the field of electric lighting, and in particular to ballast circuits used to drive gas-discharge lamps.
2. Description of Related Art
A gas-discharge lamp belongs to a family of electric lighting or light generating devices that generate light by passing an electric current through a gas or vapor within the lamp. Atoms in the vapor absorb energy from the electric current and release the absorbed energy as light. One of the more widely used types of gas-discharge lamps is the fluorescent lamp which is commonly used in office buildings and homes. Fluorescent lamps contain mercury vapor whose atoms emit light in the non-visible low wavelength ultraviolet region. The ultraviolet radiation is absorbed by a phosphor disposed on the interior of the lamp tube causing the phosphor to fluoresce, thereby producing visible light.
Fluorescent lamps exhibit a phenomenon known as negative resistance, which is a condition where increased current flow decreases the electrical resistance of the lamp. If a simple voltage source is used to drive a fluorescent lamp, this negative resistance characteristic leads to an unstable condition in which the lamp current rapidly increases to a level that will destroy the lamp. Thus, a fluorescent lamp needs to be driven from a power source that can control the lamp current. While it is possible to use direct current (DC) to drive a fluorescent lamp, in practice, alternating current (AC) is typically used because it affords easier and more efficient control of the lamp current. The current controlling circuits used to drive fluorescent lamps are generally referred to as ballast circuits or “ballasts”. In practice, the term ballast is commonly used to refer to the entire fluorescent lamp drive circuit, and not just the current limiting portion.
Current flow through a fluorescent lamp is generally achieved by placing cathodes at either end of the lamp tube to inject electrons into a vapor within the lamp. These cathodes are structured as filaments that are coated with an emissive material used to enhance electron injection. The emission mix typically comprises a mixture of barium, strontium, and calcium oxides. A small electric current is passed through the filaments to heat them to a temperature that overcomes the binding potential of the emissive material allowing thermionic emission of electrons to take place. When an electric potential is applied across the lamp, electrons are liberated from the emissive material coating on each filament, causing a current to flow. While a lamp is in operation, and especially when a lamp is ignited, the emission mix is slowly sputtered off the filaments by bombardment with electrons and mercury ions. The rate of depletion of the emission mix varies from filament to filament. Thus as a lamp nears its end of life, the emission mix on one filament will deplete more quickly and exhibit lowered electron emissions, while the other filament will continue to support normal electron emissions. This can lead to a slight rectification of the alternating current flowing through the lamp. Continued operation of a lamp after the emission mix is depleted can lead to overheating resulting in cracking of the glass allowing hazardous mercury vapor to escape. It is therefore desirable to detect when a lamp is nearing its end of life (EOL) and turn it off before overheating can occur.
Temperature has a significant effect on the operation of fluorescent lamps. Wall temperature of a lamp affects the partial pressure of mercury vapor within the lamp, which in turn affects light output of the lamp. The wall temperature is generally a function of the ambient air surrounding the lamp, and other factors such as the room temperature or outside temperature where the lamp fixture is installed. Fluorescent lamps are typically designed to operate in ambient temperature environments that can from about 85 degrees Centigrade to 110 degrees Centigrade. At higher temperatures, such as for example above about 110 degrees Centigrade, fluorescent lamps are vulnerable to high currents that can damage the lamp and reduce its operational life. At lower temperatures, fluorescent lamps are generally harder to start and require a higher open circuit voltage from the ballast in order to reliably start at low temperatures. The minimum starting temperature of a fluorescent lamp can depend on both the rating of the lamp and of the ballast. Applying a starting voltage to a lamp that is higher than necessary can adversely affect lamp life. Thus, it would be advantageous to provide a lamp ballast configured to adjust the starting lamp voltage based in part on temperature.
During lamp operation, high temperatures can increase lamp current and undesirably reduce light output, lamp efficiency and lamp life. Accordingly it would be advantageous to provide a lamp ballast that can reduce high temperature effects and improve lamp life.
End-of life protection of a fluorescent lamp can also be improved by reducing or avoiding the high currents that can occur at higher lamp temperatures. Accordingly, it would be advantageous to reduce lamp current as lamp operating and ambient temperatures rise.
Accordingly, it would be desirable to provide a lamp ballast that addresses at least some of the problems identified above.
As described herein, the exemplary embodiments overcome one or more of the above or other disadvantages known in the art.
One aspect of the present disclosure relates to a ballast for driving a gas discharge lamp. In one embodiment, the ballast includes an inverter configured to generate a lamp supply voltage signal, and a voltage regulator coupled to the inverter and configured to generate a regulation signal. The regulation signal is used by the inverter to adjust the lamp voltage signal. A thermistor circuit is coupled between the lamp supply voltage signal and the voltage regulator and is configured to detect a temperature of the ballast and vary the regulation signal. The lamp supply voltage signal is varied by the regulation signal in accordance with the detected temperature of the ballast.
Another aspect of the present disclosure relates to an electric lighting apparatus. In one embodiment, the apparatus includes an inverter configured to generate a lamp supply voltage and a lamp load coupled to the lamp supply voltage. The lamp load comprises one or more gas discharge lamps. A feedback regulator is coupled to the inverter, the feedback regulator being configured produce a regulation signal that is used by the inverter to maintain the lamp supply voltage at a substantially constant voltage. The feedback regulator comprises a first feedback circuit coupled to the lamp supply voltage and configured to generate a first feedback voltage signal, an error amplifier coupled to the first feedback voltage signal and configured to generate the regulation signal, and a thermistor circuit coupled between the lamp supply voltage and the first feedback circuit. The thermistor circuit is configured to adjust the regulation signal to vary the lamp supply voltage according to a temperature detected by the thermistor circuit.
A further aspect of the present disclosure relates to a method for providing temperature compensation in a lighting apparatus, where the lighting apparatus comprises an inverter to provide a lamp supply voltage, a lamp load driven by the lamp supply voltage, and a feedback circuit to regulate the lamp supply voltage. In one embodiment, the method includes receiving a supply side signal from the lamp load, the supply side signal comprising information on the lamp supply voltage, adjusting a first feedback gain in the feedback circuit using a first thermistor, the first feedback gain being dependent upon a temperature detected by the first thermistor, applying the first feedback gain to the supply side signal to create a first feedback signal, generating an error signal in the feedback circuit based at least in part on the first feedback signal and regulating the lamp supply voltage generated by the inverter according to the error signal.
Yet another aspect of the present disclosure relates to a method for providing temperature compensation in a lighting apparatus, where the lighting apparatus comprises an inverter to provide a lamp supply voltage, a lamp load driven by the lamp supply voltage, and a feedback circuit to regulate the lamp supply voltage. In one embodiment, the method includes receiving a return side signal from the lamp load, the return side signal comprising information on the return side of the lamp load, adjusting a first feedback gain in the feedback circuit using a first thermistor, the first feedback gain being dependent upon a temperature detected by the first thermistor, applying the first feedback gain to the return side signal to create a first feedback signal, generating an error signal in the feedback circuit based at least in part on the first feedback signal and regulating the lamp supply voltage generated by the inverter according to the error signal.
These and other aspects and advantages of the exemplary embodiments will become apparent from the following detailed description considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. It is to be understood, however, that the drawings are designed solely for purposes of illustration and not as a definition of the limits of the invention, for which reference should be made to the appended claims. Additional aspects and advantages of the invention will be set forth in the description that follows, and in part will be obvious from the description, or may be learned by practice of the invention. Moreover, the aspects and advantages of the invention may be realized and obtained by means of the instrumentalities and combinations particularly pointed out in the appended claims.
In the drawings:
Referring now to the drawings, wherein the various features are not necessarily drawn to scale, the present disclosure relates to electronic lighting and more particularly to ballasts with temperature compensation for use in connection with fluorescent lamps and will be described with particular reference thereto. The exemplary ballasts described herein can also be used in other lighting applications and configurations, and are not limited to the aforementioned application. For example, various disclosed advances can be employed in single-lamp ballasts, series-coupled multiple-lamp ballasts, parallel-coupled multiple-lamp ballasts, and the like.
In one embodiment, sensing signals 194, 196 are generated by the inverter power section 130 and contain information about the lamp supply voltage 180 and lamp return voltage 208 respectively. For example, the first or supply side sensing signal 194 provides information about the lamp supply voltage 180 used to drive or supply the lamp load 206. The second or return side sensing signal 196 provides information about the power being drawn by the lamp load 206. In one embodiment, the return side sensing signal 196 can provide information about the power being drawn by the lamp load 206 in the form of the lamp return voltage 208 at the return side of the lamp load 206, also referred to as the inverse lamp voltage on the return side of the lamp load 206. Although for the purposes of the description herein, two separate sensing signals 194, 196 are described, in one embodiment, the information about the lamp supply voltage 180 and the power being drawing by the lamp load 206 can be included in a single sensing signal.
A feedback control or regulation circuit 204, generally referred to herein as feedback voltage regulator 204, detects or receives the sensing signals 194, 196 and generates the regulation signal 210. The regulation signal 210 is used to control the gate drive circuit 202 to maintain the lamp supply voltage 180 at a substantially constant voltage corresponding to the regulation signal 210. The gate drive circuit 202 produces the pair of gate drive signals 101, 102 that are used to operate the resonant inverter 100. In certain embodiments, the frequency of the lamp supply voltage 180, also known as the inverter frequency or the frequency of the inverter, is maintained at a frequency above the resonant frequency of a resonant tank circuit (discussed in more detail below) such that varying the frequency of the resonant inverter 100 causes a corresponding variation in the lamp supply voltage 180. The lamp supply voltage 180 is regulated through control of the frequency of the resonant inverter 100. In one embodiment, the gate drive circuit 202 receives the regulation signal 210 and operates the resonant inverter power section 130 at a frequency that achieves a corresponding lamp supply voltage 180.
As shown in
Temperature affects the supply voltage needed to operate gas discharge lamps. At low temperatures, initiation of an arc in a gas discharge lamp becomes more difficult, requiring an increased lamp supply voltage 180 to ignite the lamp load 206. At high ambient temperatures, excessive currents can flow through the gas discharge lamps in lamp load 206, which can damage the lamps and reduce their useable lifespan. In one embodiment, the feedback voltage regulator 204 is configured to apply a gain used to regulate and control the lamp supply voltage 180. The gain, in the form of regulation signal 210, is dependent upon a detected temperature. For example, as a temperature in an around the lamp load 206 increases, the regulation signal 210 generated by the feedback voltage regulator 204 will cause the resonant inverter 100 to decrease the lamp supply voltage 180. When a temperature in an around the lamp load 206 decreases, the regulation signal 210 generated by the feedback voltage regulator 204 will cause the resonant inverter 100 to increase the lamp supply voltage 180.
In one embodiment, referring to
In the exemplary embodiment shown in
In this example, the second thermistor circuit 228 is configured to detect an increase in temperature due to an increased amount of current flowing through lamp load 206. As noted above, increased or high currents through a gas discharge lamp can damage the lamps. In this embodiment, the return side sensing signal 196 can be used to provide information to the second feedback circuit 218 on the amount of current drawn by the lamp load 206. For example, an increase in the current flowing through the lamp load 206 can cause a resulting temperature increase, which can be detected by the thermistor circuit 228. The temperature increase can be detected by monitoring the temperature of the lamp load 206 or by monitoring the amount of current flow through the lamp load 206.
In one embodiment, an increase in current drawn by the lamp load 206 is reflected in the return side sensing signal 196. The return side sensing signal 196 can cause a temperature of, or detected by, the thermistor circuit 228 to increase. When the thermistor circuit 228 detects the increase in temperature due to increased current draw, the second feedback circuit 218 can adjust its gain to enable the regulation signal 210 to cause the resonant inverter 100 to lower the lamp supply voltage 180. Alternatively, if the thermistor circuit 228 detects a decrease in temperature due to a reduced current draw, the second feedback circuit 218 can adjust its gain to enable the regulation signal 210 to cause the resonant inverter 100 to increase the lamp supply voltage 180. In one embodiment, the increase or decrease in detected temperature must exceed pre-determined threshold values to affect a change in the lamp supply voltage 180. Thus, the amount of current flowing through the lamp load 206 can be regulated based on a detected temperature induced by the current flow through the lamp load 206.
Although the example of
The DC input voltage 150 is received onto the positive and ground rails 152, 154 and is selectively switched by switching devices Q1 and Q2 connected in series between the positive rail 152 and ground rail 154. The selective switching of switching devices Q1 and Q2 generally operates to generate a square wave at an inverter output node 158, which in turn excites the resonant tank circuit 156 to thereby drive the lamp supply voltage 180 at node 181. In one embodiment, the square wave has an amplitude of approximately one-half the DC input voltage 150 at the inverter output node 158. The frequency of the square wave generated at node 158 is referred to herein as the frequency of the inverter or as the inverter frequency. In one embodiment, the inverter frequency is approximately 70 kilohertz, although any suitable or desired inverter frequency may be used. The resonant tank 156 includes a resonant inductor L1-1 as well as an equivalent capacitance, generally comprising the equivalent of capacitors C111 and C112 connected in series between the positive rail 152 and the ground rail 154 with a center node 160 coupled to node 181 by capacitor C113. A clamping circuit is formed by diodes D1 and D2 individually connected in parallel with the capacitances C111 and C112, respectively. The lamp supply voltage 180 is used to drive the lamp load 206, which in the embodiment of
Referring to
The diodes D214, D215, D216, D217 shown in
In one embodiment, the feedback voltage regulation and control circuit 400 includes a thermistor circuit 418. The term thermistor or thermistor circuit is generally used herein to describe any device whose resistance changes as a predictable function of temperature. In the embodiment of
At cold temperatures, such as for example, approximately zero degrees Centigrade, higher open circuit voltages are required to ignite a fluorescent lamp. However if these higher open circuit voltages are used at warmer temperatures, the higher open circuit voltages can negatively impact lamp life. When the impedance of the thermistor circuit 418 increases, the feedback voltage at node 412 decreases causing the lamp supply voltage 180 to rise. By using a positive temperature constant (PTC) type thermistor T420, where the impedance of the thermistor T420 increases as the temperature increases, the lamp supply voltage 180 can be made to increase as temperature around the ballast decreases. This provides the desired effect of increasing the lamp supply voltage 180 at low temperatures in order to improve low temperature lamp ignition while keeping the lamp supply voltage 180 at desired levels when temperatures are warmer.
In one embodiment, the supply side feedback circuit 530 receives the supply side sensing signal 502 through a resistor divider network that includes a resistor R901 and a resistor R903. Thermistor T920 is connected in parallel with resistor R901. The supply feedback voltage 506 is created on a central circuit node 508 between the two resistors R901 and R903. Rectification of the supply feedback voltage 506 is provided by a pair of series connected diodes D91 and D92 which are coupled in parallel with the resistor R903, and produce a positive polarity supply feedback voltage 506. The parallel combination of thermistor T920 and resistor R901 is connected to central node 508 between the pair of diodes D91, D92. When resistor R901 is exposed to an AC signal, the supply feedback voltage 506 is a DC signal. The parallel combination of thermistor T920 and resistor R901 provides a temperature dependent behavior that is similar to that described with respect to thermistor circuit 418 of
In one embodiment, error amplifier 534 is used to create a regulation signal 210 proportional to the difference between a reference voltage 536 and the feedback voltage at node 512. A zener diode Z41 is connected between the error amplifier 534 and the circuit ground 514 such that a reference voltage 536 of the error amplifier 534 is clamped to a reference voltage created by the zener diode Z41. In certain embodiments, bias power may be applied to the source node of switching device Q401 by an external power supply to help generate the reference voltage 536. In the error amplifier 534 a switching device Q401, such as a MOSFET, is used as the active amplifying device and a resistor R406 and capacitor C406 are placed in series between the feedback voltage at node 512 and the drain of switch Q401 to establish a negative feedback control for operation of the feedback voltage regulation and control circuit 500. An increased feedback voltage at node 512 will cause switch Q401 to adjust the regulation signal 210 to increase the frequency of the resonant inverter 100 and reduce the lamp supply voltage 180. Alternatively other types of error amplifiers, for example operational amplifiers, may also be employed to create the regulation signal 210.
Using a PTC type thermistor T910 in the return signal branch of R909, T910 provides several advantageous affects for temperature compensation when the feedback voltage regulation and control circuit 500 is used in the lighting apparatus 200 shown in
A first feedback gain is adjusted 604 using a thermistor such that the resulting gain is dependent on the temperature detected by the thermistor which is correlated with the ambient air temperature. Adjusting 604 the feedback gain in a feedback voltage regulator 204 has the effect of changing the lamp supply voltage 180 without varying any reference voltage or set point the feedback voltage regulator 204 may be using to control the lamp supply voltage 180. Raising the first feedback gain will lower the lamp supply voltage 180 while lowering the first feedback gain will raise the lamp supply voltage 180. The adjusted first feedback gain is applied 606 to the supply side signal to create a first feedback signal. A return side sensing signal is received 608 that provides information about the return side of the lamp load 206 and may be conditioned similar to the supply side sensing signal. A second feedback gain is then adjusted 610 using a second thermistor so that the second feedback gain is correlated with the temperature of the second thermistor. In the exemplary lighting apparatus of
In certain embodiments a reference voltage or set point signal is combined with the supply and return side sensing signals such that the error signal represents a variation between the actual inverter output and a desired value indicated by the reference voltage or set point. It is common in voltage regulators to vary the reference voltage or set point when variation in the output voltage is desired, however in the disclosed embodiments thermistors are used to provide a temperature sensitive variation in the feedback gain to adjust the lamp supply voltage 180. The error signal, such as the regulation signal 210 of
The aspects of the disclosed embodiments are directed to providing temperature compensation in an electric lighting apparatus. The temperature compensation provides protection from temperature effects in gas discharge lamps that are powered by a resonant inverter including thermal foldback, improved end of life protection, and enhanced low temperature starting capabilities.
Thus, while there have been shown, described and pointed out, fundamental novel features of the invention as applied to the exemplary embodiments thereof, it will be understood that various omissions and substitutions and changes in the form and details of devices illustrated, and in their operation, may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Moreover, it is expressly intended that all combinations of those elements, which perform substantially the same function in substantially the same way to achieve the same results, are within the scope of the invention. Moreover, it should be recognized that structures and/or elements shown and/or described in connection with any disclosed form or embodiment of the invention may be incorporated in any other disclosed or described or suggested form or embodiment as a general matter of design choice. It is the intention, therefore, to be limited only as indicated by the scope of the claims appended hereto.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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201210399593.4 | Oct 2012 | CN | national |