The subject matter of this disclosure relates to controlling supply of pulsed current to a load, one application of which is in light emitting diode dimmer circuits.
Loads of various types can be driven by a pulsed current source, in which the width, or duty ratio, of pulses controls the amount of current supplied to the load. An example is in a circuit for driving a light emitting diode (LED) with a pulsed current source, in which the pulse width is varied in order to control light intensity produced by the LED. Pulsed current is generated from an unregulated input voltage supply by enabling and disabling a voltage regulator to drive the desired current through the LED. If the pulse is mainly on (high duty ratio), LED light intensity is high. As duty ratio is lowered, the LED will appear to dim.
A variety of regulator topologies has been implemented to generate pulsed current of varying duty ratio, namely Buck, Boost, and Buck-Boost converters, each of which employs an inductor and filter capacitor to generate regulated voltage.
As the operation of a Buck type switching regulator is well known, the same will not be described herein, for brevity.
The conventional regulator 10 of type depicted in
To confront capacitor charging and discharging delay in the conventional regulator, PWM dimming has been improved by introducing a switch in series with the LED load, to interrupt current flow through the LED during times when the regulator is turned off. This technique employs either an NMOS (N-channel metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistor) switch to disconnect the load from the low voltage side (e.g., ground side) of the output voltage (termed low side LED dimming) or a PMOS (P-channel metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistor) switch on the high side (e.g., power side) to disconnect the LED load from the high voltage side of the output voltage (high side LED dimming). Either technique interrupts the discharge path of the regulator capacitor.
In the example of a low side LED dimmer circuit, the NMOS switch can be driven with the same signal as the PWM signal that enables the regulator. However, a high side LED dimmer implements a PMOS switch that must be driven with an inverted version of the PWM signal that is level shifted to the PMOS source voltage.
The low side dimming approach can be employed to extend PWM dimming ratio for the Buck converter shown in
Although an improvement over the conventional circuit, the low side PWM dimming circuit of
Referring to
One aspect of the disclosed subject matter is in a circuit for controlling pulsed current applied to a load, comprising an input node for receiving a timing signal such as a PWM signal, a switch having first and second electrodes and a control electrode, coupled between a high side voltage node and the load, and a source of reference voltage having a magnitude independent of supply voltage magnitude. A control circuit is configured for shifting the level of the PWM signal to cause the PWM signal to vary between a voltage of the first electrode of the switch and a prescribed fixed voltage, related to the reference voltage below that of the first electrode voltage. A drive circuit is responsive to an output of the control circuit for driving the control electrode of the switch.
Another aspect is a circuit for controlling light intensity of an LED, comprising first and second reference nodes for receiving a supply voltage, an input node for receiving a timing signal, such as a PWM signal, and a controlled switch coupled between the first reference voltage node and the LED for supplying current to the LED. The controlled switch has a control electrode for controlling on and off states of the controlled switch. Pull-up circuitry is coupled between the control electrode and first reference voltage node, and a pull-down switch is coupled between the control electrode and second reference voltage node. A source of reference voltage is provided which has a magnitude independent of supply voltage magnitude. A control circuit coupled between the input node and control electrode of the controlled switch is configured for shifting the level of the PWM signal to cause the control electrode to vary in voltage between a voltage of the first electrode of the switch and a prescribed fixed voltage, related to the reference voltage, below that of the first electrode voltage.
Still another aspect of the disclosed subject matter is in a circuit for supplying pulsed current to a load, comprising first and second reference nodes for receiving a supply voltage, an input node for receiving a timing signal, such as a PWM signal, and a controlled switch coupled between the first reference voltage node and the load, the controlled switch having first and second electrodes and a control electrode for controlling on and off states of the controlled switch. Pull-up circuitry is coupled between the control electrode and first reference voltage node, and a pull-down switch is coupled between the control electrode and second reference voltage node. A source of reference voltage is included which has a magnitude independent of supply voltage magnitude; and a feedback circuit is configured to drive the control electrode of the controlled switch in response to the PWM signal and reference voltage source.
Additional advantages and novel features will be set forth in part in the description which follows, and in part will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon examination of the following and the accompanying drawings or may be learned by production or operation of the examples. The advantages of the present teachings may be realized and attained by practice or use of the methodologies, instrumentalities and combinations particularly pointed out in the appended claims.
a-5c are waveforms generated in the circuit of
Referring to
The output of comparator 72 is supplied to one input of a logic NOR gate 76, the output of which is connected to the control input of pull-down switch 68. To the other input of NOR gate 76 is applied the PWM signal at line 73.
The control gate of pull-up switch 66 receives a level-shifted replica of the PWM signal, through a level shift circuit 80, altered somewhat in magnitude. Circuit operation is as follows.
When PWM is low (t<t1 in
When PWM transitions high (at time t1 in
The voltage GATE applied to the gate of PMOS transistor 62 will decrease until (at t=t2) either the gate voltage is equal to ground (if the magnitude of reference source 74 is below ground) or until the gate voltage drops to be lower than the reference voltage, detected by comparator 72,
If the reference voltage at line 73 is above ground, the GATE voltage at PMOS transistor 62 will be maintained slightly below the reference voltage. When the GATE voltage falls below the reference voltage level, see
It is significant to note that the circuit of
Level shift circuit 80 is comprised of a one shot circuit, transistor QN6 and resistor R3, as depicted. The one shot circuit is a mono-stable multi-vibrator that produces a short duration output pulse in response to an input voltage change produced by the PWM signal at node 70 through inverter 78.
NOR gate 76 in
In operation, when the PWM signal at node 70 transitions high, pull-down switch QN1 is activated because QN5 turns off and base current flows into transistor QN1. Transistor QN1 sinks current from the gate of PMOS transistor 62 through diode D1. Pull-up latch or switch 66 is inactive at this time because there is no current driving resistor R3, and diode D1 ensures that transistors QN2 and QN3 are turned off. Transistor QN1 continues to sink a large amount of current from the gate of PMOS transistor 62 until Zener diode Z1 in the limit detect circuit, between the gate and source of the PMOS transistor, begins to conduct current (at 8 volts in practice). The current flowing through Zener diode Z1 turns on current source QP1, which supplies current to transistor QN4 and resistor R4, that in turn turns off base drive to turn off transistor QN1. Current from current source I1 sinks a small amount of current from the gate of PMOS transistor 62 to maintain the on state voltage, and maintain the limit detect circuit 72,74 activated. With the limit detect circuit 72, 74 active, transistor QN1 turns off.
When the PWM signal transitions low, pull-down transistor QN1 is maintained off, and current source I1 disabled. The PWMB signal next will transition high, generating a one-shot pulse, which activates the pull-up latch or switch, consisting of transistors QN2, QN3 and QP2. This latch will now source a large current until the gate and source voltages of PMOS transistor 62 equalize, and will turn off. Pull-up resistor R1 maintains the gate of PMOS switch 62 at the transistor source potential.
Current source I1 is a controlled source, operating as described. One configuration of this type of current source is shown in the circuit diagram of
The reference and comparator circuits 74, 72 in
While the foregoing has described what are considered to be the best mode and/or other examples, it is understood that various modifications may be made therein and that the subject matter disclosed herein may be implemented in various forms and examples, and that the teachings may be applied in numerous applications, only some of which have been described herein. For example, although circuit implementation is described in relation to a power supply of prescribed polarity, and exemplary diode and transistor types and polarities shown, other circuit configurations may be implemented. It is intended by the following claims to claim any and all applications, modifications and variations that fall within the true scope of the present teachings.
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20070257861 A1 | Nov 2007 | US |