The present invention relates to a circuit arrangement for operating a high-pressure discharge lamp comprising a bridge circuit with at least two switches and a control apparatus, which is designed to drive the at least two switches. The invention moreover relates to an operating method for a high-pressure discharge lamp using a circuit arrangement comprising a half-bridge circuit with precisely two switches, a control apparatus, which alternately switches the first switch and the second switch in the half-bridge circuit on and off at a first frequency and, during the off phase of the one switch, drives the other switch with a square-wave signal of a second frequency, which is higher than the first frequency, and a predeterminable switch-on duration.
In general, the present invention relates to the problem of extinguishing high-pressure discharge lamps. Generally, high-pressure discharge lamps are operated using a full-bridge circuit, i.e. using a bridge circuit with four switches. With a view to reducing costs, it is desirable to operate high-pressure discharge lamps using a half-bridge circuit. As has been proven in practice, however, this results in the high-pressure discharge lamp being extinguished within a short period of time in the case of many types of high-pressure discharge lamps.
The object of the present invention therefore consists in developing the circuit arrangement mentioned at the outset or the operating method mentioned at the outset in such a way that the operation of as many types of high-pressure discharge lamp as possible is enabled even using a half-bridge circuit.
This object is achieved by a circuit arrangement having the features of patent claim 1 and by an operating method having the features of patent claim 14.
The present invention is based on the knowledge that a half-bridge circuit is less “rigid” than a full-bridge circuit, i.e. has fewer voltage reserves (excessively low off-load voltage). In order to explain the consequences resulting from this,
The analysis of
During operation various approaches have been tested to see how this problem can be counteracted:
First, a power regulator was considered which regulates the power converted in the high-pressure discharge lamp to its desired value. Such power regulators are in principle slow (τ approximately 100 ms), however, and cannot counteract the event of the high-pressure discharge lamp suddenly becoming highly resistive anywhere near quickly enough (see
Regulation of the lamp voltage UL would go beyond keeping the voltage constant. That is to say an increase in the running voltage would have to be counteracted by the running voltage being reduced in terms of its amplitude. This would result in particular in a reduction in the lamp current and consequently accelerate extinguishing of the lamp instead of preventing it.
A measurement of the lamp current IL is possible with reasonable complexity in a half-bridge circuit only in one direction with respect to the first frequency. In the other direction, the monitoring would therefore be “blind” and could not counteract the increase in running voltage occurring during such a cycle. A measurement of the lamp current in both flow directions continuously or with a high sampling rate results in an undesirably high complexity primarily when, as in the exemplary embodiment, the first frequency is comparatively low.
There is another approach for the invention: first, it is based on the knowledge that an increase in the running voltage must be counteracted by an increase in the lamp current. An increase in the running voltage can be established in a simple manner by a voltage measurement apparatus. This can be realized without excessive complexity for both directions of the first frequency. It is furthermore based on allowing the first frequency to be substantially constant, and for this purpose extending the switch-on duration of the signal with which the one switch in the half-bridge circuit is driven during the off phase of the other switch, at least for a predeterminable period of time. As a result, an increase in the lamp current can be brought about which, together with the increase in the running voltage of the lamp, results in a power converted in the lamp which is sufficient for preventing cooling of the plasma, which would result in extinguishing of the lamp.
The surprising fact in relation to the solution according to the invention is the fact that actually an extension of the switch-on duration of the second frequency must result in a further increase in the running voltage of the lamp. In practice, however, this is surprisingly not the case as a result of the nonlinearity of the high-pressure discharge lamp. Instead, an extension of the switch-on duration results in an increase in the lamp current, therefore in heating of the plasma and therefore in a reduction in the running voltage.
In a preferred embodiment, in addition to the extension of the switch-on duration, the second frequency is reduced. This provides the advantage that the half-bridge switches switch on when the current in the lamp inductor is equal to zero. As a result, the switching losses in the half-bridge switches are reduced.
In preferred embodiments, the second frequency is at least 15 kHz, while the first frequency is a maximum of 500 Hz.
Preferably, the predeterminable period of time for the extension of the switch-on duration is at least 30 μs, in particular at least 100 μs, and at most 3 ms, in particular at most 500 μs.
In a particularly preferred development, the voltage measurement apparatus, the reference value apparatus, the comparison apparatus and the control apparatus are dimensioned in such a way that the period of time between the actual event of the at least one limit value being exceeded and the driving of the two switches in the half-bridge circuit at the extended switched-on duration is a maximum of 1 ms, in particular a maximum of 0.3 ms.
The at least one limit value may be a constant limit value, but may also be a limit value which is dependent on the mean voltage across the high-pressure discharge lamp. The lastmentioned implementation takes account of an ageing-related shift in the rated running voltage and makes it possible to identify a discrepancy independently of the life of the high-pressure discharge lamp. Preferably, the mean voltage of the high-pressure discharge lamp is updated at equidistant intervals, for example every 50 to 100 ms.
Particularly preferably, the control apparatus is designed to dimension the extension of the switch-on duration as a function of the measured voltage across the high-pressure discharge lamp and/or of the temporal mean of the voltage across the high-pressure discharge lamp and/or of the critical limit value.
The control apparatus can in addition be designed to ignore an event of the limit value being exceeded by the voltage measured across the high-pressure discharge lamp after commutation of the current through the high-pressure discharge lamp for a predeterminable period of time, in particular for at least 10 μs. This ensures that the lamp voltage is only evaluated after the ignoring period, i.e. after the overshoot of the lamp voltage which is brought about by the commutation. This overshoot should be distinguished from the undesirable increase in the running voltage, which is made possible as a result of the fact that it is temporally limited.
Preferred embodiments of the circuit arrangement according to the invention are characterized by the fact that, after an extension of the switch-on duration for the predeterminable period of time, the switch-on duration is reduced stepwise or continuously to the initial value again. In this case, a plurality of intermediate stages can be provided, an undershoot in the lamp current can be reliably avoided by this measure.
In contrast, the control apparatus can also be designed to extend the switch-on duration stepwise or continuously.
Further advantageous embodiments are given in the dependent claims.
The preferred embodiments mentioned in connection with the circuit arrangement according to the invention and advantages thereof apply, insofar as they are applicable, correspondingly to the operating method according to the invention for a high-pressure discharge lamp.
An exemplary embodiment of a circuit arrangement according to the invention will now be explained in more detail below with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
The variables introduced in respect of
The circuit arrangement shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 007 754.7 | Feb 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2007/051230 | 2/8/2007 | WO | 00 | 8/13/2008 |