1. Field of the Invention:
The invention relates to a circuit for driving and monitoring a light signal, in particular an LED signal. The circuit has an actuating part that produces a process voltage and a signal transmitter for presetting current windows for daytime operation and nighttime operation.
Light signals, in particular for road and rail traffic, must be brighter during daytime operation than during nighttime operation. In the case of light signals for railroad technology, the brightness is controlled via current windows, which are predetermined by the signal transmitter.
It is accordingly an object of the invention to provide a driver and monitor circuit for a light signal which overcomes the above-mentioned disadvantages of the heretofore-known devices and methods of this general type and which allows the signal brightness for daytime and nighttime operation to become largely constant in a simple manner even in the event of component degradations and the replacement of light source elements, in particular LEDs.
With the foregoing and other objects in view there is provided, in accordance with the invention, a circuit for driving and monitoring a light signal, in particular an LED signal, comprising:
an actuating part for providing of a process voltage;
a signal transmitter connected to said actuating part, said signal transmitter setting current windows for daytime operation and nighttime operation, respectively, of the light signal; and
said signal transmitter including a regulator, one or more brightness sensors disposed to measure a brightness of the light signal, and a monitoring logic connected to said brightness sensors and said regulator, said monitoring logic producing a nominal daytime value and a nominal nighttime value, respectively, of the current window for the regulator.
Controlling the brightness results in a high degree of independence between the power of the signal transmitter and the light power of the lighting elements used. As a consequence, there is no longer any need for configuration or reengineering of the actuating part for matching to the power of the signal transmitter. The safety verification is valid for a wide power range of the signal transmitter. In addition, there is no time limit to the permissible time of use of the lighting elements, since aging-dependent brightness decreases are effectively regulated out.
A signal box is normally required for the signal drive. The high signal voltage is converted in the signal box to a low voltage for the signal transmitter by means of signal transformers, in order to minimize the power loss which occurs in the signal cable as a result of the line resistance. The signal transformer has a plurality of taps. In consequence, the voltage losses in the signal cable can be compensated for by configuration. This distance-dependent adjustment is no longer necessary because of the brightness control, so that there is no need for a signal box in the present form. The existing signal cables can still be used, irrespective of their length.
The reference variable for brightness control is formed by means of brightness sensors which measure the actual brightness of the lighting elements. A daytime and nighttime nominal value of the regulator current is produced by means of the monitoring logic, in order to regulate the nominal brightness.
In accordance with an added feature of the invention, the switching time between daytime and nighttime operation is preset by the actuating part. This can be achieved, for example, by means of a different waveform of the process voltage which is produced by the actuating part.
In accordance with an alternative possibility, decentralized daytime/nighttime switching can be provided. A sensor for measurement of the environmental (i.e., ambient) brightness of the light signal is in this case used to set the switching time. The brightness of the light signal is optimally matched to the location of the signal, avoiding the complexity for the additional provision of a nighttime voltage. The signal transmitter can be configured or designed in such a way that it optimally regulates the light strength of the signal as a function of the brightness of the signal environment.
In accordance with an additional feature of the invention, the regulator is not designed to be signaling-technology secure—in contrast to the monitoring logic and the brightness sensors for measurement of the signal brightness and, possibly, the sensors for measurement of the environmental brightness. The brightness is thus monitored in a safety-relevant manner, for example by means of duplication of the monitoring logic and of the connected brightness sensors. However, the monitoring logic and the associated brightness sensors can also be used, in one simple embodiment, for non-safety-relevant signal circuits. The functionality is fully maintained. Graduated safety is also feasible, wherein the monitoring logic together with the sensors is used in only duplicated form.
In accordance with a further feature of the invention, the regulator is connected to an AC/DC converter, which converts the fluctuating process voltage to a lower, constant DC voltage. The regulation principle is in this case based on the idea of the current and voltage for the lighting elements being adjusted via this conversion process in such a manner that the actual brightness corresponds to the nominal brightness of the light signal. If required, pulse-width modulation can also be interposed. There is no need for any signal transformer for conversion of the high signal voltage to a low voltage for the signal transmitter, as a result of the use of a more compact and lighter-weight AC/DC converter.
In accordance with again another feature of the invention, a logic is provided for daytime/nighttime switching, which produces the nominal value and a reference voltage for the monitoring of the operating point for daytime and nighttime operation, respectively, with the reference voltage and the output signal from the brightness sensors which corresponds to the actual brightness value of the light signal being compared by means of a comparator, whose output signal is logically linked with a high or low level, which is associated with the current-flow state of the monitoring logic of a signal by means of an AND gate, with a switch being switched on and the actuating part signaling a fault state in the situation wherein the signal brightness does not correspond to the predetermined current window. The daytime/nighttime switching is preferably designed for central daytime/nighttime switching according to claim 2, and/or decentralized daytime/nighttime switching according to claim 3.
Since the information as to whether a signal transmitter has been switched on correctly is available in the monitoring logic, this information is made available, in accordance with a further feature of the invention, as an output for the connection of a train-influencing or train signaling device.
Other features which are considered as characteristic for the invention are set forth in the appended claims.
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein as embodied in a circuit for driving and monitoring a light signal, it is nevertheless not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made therein without departing from the spirit of the invention and within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims.
The construction and method of operation of the invention, however, together with additional objects and advantages thereof will be best understood from the following description of specific embodiments when read in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to the figures of the drawing in detail, the position of the AP_night and AP_day operating points shown in
An AC/DC converter AC_DC converts a high fluctuating process voltage UP which is produced by the actuating part St, to a low constant DC voltage, with the brightness being regulated with low losses, for example on the basis of pulse-width modulation.
The AC/DC converter AC_DC converts the high fluctuating process voltage UP to a low DC voltage in such a manner that the nominal brightness Bnom corresponds to the actual value Bact.
The monitoring logic ML together with the voltage converter DCW uses the voltage drop across a resistor RS to produce a constant voltage U_Hi, for example of 5 V. A signal E is produced from this voltage U_Hi and, once the process voltage UP has been switched on by the actuating part St, changes from low L to high H in a delay time tv. Logic for the daytime/nighttime switching D/N-logic produces a reference voltage Ref_T/N for a downstream comparator C, whose second input has the actual brightness signal Bact from the brightness sensors SL applied to it. The output signal CA from the comparator C is logically linked by means of an AND gate LA with the signal E in such a manner that, in the event of a fault, that is to say the brightness does not correspond to the AP_night or AP_day operating point, a switch S is switched on, and a high current and thus a fault state are signaled to the actuating part St via a resistor RF. The actuating part St can then initiate appropriate failure processing.
In addition to forming the reference value Ref_D/N for the monitoring of the AP_night and AP_day operating points, the logic for daytime/nighttime switching DN-logic also forms the nominal value Bnom for brightness regulation HR. Two operating modes are possible in this case, specifically decentralized daytime/nighttime switching or central daytime/nighttime switching. In the case of decentralized daytime/nighttime switching, sensors SH measure the brightness of the environment. The logic for daytime/nighttime switching DN-logic uses this to form the nominal value Bnom for brightness regulation HR and the reference value Ref_D/N for monitoring the AP_night and AP_day operating point. The signal brightness is optimally matched to the signal location. In the case of central daytime-nighttime switching, the information as to whether the signal transmitter Sign is intended to operate at the AP_day or AP_night operating point is transmitted from the actuating part St to the signal transmitter Sign. For this purpose, the actuating part St sends a continuous AC voltage UP when the AP_day operating point is to be set, and an AC voltage wherein every N-th cycle is missing when the AP_night operating point is to be set.
The signal transmitter Sign can be driven by the actuating part St in the power range from 5 W to 50 W by way of example, without any need to change the configuration data of the actuating part St. A process voltage UP of 200 V AC results in a current range from 25 mA to 250 mA on the primary side. If the regulation REG is implemented in such a way that a current of more than 40 mA always flows on the primary side, and the resistor RF is of such a magnitude that a current of more than 1 A flows in the event of a fault, then signal switching which is insensitive to disturbances can be provided on the basis of the large current separations. If the actuating part St measures a current of less than 40 mA, then the signal transmitter Sign is switched off, while current is flowing correctly in the signal transmitter Sign in a current range from 40 mA to 250 mA, and a fault has occurred if the current is more than 1 A. A line resistance RL of 140 ohms results in a power loss in the cable of 0.23 W at 40 mA and 8.75 W at 250 mA.
One output On_OK of the signal transmitter Sign can be used for the connection of a train-influencing device, since the monitoring logic ML provides the information about the current-flow state.
The invention is not restricted to the exemplary embodiment specified above. In fact, a number of variants are feasible, which also make use of fundamentally different types of embodiment of the features of the invention.
This application claims the priority, under 35 U.S.C. §119, of German patent application No. 10 2005 023 295.7, filed May 12, 2005; the entire disclosure of the prior application is herewith incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 023 295.7 | May 2005 | DE | national |