This application claims priority to PCT/EP2005/002856, filed on Mar. 17, 2005, which claims priority to DE102004045031.5 filed on Sep. 15, 2004 and to DE102004016764.8 filed on Apr. 1, 2004.
The invention relates to a control circuit for relay-operated gas valves.
Gas valves are known which are opened and closed via a relay. It is also known for such relays for opening and closing gas valves to be activated via a control device, often in the form of a microprocessor. It can be important here that the overall arrangement is failsafe, i.e. that a gas valve is only opened via a relay when the control device is in a defined state. If an undefined state of the control device is present, it is desirable that the relay not open the gas valve. For this, control circuits for relay-operated gas valves sometimes have a failsafe circuit in addition to the relay, where the failsafe circuit is connected between the control device and the relay. The failsafe circuit may help ensure the failure safety of the overall arrangement.
According to one illustrative embodiment of the present invention, a control circuit may be provided that includes a relay for opening and/or closing a gas valve, and a failsafe circuit. A control device may be connectable to one or more input of the failsafe circuit, and the failsafe circuit may be adapted to only supply the relay with a voltage and/or current necessary for opening the gas valve when an input signal supplied at an input of the failsafe circuit by the control device has, for example, at least two different frequency signals succeeding each other in time.
In accordance with this illustrative embodiment, the relay can accordingly only open a gas valve if the signal supplied by the control device contains the two frequency signals in the time-defined order. If only one of the two frequency signals is present, the relay cannot open the gas valve. This helps ensure that the relay can only actuate the gas valve if the control device, often in the form of a microprocessor, is working properly. If the control device supplies a signal with other frequencies or a different time sequence of frequencies at the input of the failsafe circuit, the gas valve may be closed, sometimes immediately.
In some illustrative embodiments, the control circuit may have a charging circuit and a drive circuit for the relay. In some cases, the charging circuit has at least one capacitor, the charging circuit charging the at least one capacitor of the charging circuit upon the application or presence of a first frequency signal in the input signal. Upon the application or presence of a second frequency signal, on the other hand, the at least one capacitor of the charging circuit discharges itself. Upon the application or presence of the second frequency signal in the input signal, the drive circuit for the relay may supply the relay with a voltage and/or current necessary for opening the gas valve.
In some cases, the drive circuit may have at least two transistors, a base of a first transistor being connected via a resistor to the capacitor of the charging circuit, and the first transistor of the drive circuit only conducting when the capacitor of the charging circuit discharges itself upon the application of the second frequency signal in the input signal.
The invention may be more completely understood in consideration of the following detailed description of an illustrative embodiment of the present invention in connection with the accompanying drawings, without being restricted to this or other illustrative embodiments, in which:
An illustrative embodiment of the present invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to
In one illustrative embodiment, and not to be limiting, the failsafe circuit 12 of the control circuit 10 may include a charging circuit 14 and a drive circuit 15. The illustrative charging circuit 14 includes the components surrounded by a dashed box in
As can be seen from
The illustrative drive circuit 15 includes, among other things, two transistors 24 and 25. A first transistor 24 is connected with its base to the capacitor 16 of the charging circuit 14, with an interposed resistor 26. The collector of the transistor 24, which according to the illustrative embodiment of
According to the illustrative embodiment of
As already mentioned, the illustrative control circuit 10 or the failsafe circuit 12 of the same may only supply the relay 11 with a voltage necessary for opening the gas valve when, for example, an input signal including at least two different frequency signals succeeding each other in time is supplied at the input 13 of the failsafe circuit 12 by the control device. In this case a defined operating state of the control device for opening the gas valve is present.
In one illustrative embodiment, and although not required, the gas valve may be only opened by the relay 11 if the signal supplied by the control device at the input 13 includes two frequency signals, namely a first frequency signal with a frequency of around 1000 kHz and a second frequency signal with a frequency of around 5 kHz, which are applied or present succeeding one another in time in such a manner in the signal supplied by the control device, that in each case a time span of around 40 ms with the first frequency signal of around 1000 kHz is followed by a time span of around 80 ms with the second frequency signal of around 5 kHz.
The illustrative control circuit 10 may work in such a manner that upon the application or presence of the first frequency signal of around 1000 kHz at the input 13 of the failsafe circuit 12, the charging circuit 14 charges the capacitor 16 of same. During the application of the second frequency signal of around 5 kHz at the input 13, on the other hand, the capacitor 16 of the charging circuit 14 cannot be charged, but instead during the time span in which the second frequency signal of around 5 kHz is applied, a discharge of the capacitor 16 of the charging circuit 14 takes place through the resistor 26 and the base of the transistor 24. It should further be noted that during the time span in which the second frequency signal of around 5 kHz is applied at the input 13, there may be a generally rectangular 5 kHz signal at the connection point 31. Thereby, on the one hand, the capacitor 33 of the drive circuit 15 is charged over the diode 34, and on the other hand there is a discharge over the relay 11. In the discharge, a direct current may flow through the relay 11. In the time span in which the first frequency signal of around 1000 kHz is applied, the capacitor 33 of the drive circuit 15 can also discharge over the relay 11. In the illustrative embodiment, the transistor 24 of the drive circuit 15 is only conducting if from the discharge of the capacitor 16 a current flows at its base.
During the time span in which the first frequency signal with the relatively high frequency of around 1000 kHz is applied at the input 13, the capacitor 16 of the charging circuit 14 is indeed being charged, but the drive circuit 15 is not conducting because of, for example, the so-called feedback capacity of the transistor 25 and because of the relatively large resistor 28. In the illustrative embodiment, the drive circuit 15 is only conducting when, during the time span in which the second frequency signal with the relatively low frequency of 5 kHz is applied at the input 13, the capacitor 16 of the charging circuit 14 discharges through the resistor 26 and the base of the first transistor 24. The charging and discharging of the capacitor 16 of the charging circuit 14 during the time spans t1 and t2 with the different frequency signals is represented in
By supplying a signal at the input 13 of the control circuit 10, in which the signal includes the two frequency signals of around 1000 kHz and around 5 kHz succeeding each other in a defined time, a voltage and/or current necessary to open the gas valve can be permanently supplied at the relay 11. In the time span in which the first frequency signal of around 1000 kHz is applied at the input 13, the capacitor 33 of the drive circuit 15 discharges, as a result of which the voltage and/or current necessary to open the gas valve is maintained at the relay 11. During the time span for which the second frequency signal of around 5 kHz is applied at the input 13 and the capacitor 16 of the charging circuit 14 discharges, the drive circuit 15 is conducting and there is a rectangular 5 kHz signal at the connection point 31. As a result of this, on the one hand the capacitor 33 is charged over the diode 34, and on the other hand there is a discharge over the relay 11. In the discharge a direct current flows through the relay 11. During the presence of the first frequency signal of around 1000 kHz, the transistor 25 is continuously conducting, as a result of which the voltage at the emitters of the Darlington transistor circuits 29 and 30 becomes high. Since during the time span in which the first frequency signal of around 1000 kHz is applied at the input 13, the voltage necessary to open the gas valve is maintained at the relay 11 by the discharge of the capacitor 33, this time typically should be shorter than the discharge time of the capacitor 33.
The actual design of the control circuit described above is up to the person skilled in the art who is addressed here. In the especially preferred embodiment, the capacitance of the capacitor 16 of the charging circuit is 10 μF, the capacitance of each of the capacitors 20, 21, 22, 23 is 100 pF. The capacitance of the capacitor 33 of the drive circuit is preferably 47 μF. The resistor 19 is preferably sized at 1 kΩ, the resistor 28 at 1 MΩ. The resistor 26 is preferably 47 kΩ, the resistor 27 100 kΩ. The resistor 32 is preferably 51Ω. The supply voltage V is 24 V. With this sizing for the circuit components, the discharge time of the capacitor 16 through the resistor 26 is about 116 ms, its charge time is about 40 ms.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 016 764 | Apr 2004 | DE | national |
10 2004 045 031 | Sep 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2005/002856 | 3/17/2005 | WO | 00 | 9/29/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2005/098888 | 10/20/2005 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3715669 | Faforest | Feb 1973 | A |
4118750 | Auer et al. | Oct 1978 | A |
5865538 | Walker et al. | Feb 1999 | A |
5889645 | Kadah et al. | Mar 1999 | A |
5917691 | Kadah | Jun 1999 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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10203765 | Aug 2003 | DE |
102004016764 | Sep 2005 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070159761 A1 | Jul 2007 | US |