1. Technical Field
The invention relates to a control circuit of a driving circuit of a discharge lamp.
2. Description of the Related Art
Fluorescent lamps are typically composed of a glass tube which contains a small quantity of mercury, a low pressure inert gas and phosphorous powders which coat the inside part of the tube. At the extremities two electrodes are present which, connected to a suitable driving circuit, form the arc that permits the discharge of the gas to be generated and maintained.
Among the possible driving circuits the so-called high frequency ballast circuits can be enumerated: these are circuits at whose output an alternating voltage signal is generated at a frequency and amplitude necessary to keep the lamp on; this waveform is produced by a circuit that comprises a couple of transistors that switch at a frequency of tens of KHz, a current limiting coil and a filtering capacitance.
A typical ballast circuit is described in
The frequency response of the circuit in
In a first phase, that is a preheating phase, the lamp is off and the corresponding point in the waveform in
In a second phase, that is the ignition phase, the switching frequency of the transistors of the half bridge is decreased by providing an increase of the current and of the voltage of the lamp. Such an increase occurs to reach the ignition voltage of the gas which allows the ignition of the lamp. During this phase, the operative point goes towards fr(HighQ) on the line A in the diagram in
In the third phase, the run/burn phase or run phase, the load driven by the half bridge will be of the inductive type but with a resistor (the lamp) in series with the capacitor C and the inductor L. The operative point is on the line B of the diagram in
One embodiment of the present invention provides a control circuit of a driving circuit of a discharge lamp which overcomes the above mentioned disadvantages.
One embodiment of the present invention is a control circuit that includes a sensor structured to sense a voltage of a discharge lamp driven by a driving circuit that includes a half bridge and a circuit that determines a switching frequency of the half bridge. The control circuit also includes a regulator structured to regulate the switching frequency when the voltage across the lamp exceeds a threshold value.
The features and the advantages of the present invention will be made evident by the following detailed description of an embodiment thereof, shown as not limiting example in the annexed drawings, wherein:
With reference to
The switching frequency Fsw is substantially determined by the value of the current Irun which changes on the base of the operative conditions, that is the pre-heating phase, the ignition phase and the run phase. During the pre-heating phase the terminal EOI is short circuited to ground because the switch SW is on and in this way the current Irun is at the maximum value. At the end of this first operative condition the switch SW is turned off and the charge of the capacitor Cign starts; in this way the voltage across the capacitor Cign increases exponentially, the current Irun and the switching frequency decrease exponentially to a minimum value. The reaching of the minimum value determines the end of the ignition phase and the start of the run phase; the duration T of the ignition phase is T=3*Rign*Cign. During this time interval the system applies the shift of the switching frequency which is necessary to increase the voltage across the lamp to the value of the ignition of the gas.
The circuit of one embodiment of the present invention, shown in
By considering the circuit in
During the ignition phase the goal of the circuit HCBS is to limit the voltage and the current of the lamp LP to prevent that they exceed the nominal values in a dangerous way. Therefore a security margin of voltage dvign and a security margin of current dlgn are defined so that, by means of a suitable design of Rs, it verifies the following relation Vhbcs=Rs*(lign+dlign)≧Csth wherein the current and the voltage must be considered as peak values.
If the lamp is working properly, it ignites when Vlamp=Vign and therefore the voltage Vhbcs is lower than Csth. If, for example in the case of ageing of the lamp, the ignition of the lamp does not occur with Vlamp=Vign, then Vhbcs>Csth and the circuit HBCS acts to limit the switching frequency Fsw. In fact the circuit HBCS allows the increase of the current Irun by limiting the exponential increase of the voltage Veoi across the capacitor Cign; in
This regulation condition of the switching frequency, which determines an increase of the duration of the ignition phase, is active until the ignition of the lamp. The circuit HBCS sets a maximum duration of the regulation procedure, that is a maximum interval Treg during which a voltage higher than Vign+dVign is applied across the lamp. If at the end of the time period Treg the lamp has still not ignited, the circuit HBCS waits the first conduction cycle of the transistor T2 during which it checks two possible events: if the voltage at the gate terminal of the transistor T2 is high and the signal CSH is high, that is the lamp has not ignited and the over voltage is still present or if the voltage at the gate terminal of the transistor T2 is high and the signal CSH is low, the lamp has ignited at the limit of the time period Treg. If the first event is verified the circuit HBCS controls the shut down of the whole system, by means of a signal SD sent to a driving circuit 300 of the half bridge, while if the second event is verified the circuit HBCS controls the resumption of the ignition phase.
When the ignition occurs the values of Vlamp and Ilamp decrease for the variation of the equivalent load of the half bridge; the regulation action is interrupted and the shift of the switching frequency is resumed until the starting of the run phase. During this phase the circuit HBCS is still active but in this case a security margin of the voltage or of the current dVign or dlgn is defined so that, by means of a suitable design of Rs, it verifies the following relation Vhbcs=Rs*(Irun+dIrun)≧Cstl, wherein the current and the voltage must be considered as peak values; the values of the voltages and the currents in this phase are lower than in the ignition phase, that is Irun<Iign and Csth>Cstl. In the case wherein the above condition occurs, the circuit HBCS controls the increase of the switching frequency, by acting on the switch S1 in order to increase the voltage Vg and in turn the current Isink which provides, by reducing the value of the voltage Veoi, to increase the current Irun. In this way the operating point of the driving circuit is moved to lower value of the currents and voltages. Even in this case the regulation continues for the above mentioned time period Treg; after the time period the following events are checked: if the voltage at the gate terminal of the transistor T2 is high and the signal CSL is high, then the fault condition is still present and the regulation has not been successful, or if the voltage at the gate terminal of the transistor T2 is high and the signal CSL is low, that is the fault condition has been corrected by the frequency adjustment and the voltage Vhbcs is under the value of the threshold Cstl. If the first event is verified the circuit HBCS controls the shut down of the whole system while if the second event is verified the circuit HBCS controls the resumption of the run phase.
When the system is in the run phase the circuit HBCS may detect a second type of fault condition, that is when the voltage Vhbcs is higher than or equal to the threshold Csth. If this condition is verified during the run phase, the circuit HBCS does not provide to any regulation but it controls the shut down of the whole system.
In
The various embodiments described above can be combined to provide further embodiments. Aspects of the embodiments can be modified, if necessary to employ concepts of the various patents, applications and publications to provide yet further embodiments.
These and other changes can be made to the embodiments in light of the above-detailed description. In general, in the following claims, the terms used should not be construed to limit the claims to the specific embodiments disclosed in the specification and the claims, but should be construed to include all possible embodiments along with the full scope of equivalents to which such claims are entitled. Accordingly, the claims are not limited by the disclosure.