This application claims the priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of European patent application no. 13194657.6, filed on Nov. 27, 2013 and European patent application no. 13164929.5 filed Apr. 23, 2013, the contents of which are incorporated by reference herein.
This invention relates to dimmable lighting circuits, to controllers therefore and to methods of controlling dimmable LED lighting circuits.
LED light sources differ significantly from incandescent light sources in that they typically produce light, the colour of which does not change significantly with their brightness. This is particularly apparent when an LED light source is used to replace a dimmable incandescent lamp. Depending on the brightness of the light, incandescent lamps produce light with a colour temperature between 1800K, when the lamp is deep dimmed, and 2700K when the lamp is at full brightness or even up to 3000K for an undimmed halogen lamp. During dimming the colour temperature of an incandescent follows the so-called black-body curve. In contrast to incandescent lamps, LEDs have an almost constant colour temperature of for example 3000K or 3500K independent of the dimming level.
To overcome this perceived problem, it is known to mimic an incandescent light by using a mixture of LED light sources which emit different spectral contents of light. For each brightness level, set by for example a wall-dimmer or remote control, the mixture is adjusted to mimic an incandescent light source. The solution is generally referred to as “Tunable White” or “Correlated Colour Tracking”.
It is possible to use different combinations of LED light sources to achieve the same effect. Some examples of combinations of coloured light sources, known as primaries, which have been used are: warm white combined with amber; cold white combined with amber; red combined with green and blue; and warm white combined with red and green. A warm white LED may typically be one having a colour temperature of 3000±100 K; conversely, a cold white may typically have a colour temperature of 3500±100 K. Although their Colour Rendering Index (CRI) may be of different quality, in principle any combination can be used, as long as the colour coordinates of the primary light sources in the XY colour plane cover the relevant part of the black body curve.
Warm or cold white combined with amber are particularly convenient combinations since, firstly, only two primary types of LEDs are required and so only two drive currents need to be adjusted. And secondly, both primaries are already located on the black-body curve, and as a result inaccuracies in the mixing do not result into colour deviations that appear unnatural.
As will be described in more detail hereinbelow, more than one LED may be used in series, for one or both of the primaries. Such a series arrangement is generally referred to as a string. In order to keep the cost of the driver low, the two LED strings will typically be supplied by a single output switching LED driver.
In known arrangements, the two strings are arranged in parallel. An example is shown in
In another known arrangement, an example 200 of which is shown in
According to a first aspect there is provided a controller, for a dimmable LED lighting circuit comprising an arrangement of at least one LED of a first type connected in series with at least one LED of a second type, the controller comprising a control circuit, a bypass circuit and a further bypass circuit and being operable for controlling a current, the current being separable into a first part (IW) and a second part (IB), and being further separable into a further first part (IA) and a further second part (IB2), wherein the controller is configured to direct the first part through the at least one LED of the second type and direct the second part through the bypass circuit, wherein the controller is configured to direct the further first part through the at least one LED of the first type and direct the further second part through the further bypass circuit, and wherein the control circuit is configured to adjust at least one of (a) the ratio between the first part and the second part, and (b) the ratio between the further first part and the further second part, in dependence on a dimming level of the LED lighting circuit.
According to a second aspect there is provided a controller, for a dimmable LED lighting circuit comprising an arrangement of at least one LED of a first type connected in series with at least one LED of a second type, the controller comprising a control circuit and a bypass circuit and being operable to direct a current comprising a first part (IW) and a second part (IB) through the at least one LED of the first type, wherein the controller is configured to direct the first part through the at least one LED of the second type and direct the second part through the bypass circuit, wherein the control circuit is configured to adjust the ratio between the first part and the second part in dependence on a dimming level of the LED lighting circuit. Thus this aspect is analogous to a particular case of the first aspect, in which the ratio between the further first part and the further second part is infinitely large, such that the further second part is zero, as a result of which the further bypass circuit would be redundant since no current would flow through it and is thus not present.
Thus embodiments may provide a low-cost solution which may be simple to implement and may be compatible with a standard off-the-shelf LED driver.
In embodiments the bypass circuit comprises a controllable current source. In embodiments, the bypass circuit comprises a transistor configured to be operated in a linear mode. The amount of current through the bypass circuit may thus be adjusted by controlling the control terminal of the transistor. In other embodiments, the bypass circuit comprises a pair of transistors connected as an output stage, and configured to operate in linear mode. Use of a pair of transistors may reduce the overall cost of the circuit.
In embodiments, the bypass circuit may comprise a switch operable with pulse width modulation. Regulation of the bypass circuit may thus be, for example, PWM, and in particular is not limited to linear regulation.
In embodiments, either the controller or the bypass circuit is configured to supply the first part from a power source having a higher voltage than a power source which supplies the second part. Thereby, the voltage drop across the bypass circuit may be made to be less than the voltage drop across the at least one LED of the second type. Thus Ohmic losses associated with the bypass circuit may be reduced or minimised. In other embodiments, either the controller or the bypass circuit is configured to supply the first and second parts from a single power source.
In embodiments the control circuit is operable to measure the first part and the second part, and comprises: a first pair of transistors arranged as a first error amplifier operable to adjust the ratio between the first part and the second part over a first range of dimming levels, and a second pair of transistors arranged as a second error amplifier and operable to adjust the ratio between the first part and the second part over a second range of dimming levels, wherein the first and second error amplifiers having a one transistor in common. In particular, the first dimming range may be a deep dimming level, and the second dimming range may be a brighter level. The ratio between the first part and the second part maybe fixed over the first range of dimming levels, and may vary over the second range of dimming levels such that as the brightness increases more of the current is directed through the at least one LED of the second type. Moreover, the second error amplifier may have a transistor in common with one of the transistors in the output stage, this transistor being separate to the transistor which is in common between the first error amplifier and the second in error amplifier.
According to another aspect there is provided a lighting circuit comprising a controller as described above, and further comprising a series arrangement of at least one LED of a first type connected in series with at least one LED of a second type. The lighting circuit may comprise the power supply.
In embodiments, the lighting circuit further comprises an LED driver operable as the power source to provide a drive current Idriver. In other embodiments, the LED driver is operable as the power source to supply the first part from a first output and the power source to supply the second part from a second output.
According to a further, aspect, there is provided a method of controlling an LED lighting circuit comprising an arrangement of at least one LED of a first type connected in series with at least one LED of a second type, the method comprising: providing a current, wherein the current comprises a first part through the at least one LED of the second type and a second part which bypasses the at least one LED of the second type and wherein the current comprises a further first part through the at least one LED of the first type and a further second part which bypasses the at least one LED of the first type.
According to a yet further aspect, there is provided a method of controlling an LED lighting circuit comprising an arrangement of at least one LED of a first type connected in series with at least one LED of a second type, the method comprising: providing a current through the at least one LED of the first type wherein the current comprises a first part through the at least one LED of the second type and a second part which bypasses the at least one LED of the second type.
In embodiments, the first type is an amber LED and the second type is a white LED. By generally increasing the relative contribution of the LEDs of the second type, which may typically correspond to a higher colour temperature, the perceived colour temperature of the arrangements may be increased with increasing brightness. It will be appreciated, that in less typical embodiments it may that the LEDs of the first type have a higher colour temperature, in which case, increasing brightness might generally result in a perceived lower colour temperature.
In embodiments, the at least one LED of the first type is one LED and the at least one LED of the second type is three LEDs. In other embodiments, the at least one LED of the first type is a first plurality of LEDs and the number of LEDs in at least one LED of the second type is three times the first plurality of LEDs.
These and other aspects of the invention will be apparent from, and elucidated with reference to, the embodiments described hereinafter.
Embodiments of the invention will be described, by way of example only, with reference to the drawings, in which
It should be noted that the Figures are diagrammatic and not drawn to scale. Relative dimensions and proportions of parts of these Figures have been shown exaggerated or reduced in size, for the sake of clarity and convenience in the drawings. The same reference signs are generally used to refer to corresponding or similar feature in modified and different embodiments.
The control circuit 330 and the bypass circuit 340 may together form a controller 360.
The control circuit is configured to adjust, in use, the ratio between the first part and the second part in dependence on a dimming level of the LED lighting circuit. A variety of different schema or arrangements may be used for this adjustment, examples of which will be described in more detail hereinunder. In general, however, at deep dimming levels—that is to say for small values of overall drive current Idriver—the fraction of the light output which is provided by the second string 320 is low. In contrast, at high brightness levels—that is to say for large values of overall drive current Idriver—the fraction of the light output which is provided by the second string 320 is higher.
Thus in the case of a tunable white application, at deep dimming levels, most of the light output is provided by the string 310 of amber LEDs. In contrast, at high brightness levels, a higher part of the light output is provided by the string 320 of white LEDs.
It will be appreciated that, at all dimming levels, the first string of LEDs, that is to say in this application the amber LED or LEDs, is driven with the complete driver current Idriver. Thus this LED (or these LEDs in the case that the string comprises a plurality of LEDs) contributes to the overall luminance output at all dimming levels. This is in contrast to known arrangements wherein the strings are arranged in parallel, in which typically the amber LEDs do not contribute at full brightness. In typical known tunable white applications, a single amber LED is used in parallel with a string of four white LEDs.
In or with embodiments, the string of four white LEDs may be replaced by a string of three white LEDs, and yet the same maximum luminance output may be achieved, since the amber LED is contributing and an amber LED typically produces the same amount of luminance for a given current as a white LED, at around 100 lumen for a 350 Ma drive current.
Similar to bypass circuit 340, bypass circuit 341 may be a variable current sink, and is for sinking (or sourcing) a controllable current IB2. In these embodiments, the LED drive current Idriver is not only split into two parts IW and IB, directed respectively through the second string 320 and the bypass circuit; rather it is further split into a further two parts, IA and IB2: The first further part IA is directed through the first string 310, and the second part IB2 is directed through the further bypass circuit 341. In such embodiments, in contrast to that depicted in
It will be apparent that splitting the current into further two parts does not involve sub-splitting the already split current; rather the driver current may comprise or consist of the first and second part, and it may, independently comprise or consist of the further first part and the further second part. Thus in general in such embodiments, the condition applies that:
Idriver=IW+IB=IA+IB2
In such embodiments, the control circuit 330, the bypass circuit 340 and the further bypass circuit 341 may together form a controller 360′. Such embodiments may therefore allow a decreasing contribution from the LEDs of the first type: this may be useful for instance in order to tune the colour point more towards the colour from the second type of LEDs at high light output. It will be appreciated that such embodiments might not benefit from all the LEDs fully contributing to the luminous output, so more LEDs may be required for the same luminance output, relative to embodiments as shown in
To simplify the following explanation of the operation of the circuit, the following nodes are shown: node A is at the junction between the first sense resistor R1 and the second string 420; node B is at the junction between the third sense resistor R3 and the transistor M1, and node C is at the junction between the second sense resistor R2 and the first string 410.
Two error amplifiers, A1 and A2, having respective blocking diodes D15 and D16 connected in series with their outputs, are arranged to control the control terminal of transistor M1. They thereby adjust the current IB through the bypass path, and thereby adjust the ratio of the currents through the first and second strings, in dependence on the overall driver current Idriver—and thus in dependence on the dimming level, since Idriver also determines the overall dimming level.
At deep dimming levels, the circuit consisting of R1, R3, A1, D15, R10 and M1 splits the current into two parts as determined by the ratio of the resistors R1 and R3. To this purpose, the first amplifier A1 measures the voltage between the nodes A and B, which is the difference between the voltage drops across sense R1 and R3. If the voltage differs significantly from zero, the current through the MOS transistor M1 is regulated to correct for this unbalance. Thus, by suitable choice of the values of sense resistors R1 and R3, the ratio of the currents through the first and second strings, and in particular the fraction of the current through the first string which also passes through the second string, may be predetermined. As will be familiar to the skilled person, the sense resistors should generally be chosen to have a low resistance so as to minimise the ohmic losses associated therewith. In a typical example, R1 may be given the value of 4 ohm and R3 many given a value of 1.5 ohm. In more detail, since the regulation acts to eliminate difference in voltages between the resistors R1 and R3, and IB+IW=Idriver, the application of Ohm's law “V=I·R” results in IB·R3=IW·R1, so the fraction, IW/Idriver, of the total driver current which passes through the second string, is given by:
If R3 is been chosen to much smaller than R1, at low brightness the amber LED will conduct a much higher current than the white LEDs, and so the colour of the emitted light will be close to amber, that is to say, will have a low colour temperature.
Although by decreasing R3 relative to R1, the fractional bypass current may be increased to tune the colour more towards saturated amber, the skilled person will appreciate that there is a good reason to keep some minimum current through the white LEDs, because the current through the white LEDs will assure that the total load voltage as seen by the LED driving current remains high enough to assure proper switching operation of the switching LED driver. The skilled person will appreciate that switching LED drivers typically require a certain minimum output voltage in order to keep up the supply voltage of the switch driver IC that gets its supply from an auxiliary winding that is reflecting the converter load voltage.
The first input to the second error amplifier is connected to node C, and its second input is connected to the second input of the first error amplifier—that is to say, node B—via a voltage offset V1. As the brightness—that is to say, the magnitude of Idriver—is increased to a higher value, at some point the voltage drop across R2 becomes high enough to activate the second error amplifier A2 and series output diode D16. From that point onwards, the amplifier A2 senses the voltage difference between voltages at nodes B and C, after subtraction of the offset voltage V1. If the amplifier input voltage deviates significantly from zero, the transistor M1 is regulated to correct for this. The result of all this is that with increasing brightness, the current through the amber LED is gradually becoming equal to the current through the white LED.
Thus, the point at which the second error amplifier comes into action can be tuned by changing the offset voltage V1 and the value of R2. The steepness of the control depends on the ratio between R3 and R2.
The point at which the second error amplifier comes into action can be tuned by changing the voltage drop across R8 and the value of R2. The voltage drop across R8 can be increased but it should be prevented that Q1B starts to operate in saturated mode. As described above, the steepness of the control depends on the ratio between R3 and R2.
In this embodiment, a schottky diode D11 is included in parallel with the sense resistor R1 and serves to limit the voltage drop across R1 beyond the regulation range of the first error amplifier around Q1A and Q1B. Inclusion of this diode reduces dissipation and so may improve power efficiency.
In embodiments, a resistor R6 is added in series with M1, or Q3, in order to shift part of the power dissipation at medium dimming level from Q3 to R6.
The skilled person will appreciate that the transition points in the control curves are smooth rather than steep. This is due to the limited voltage gain of the error amplifier but is not a problem for the application.
It will further be appreciated that in embodiments such as that shown in
A capacitor C1 may be included between the node between R1 and R2, and the control terminal to M1, or Q2B, in order to improve the stability of the regulation loop.
The skilled person will appreciate that the invention is not limited to the specific control scheme described above with reference to the
In order to control the current thought the bypass 34, the controller 330 may sense the currents through the strings or total current from the driver (as described above). In other embodiments, the controller may get one or more dedicated control signals from the driver 350. Thus, as the skilled person will appreciate, in some embodiments, sense resistor may not be required, in order to determine the current through the strings and/or the bypass circuit.
The skilled person will appreciate that the embodiments shown in
From reading the present disclosure, other variations and modifications will be apparent to the skilled person. Such variations and modifications may involve equivalent and other features which are already known in the art of LED lighting circuits, and which may be used instead of, or in addition to, features already described herein. In particular and without limitation, the skilled person will appreciate that the controller 360 may be separate to, or may be integrated with the driver controller 710.
Further, although embodiments have been described with reference to white LEDs and amber LEDs, the skilled person will appreciate that the invention is not limited thereto, and in particular extends to other combinations of types of LED, such as, without limitation, red combined with green and amber, and warm white combined with red and green.
In embodiments described above, regulation of the bypass circuit is shown using a form of linear regulation. The skilled person will appreciate that other forms of regulation for the bypass circuit may be appropriate. In particular, the bypass circuit may comprise a switch operable by pulse width modulation, or other form of switch mode regulation. Circuits using such regulation may have an advantage in that it may be possible or appropriate to recycle, rather than dissipate, energy associated with the voltage drop in the bypass circuit.
Although the appended claims are directed to particular combinations of features, it should be understood that the scope of the disclosure of the present invention also includes any novel feature or any novel combination of features disclosed herein either explicitly or implicitly or any generalisation thereof, whether or not it relates to the same invention as presently claimed in any claim and whether or not it mitigates any or all of the same technical problems as does the present invention.
Features which are described in the context of separate embodiments may also be provided in combination in a single embodiment. Conversely, various features which are, for brevity, described in the context of a single embodiment, may also be provided separately or in any suitable sub-combination. The applicant hereby gives notice that new claims may be formulated to such features and/or combinations of such features during the prosecution of the present application or of any further application derived therefrom.
For the sake of completeness it is also stated that the term “comprising” does not exclude other elements or steps, the term “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality, a single processor or other unit may fulfill the functions of several means recited in the claims and reference signs in the claims shall not be construed as limiting the scope of the claims.
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