1. Field of the invention
The present invention relates to a discharge lamp starting circuit and a discharge lamp lighting device, which can provide a discharge lamp with an optimal starting waveform at the start of the discharge lamp using a simple-enough circuit configuration.
2. Description of the Related Art
Recently, a start-up voltage for lighting a lamp at its lighting start-up has become low owing to the development in technique for a lamp as a discharge lamp. As a result, a waveform required in the discharge lamp lighting device at its start-up has undergone changes.
Conventional discharge lamps need a high voltage as high as around 15 kV at the lighting start-up and hence a discharge lamp lighting device also needs to be designed, accordingly. By encapsulating krypton or the like inside a discharge lamp, however, a voltage required for the lighting start-up has decreased to around 3 to 5 kV. Further, a discharge lamp lighting device capable of continuously generating a pulse voltage around 1 to 2k V has been required in order to meet new needs.
In association with such a decrease in lighting start-up voltage of a discharge lamp, the conventional lighting devices have met the above-mentioned needs by applying and developing the conventional high-frequency start-up system. Specifically, as disclosed in Japanese patent publication No. 2006-513539, with the conventional circuit system unchanged, the frequency of an inverter at the lighting start-up is allowed to sequentially change and to match the frequency of the inverter to a resonant frequency of each circuit part so as to temporarily obtain a desired pulse voltage, or otherwise, a new circuit is added to the original one to realize the desired pulse voltage.
According to the foregoing technique proposed by Japanese unexamined patent application publication No. 2006-513539, it is possible to obtain the desired pulse voltage meeting the discharge lamp. Such desired voltage, however, cannot be continuously obtained therefrom. Further, since an inverter is allowed to operate at high frequencies on the order of 70 kHz to 200 kHz and besides generate a high voltage, there arises a concern about safety in view of resonance frequency variation attributable to the variation in properties of parts. Furthermore, when adding a new circuit, there occurs the problem that the cost is likely to increase by just that much.
Therefore, with the view of the problems described above, it is an object of the present invention to provide a discharge lamp starting circuit and a discharge lamp lighting device, which can continuously apply a starting waveform optimal to a discharge lamp using a simple-enough configuration.
In order to attain the object described above, a discharge lamp starting circuit according to the present invention is one which is connected with an output circuit for outputting an AC power and receives the AC power from the output circuit to output, to the discharge lamp, an output voltage capable of starting the discharge lamp. The discharge lamp starting circuit includes first and second windings connected in series with the discharge lamp as well as being connected with output terminals of the output circuit, and at least two first and second capacitors connected with the terminals of the windings in such a manner that the charging polarity of each of the capacitors connected with each of input terminals of the windings is opposite to that of each of the capacitors connected with each of output terminals of the windings.
Further, the discharge lamp lighting device according to the present invention is equipped with an output circuit for outputting AC power, and a discharge lamp starting circuit for receiving the AC power from the output circuit to output, to the discharge lamp, an output voltage capable of starting the discharge lamp. The discharge lamp starting circuit comprises first and second windings connected in series with the discharge lamp as well as being connected with output terminals of the output circuit, a first capacitor connected between an output terminal of the first winding and an input terminal of the second winding, and a second capacitor connected between an input terminal of the first winding and an output terminal of the second winding.
In these discharge lamp starting circuit and discharge lamp lighting device, the AC power is desirably output from the output circuit as a rectangular waveform AC voltage alternately switching between positive and negative polarities.
Further, in that case, the first and second windings and the first and second capacitors are desirably selected so that after switching of the AC voltage in polarity, both the voltage differences between input sides and output sides of the first and second windings become zero and thereafter the AC voltage again switches in polarity.
Further, the output circuit is desirably configured so that the frequency of the AC power output at the start of the discharge lamp becomes higher than that of the AC power output in the steady state of the discharge lamp.
Furthermore, the first and second windings are desirably wound around the common magnetic core to form an additive polarity transformer.
According to the present invention, at the moment the polarity of the AC power applied from the output circuit to the discharge lamp starting circuit has been reversed, the capacitor attempts to maintain the voltage charged therein up to that time and therefore the charged voltage of the capacitor itself is added to the AC voltage output from the output circuit, enabling an output voltage higher than the AC voltage to be applied instantaneously to the discharge lamp. By continuously applying the AC voltage from the output circuit to the discharge lamp for a given length of time, the output voltage capable of lighting the discharge lamp can be continuously generated from the discharge lamp starting circuit, thus improving the lighting performance of the discharge lamp. Accordingly, the need for such a charging and discharging circuit as was conventionally used is eliminated and besides an optimal starting waveform can be continuously applied to the discharge lamp using a simple-enough circuit configuration with only the first and second capacitors added.
Further, by outputting the AC voltage output from the output circuit as the rectangular waveform AC voltage alternately switching between positive and negative polarities, an output voltage higher than the foregoing AC voltage can be applied instantaneously to the discharge lamp immediately after the foregoing AC voltage has switched in polarity.
Furthermore, by suitably selecting the first and second windings and the first and second capacitors, the first and second capacitors can be charged with the same voltage as the foregoing AC voltage before the AC voltage switches again in polarity. Hence, every time the AC voltage switches in polarity, an output voltage three times larger than the AC voltage can be unfailingly and instantaneously applied to the discharge lamp.
Moreover, in the steady state after the start of the discharge lamp, the frequency of the AC power from the output circuit decreases and therefore the influence of the discharge lamp starting circuit can be neglected, thus enabling the discharge lamp to continue to stably light up.
Further, the first and second windings are wound not around separate magnetic cores but around the common magnetic core to form an additive polarity transformer. Hence, the discharge lamp starting circuit can be compactly formed.
These objects and other objects and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent upon reading of the following detailed description and the accompanying drawings in which:
Hereunder is a description of a preferred embodiment according to the present invention with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The starting circuit 12 receives the AC voltage Vac from the inverter circuit 11 to generate and output such a high voltage Vout as to allow the discharge lamp 16 to start, across the output terminals 14, 15. Here, the starting circuit 12 comprises an additive polarity transformer 34 with two substantially equal first and second windings 31, 32 wound around their common magnetic core, a first capacitor 41, and a second capacitor 42. The first winding 31 is connected with the intermediary portion of a first polarity line 44 extending from one output terminal of the inverter 11 to the output terminal 14, while the second winding 32 is connected with the intermediary portion of a second polarity line 45 extending from the other output terminal of the inverter 11 to the output terminal 15. Further, the two capacitors 41, 42 are connected, in such a manner as to straddle crisscross the additive polarity transformer 34, with the terminals of the windings 31, 32 so that the charging polarity of each of the capacitors 41, 42 is apposite to each other when the starting circuit 12 operates, eventually a polarity of voltage on the input side of the starting circuit 12 is temporarily opposite to that on the output side of the starting circuit 12 at the moment when a polarity of the AC voltage Vac from the inverter circuit 11 has been reversed. Specifically, on the input side of the starting circuit 12, the no-dot terminal of the winding 31 and one terminal of the capacitor 42 are connected with one output terminal of the inverter 11, and the dot terminal of the winding 32 and one terminal of the capacitor 41 are connected with the other output terminal of the inverter 11, while on the output side of the starting circuit 12, the dot terminal of the winding 31 and the other terminal of the capacitor 41 are connected with the output terminal 14 and the no-dot terminal of the winding 32 and the other terminal of the capacitor 42 are connected with the other output terminal 15.
In
Next is a description of the behavior of the foregoing scheme based on
Here, as shown in
Later, as shown in
Subsequently, energy exchanges take place between the two windings 31, 32 and the two capacitors 41, 42 connected to the windings through resonance, thus allowing the output voltage Vout generated between the output terminals 14, 15 to go on attenuating while they are resonating at a constant frequency. Eventually, as shown in
Later, as shown in
Subsequently, energy exchanges take place between the two windings 31, 32 and the two corresponding capacitors 41, 42 through resonance, thus allowing the output voltage Vout generated between the output terminals 14, 15 to go on attenuating while they are resonating at a constant frequency. Eventually, as shown in
In this way, the operations illustrated in the aforementioned
For the sake of comparison,
Here, when the circuits shown in
As described above, in the present embodiment, the starting circuit 12 acting as the discharge lamp starting circuit connected to the inverter 11 outputs to the discharge lamp 16 the output voltage Vout capable of starting the discharge lamp 16 that is a load, upon receiving AC power with a high frequency from the inverter 11 at the start. Particularly, the starting circuit 12 comprises the first and second windings 31, 32 which are connected to the output terminals of the inverter 11 and are serially connected to the discharge lamp 16; the first capacitor 41 connected between the output terminal of said first winding 31 and the input terminal of said second winding 32; and a second capacitor connected between an input terminal of the first winding 31 and an output terminal of the second winding 32. Further, the discharge lamp lighting device comprising the inverter 11 and the starting circuit 12 has the same configuration.
Accordingly, at the moment when the polarity of the AC power supplied to the starting circuit 12 from the inverter 11 has been reversed, the capacitors 41, 42 constituting the starting circuit 12 attempt to maintain the charging voltages stored so far, thereby allowing the charged voltages +V of the capacitors 41, 42 to be added to the AC voltage Vac from the inverter 11, thus making it possible to instantaneously apply to the discharge lamp 16 the output voltage Vout higher than the AC voltage Vac. Further, since the AC power Vac is continuously applied from the inverter 11 for the given period of time, there can be continuously generated from the starting circuit 12 the output voltage Vout capable of lighting the discharge lamp 16, thus improving the lighting performance of the discharge lamp 16. Accordingly, the present invention eliminates the use of the conventional charge/discharge circuit 53, and is capable of continuously applying to the discharge lamp 16 an optimum starting waveform with a simple-enough circuit configuration with the only two capacitors 41, 42 added.
Further, in the present embodiment, the AC power output from the inverter 11 is especially selected as the rectangular AC voltage Vac switching alternately between positive and negative polarities. Accordingly, immediately after the AC voltage Vac has switched in polarity, the output voltage Vout higher than the AC voltage Vac can be applied instantaneously to the discharge lamp 16.
Furthermore, in this case, the windings 31, 32 and the capacitors 41, 42 are desirably selected so that after the AC voltage Vac has switched in polarity, both the voltage differences between the input and output terminals of each of the windings 31, 32 become zero as shown in
Further, in the present embodiment, the inverter is configured so that the frequency of the AC voltage Vac output at the start of the discharge lamp 16 becomes higher than that of the voltage Vac output in the subsequent steady state of the discharge lamp 16. Hence, on the steady state of the discharge lamp 16 subsequent to the start thereof, the frequency of the AC voltage Vac from the inverter 11 decreases to enable the influence of the starting circuit 12 to be neglected, permitting the discharge lamp 16 to continue to be stably lighted.
Furthermore, in the present embodiment, the additive polarity transformer 34 is constituted by winding the windings 31, 32 around the common magnetic core 33. The additive polarity transformer 34 is constituted by wingding the windings 31, 32 not around separate magnetic cores but around the common magnetic core 33 and thereby the starting circuit 12 can be compactly formed.
However, the present invention is not limited to the present embodiment. As a matter of fact, various modified embodiments are possible within the scope of the gist of the present invention. For example, the inverter 11 serving as an output circuit is not limited to that including a full-bridge connected four switching elements 21 through 24 as in the present embodiment. Further, as described above, the same effect may be achieved with either one additive polarity transformer 34 formed by winding the windings 31, 32 around the common magnetic core 33, or two inductors formed by winding the windings around two separate magnetic cores. Furthermore, with regard to the two capacitors 41, 42, there may be used, for example, two capacitors 41 and two capacitors 42 instead of one capacitor 41 and one capacitor 42 as long as a desired capacity can be obtained. Similarly, two windings 31 and two windings 32 may be employed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2010-126301 | Jun 2010 | JP | national |