The present invention relates to an overcurrent protection circuit for electrical systems, such as power supplies, and in particular, an off-line high efficiency linear power supply.
In the above-identified U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/458,608, a high efficiency off-line linear power supply is described. The power supply is designed to provide current to electronic circuits during a time period when a dimmer circuit for electric lamps is not drawing current. In particular, the power supply is designed to draw current for powering electronic circuits during time periods when the triac of the dimmer circuit is off.
With reference to
With reference to
The power supply includes a gate voltage supply including resistors R1, diode D2, capacitor C1, and zener diode Z1, which operate essentially the way as described in the above-identified copending patent application to provide a hard gate voltage turn-on for transistor Q1 via resistor R3, diode D3 and resistor R5. The voltage provided to the gate of transistor Q1 by this circuit provides a hard turn-on of transistor Q1, reducing the power loss in transistor Q1 when transistor Q1 is on.
Transistor Q2 turns off the transistor Q1 when the voltage level at its base, as defined by a voltage divider comprising resistors R1 and R2, reaches the threshold to turn on transistor Q2. This occurs when the bus voltage on bus V+ exceeds a predefined value, typically when the triac of the associated dimmer turns on and the bus V+ waveform is in region 2 of
The circuit of
Overcurrent protection circuit 100 of the power supply circuit of
It is desirable to provide an overcurrent protection circuit that results in less power loss but still adequately protects the power switching transistor.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an improved overcurrent protection that which results in less power loss than the overcurrent protection circuit described above.
The above and other objects of the invention are achieved by an overcurrent protection circuit for a power switching transistor wherein the power switching transistor has a control electrode and two main electrodes, the circuit comprising:
A circuit including a protection switch for sensing the rate of change of voltage with respect to time at one of the main electrodes of the power switching transistor and for controlling the protection switch to remove a control signal to the control electrode of the power switching transistor to turn off the power switching transistor if the rate of change exceeds a predefined value.
Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the detailed description which follows.
With reference now to
If the current in transistor Q1 exceeds a predefined limit, the dV/dt or rate of change of the ripple voltage on capacitor C4 will be such that a pulse passed by capacitor C8 due to the dV/dt will cause a voltage drop across resistor R8 of approximately 0.6 volts thereby turning on transistor Q4. Under normal operating conditions, the dV/dt present on capacitor C4 will develop only approximately 0.3 volts across resistor R8, insufficient to turn transistor Q4 on.
Capacitor C8 must be reset for each cycle whether a half-wave or full-wave rectified voltage is provided on bus V+. The exemplary circuit uses a half-wave rectifier so the capacitor must be reset at the end of each full-wave of the AC cycle. Resistor R8 should normally be adequate to discharge capacitor C8 so that it will be ready to pass the next pulse during the next AC cycle. If resistor R8 is inadequate to discharge the capacitor, a diode can be provided between the base of transistor Q4 and ground polarized with its anode to ground to discharge the capacitor before the next cycle.
The dV/dt-detecting overcurrent protection circuit according to the invention provides benefits over the overcurrent protection circuit described with respect to
Further, since there is no series resistance element, there is no series element voltage drop, enabling a higher voltage to develop across capacitor C4 and thus conserving power. The power supply will charge more quickly and peak currents can be reduced resulting in less voltage drop across transistor Q1 and thus less power dissipation in transistor Q1.
According to an alternative embodiment of the invention, the transistor Q4 may be replaced by a field effect transistor.
In the circuit described, capacitor C8 is approximately 0.01 uF and resistor R8 is approximately 3.3 Kohms.
Although the overcurrent protection circuit of the invention has been shown in connection with protecting a power switching transistor of a power supply, the invention can be used in various circuits where the aim is to protect a power switching transistor or other electrical device from overcurrent damage. For example, the overcurrent protection circuit of the invention could be used to protect the triac of a dimmer if there is a short at the lighting load.
Although the present invention has been described in relation to particular embodiments thereof, many other variations and modifications and other uses will become apparent to those skilled in the art. Therefore, the present invention should be limited not by the specific disclosure herein, but only by the appended claims.
The present application is related to U.S. application Ser. No. 10/458,608 filed Jun. 10, 2003 and entitled “HIGH EFFICENCY OFF-LINE LINEAR POWER SUPPLY”, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein.