Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6628091
-
Patent Number
6,628,091
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Date Filed
Tuesday, May 29, 200123 years ago
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Date Issued
Tuesday, September 30, 200321 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 315 209 R
- 315 240
- 315 244
- 315 291
- 315 307
- 315 311
- 315 DIG 4
- 315 224
- 315 219
- 323 211
- 323 209
- 323 241
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International Classifications
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Abstract
The present invention provides electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture that allows power to be switched on and off to a group of lamps in a fixture when more or less illumination is needed in an area. The power can be switched without the need to power down the fixture when switching from high level with all lamps illuminated to a low level with only part of the lamps illuminated. The lamp current or frequency can be adjusted to save power when only part of the lamps are illuminated.
Description
TECHNICAL FIELD
The technical field of this disclosure is lighting control, particularly, electronic switching and control for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Bi-level switching of fluorescent lamps allows space to be illuminated as needed by providing a high level of illumination when the space is occupied and a lower level of illumination when it is not. This can be accomplished by lighting all of the fluorescent lamps for high level illumination and lighting some of the fluorescent lamps for lower level illumination. Energy use and energy cost will be reduced if lights are switched off for lower level illumination. The illumination level can be controlled manually, with timers, or with sensors able to detect when the room is occupied.
Bi-level switching of fluorescent lamps has been accomplished using a triac to switch power at the ballast output, but using a triac does not allow continuous lighting. Such switching is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,808,423 to Li et al., assigned to the same assignee as the present invention and incorporated herein by reference. The ballast must be switched off between the high power level of the high level illumination and the low power level of the lower level illumination because the triac remains latched until power is removed completely. This is inconvenient to the occupants, since the light is switched off to switch from high to low level illumination. It is also confusing to the occupants, because the bi-level lighting is operated from a single switch. In addition, switching decreases the useful life of the lighting components, because of the input current surge when switching levels. Bi-level operation could be provided using an individual ballast for each group of fluorescent lamps, but this would be costly.
One difficulty is to maintain approximately the same light level on all the lamps during high level illumination and be able to drop the input power to 50% during low level illumination. Designs using unequal light level between lamp groups have been used, so that the lower power lamps are driven at 50% input power when the higher power lamp group is off, but the unequal brightness level provided in this approach is not commercially attractive.
It would be desirable to have electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture that would overcome the above disadvantages.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
One aspect of the present invention provides electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture.
Another aspect of the present invention provides electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture without the need to power off the ballast during switching.
Another aspect of the present invention provides electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture allowing bi-level operation to reduce energy use and expense.
Another aspect of the present invention provides electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture allowing bi-level operation using a single ballast per light fixture.
Another aspect of the present invention provides electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture that avoids decreasing the useful life of lighting components.
Another aspect of the present invention provides approximately the same light level from all lamps during high level illumination and reduces input power during low level illumination.
The foregoing and other features and advantages of the invention will become further apparent from the following detailed description of the presently preferred embodiments, read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. The detailed description and drawings are merely illustrative of the invention, rather than limiting the scope of the invention being defined by the appended claims and equivalents thereof.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
shows a block diagram of a bi-level fluorescent lamp system made in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 2
shows a schematic diagram of a circuit for electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture having DC bus voltage and frequency control.
FIG. 3
shows a block diagram of a circuit for electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture made in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 4
shows a schematic diagram of a circuit for electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture made in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 5
shows collector emitter voltage and collector current traces for the high voltage power transistor Q
4
of FIG.
4
.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
The electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture allows power to be switched on and off to a group of lamps in a fixture when more or less illumination is needed in an area. The power can be switched without the need to power down the fixture when switching from high level with all lamps illuminated to a low level with only part of the lamps illuminated.
FIG. 1
shows a block diagram of a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture made in accordance with the present invention. Power is supplied to ballast
20
by the BLACK and GRAY wires. Power is typically supplied at 120 VAC, but can be 277 VAC or another voltage as required for a particular application. The ballast
20
can be an electronic ballast for use with fluorescent lamps. The ballast
20
supplies power to the first lamp group
24
comprising lamp
1
and lamp
2
, which are connected in parallel. Second lamp group
26
, comprising lamp
3
and lamp
4
, are also connected in parallel to ballast
20
, but connected through electronic switch
22
. Electronic switch
22
controls the power to the second lamp group in response to a control signal on the GRAY wire. The control signal is typically the line voltage of 120 VAC, but can be other voltages as required for particular applications. It is well known to those skilled in the art that the control signal logic levels and voltages can vary and have reversed polarity as required for a particular application. In different embodiments, the control signal can be generated through a manual switch or through automatic control, such as automatic control that senses room occupancy or adjusts by time of day. Although the electronic switch
22
is shown separate from ballast
20
, the electronic switch
22
can be included within the case of the ballast
20
for ease of installation.
Power is supplied to ballast
20
any time the lamp fixture is turned on. Ballast
20
always supplies power to the first lamp group
24
, keeping it illuminated whether a high level or low level of illumination is required. When no control signal is present on the GRAY wire, the electronic switch
22
is open and power is supplied from ballast
20
to the first lamp group
24
but not the second lamp group
26
. When the control signal is present on the GRAY wire, the electronic switch is closed and power is supplied from ballast
20
to the second lamp group
26
, as well as the first lamp group
24
. The first lamp group
24
and second lamp group
26
can each comprise a single lamp or a plurality of lamps. Typically, first lamp group
24
, which is always on, will have two lamps and second lamp group
26
will have one or two lamps.
Ballast
20
can be a two-stage ballast comprising an AC/DC converter
23
, DC/HFAC inverter
25
, and a controller
21
. The AC/DC converter
23
receives power on the BLACK and WHITE wires and provides DC power on a bus to the DC/HFAC inverter
25
. The DC/HFAC inverter converts the bus DC power to a high frequency AC (HFAC) signal and supplies the HFAC power at a given current and frequency to the lamp groups through the capacitors and the electronic switch. Capacitors C
3
, C
4
, C
5
, and C
6
are required to control current through the lamp groups because fluorescent lamps operate at approximately a constant voltage.
The GRAY wire provides the control signal to controller
21
, and is the same signal provided to electronic switch
22
. Controller
21
is responsive to the control signal on the GRAY wire and controls the bus voltage and the HFAC frequency, which controls the current and frequency supplied to the lamp groups from the ballast
20
. Controller
21
can control either bus voltage or HFAC frequency alone, or a combination of bus voltage and HFAC frequency. If switching is performed without controller
21
, the first lamp group
24
can become brighter when the second lamp group
26
is switched off, particularly for ballast types such as that of U.S. Pat. No. 5,808,423 to Li et al. For bus voltage control, controller
21
typically supplies a bus voltage control signal to the AC/DC converter
23
, so that ballast
20
supplies a first lamp current when the first lamp group
24
is illuminated and the second lamp group
26
is not illuminated, and a second lamp current when the first lamp group
24
and the second lamp group
26
are both illuminated. For example, the bus voltage corresponding to the first lamp current can be 190V DC and the bus voltage corresponding to the second lamp current can be 240V DC. This method allows the input power to be reduced to a given percent, typically 50 percent, when switching from high level to low level illumination.
In another embodiment for frequency control, the controller
21
can adjust the frequency rather than the bus voltage to change the lamp illumination level when switching lamp groups. The controller
21
can supply a frequency control signal to the DC/HFAC inverter
25
, so that ballast
20
supplies a first lamp frequency when the first lamp group
24
is illuminated and the second lamp group
26
is not illuminated, and a second lamp frequency when the first lamp group
24
and the second lamp group
26
are both illuminated. Frequency can be adjusted by varying the capacitance to the power transformer for self-oscillating designs such as that of U.S. Pat. No. 5,808,423 to Li et al. or by changing the driver frequency in frequency driven designs.
FIG. 2
, in which like elements share like reference characters with
FIG. 1
, is a schematic diagram of a circuit for electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture having DC bus voltage and frequency control. The DC bus voltage output by AC/DC converter
23
is controlled by feedback control. In this embodiment, the controller
21
drives a transistor Q
1
on and off to change the value of the bottom resistance for the resistor divider used for sensing the DC bus voltage. When transistor Q
1
is off, the bottom resistance is R
2
; when transistor Q
1
is on, the bottom resistance is R
2
and R
3
in parallel. The feedback signal through comparator U
1
maintains the desired DC bus voltage by comparing the sensed DC bus voltage to a reference signal, and providing the feedback signal to the AC/DC converter
23
. The controller
21
can also inject an extra current or voltage signal at an appropriate sensing point in the AC/DC converter
23
to change the DC bus voltage. In different embodiments, the DC bus voltage can be adjusted by adjusting the value of a sense (or feedback) signal or reference signal or by changing one of the component values in the feedback sensing network.
For the type of self-oscillating inverters as used in one present embodiment, the frequency of the DC/HFAC inverter
25
can be changed by changing the value of the “resonant capacitor” in response to the frequency control signal. As shown in
FIG. 2
, this can be done by using a transistor Q
2
to switch in or out an extra capacitor C
2
in parallel to an existing capacitor C
1
. Different types of frequency control are possible for different types of inverters. For driven inverters, there is usually an oscillator built within the IC and/or some discrete components. The frequency can be changed by sending an appropriate signal or by changing component values in the oscillator. For a VCO (voltage controlled oscillator) in the inverter, the frequency can also be changed by changing the control voltage. For an “RC” oscillator, the frequency can be changed by adjusting either an “R” or a “C” value.
FIG. 3
shows a block diagram of a circuit for electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture. The control signal (shown as the GRAY wire on
FIG. 1
) is connected to terminal
30
of the control signal sensing circuit
27
. The control signal sensing circuit
27
senses the control signal and provides output to the biasing circuit
28
indicating whether the control signal is present. The biasing circuit
28
is adapted to adjust and rapidly switch the switching circuit
29
. The switching circuit
29
provides an open or closed path from terminal
34
to terminal
36
in response to the biasing circuit
28
output. If the output of the control signal sensing circuit
27
is compatible with the input of the switching circuit
29
, the biasing circuit
28
can be omitted.
FIG. 4
shows a schematic diagram of a circuit for electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture. The control signal (shown as the GRAY wire on
FIG. 1
) is connected to terminal
30
of the electronic switch
22
. The control signal is typically the line voltage of 120 VAC, but can be other voltages as desired for particular applications. The circuit comprising diodes D
1
and D
2
, capacitor C
1
, and resistor R
1
rectify and filter the control signal to provide a DC input to optocoupler
32
. The output of the optocoupler
32
is logic zero when the control signal is present and logic one when the control signal is not present. The optocoupler
32
can be a fast digital optocoupler using a Schmitt trigger and providing an on or off signal as an output. The optocoupler
32
isolates the electronic switch
22
from the high voltage control signal. The circuit of
FIG. 4
from the input at the terminal
30
to the output of the optocoupler
32
corresponds to the control signal sensing circuit
27
of FIG.
3
.
Referring to
FIG. 4
, with a control signal present such that the output of the optocoupler
32
is logic zero, the voltage divider of resistors R
2
and R
3
sources a current through the pnp transistor Q
1
which in turn turns on the npn transistor Q
2
. This supplies a low impedance base drive to the high voltage power transistor Q
4
to turn on the high voltage power transistor Q
4
. The circuit of
FIG. 4
from the output of the optocoupler
32
to the input to high voltage power transistor Q
4
corresponds to the biasing circuit
28
of FIG.
3
. The high voltage power transistor Q
4
can be a bipolar transistor able to handle high voltages, such as 1500 V at 0.5 Amps.
Referring to
FIG. 4
, with the voltage power transistor Q
4
turned on, power is supplied to the switched second lamp group
26
(see
FIG. 1
) through terminal
34
and terminal
36
. There is AC power across terminal
34
and terminal
36
, so the current flows through diode D
3
for one polarity and through diode D
4
for the opposite polarity. The diodes D
3
and D
4
can be high voltage avalanche diodes. The circuit of
FIG. 4
from the input to high voltage power transistor Q
4
to the path through terminal
34
and terminal
36
corresponds to the switching circuit
29
of FIG.
3
.
Referring to
FIG. 4
, to switch off the second lamp group
26
(see FIG.
1
), the control signal at terminal
30
is switched off. This removes the DC input to the optocoupler
32
and the output of the optocoupler
32
switches to a logic one almost instantaneously. This immediately switches off the pnp transistor Q
1
, shutting off npn transistor Q
2
and switching on the pnp transistor Q
3
. This supplies a negative voltage to the base of high voltage power transistor Q
4
, which gives it a fast turnoff.
FIG. 5
shows a collector emitter voltage and collector current trace for the high voltage power transistor of FIG.
4
. If high voltage power transistor Q
4
turns off too slowly, the collector emitter junction of the high voltage power transistor Q
4
will degrade and fail after a number of switching cycles. The collector emitter junction can start to leak so that the second lamp group
26
is always on and cannot be turned off. Faster switching helps avoid the problem region. Degradation can be seen above switching times of 100 μseconds, while a typical switching time can be 50 μseconds or faster.
FIG. 5
shows a switching time of 8 μseconds, which approaches the physics limits of a high voltage power transistor.
It is important to note that
FIGS. 1-5
illustrate specific applications and embodiments of the present invention, and are not intended the limit the scope of the present disclosure or claims to that which is presented therein. Upon reading the specification and reviewing the drawings hereof, it will become immediately obvious to those skilled in the art that myriad other embodiments of the present invention are possible, and that such embodiments are contemplated and fall within the scope of the presently claimed invention.
While the embodiments of the invention disclosed herein are presently considered to be preferred, various changes and modifications can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. The scope of the invention is indicated in the appended claims, and all changes that come within the meaning and range of equivalents are intended to be embraced therein.
Claims
- 1. A circuit for electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture, the bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture having a first lamp group and a second lamp group, the first lamp group and the second lamp group powered from a ballast at a lamp current and a lamp frequency, comprising:a control signal sensor responsive to a control signal and providing a control signal sensor output; and a switching circuit responsive to the control signal sensor output; wherein the second lamp group is being switched by the switching circuit without switching off the first lamp group.
- 2. The circuit of claim 1 wherein the control signal is at line voltage.
- 3. The circuit of claim 1 wherein the control signal sensor further comprises a filter and rectifier for conditioning the control signal, and an optocoupler responsive to the conditioned control signal.
- 4. The circuit of claim 3 wherein the optocoupler is a digital optocoupler using a Schmitt trigger.
- 5. The circuit of claim 1 wherein the switching circuit further comprises a first diode in series with a transistor, the transistor having a transistor switching time, and a second opposite diode connected in parallel to the series.
- 6. The circuit of claim 5 wherein the transistor is a high voltage power transistor.
- 7. The circuit of claim 5 wherein the transistor switching time is selected from the group consisting of 0 μseconds to 100 μseconds, 0 μseconds to 50 μseconds, and 0 μseconds to 10 μseconds.
- 8. The circuit of claim 5 wherein the first diode and the second opposite diode are avalanche diodes.
- 9. The circuit of claim 1 wherein the ballast is responsive to the control signal, the ballast providing a first lamp current when the first lamp group is on and the second lamp group is off, and a second lamp current when the first lamp group is on and the second lamp group is on.
- 10. The circuit of claim 1 wherein the ballast is responsive to the control signal, the ballast providing a first lamp frequency when the first lamp group is on and the second lamp group is off, and a second lamp frequency when the first lamp group is on and the second lamp group is on.
- 11. The circuit of claim 1, the ballast further comprising:a controller responsive to the control signal, the controller providing a bus voltage control signal; an AC/DC converter supplying a bus voltage, the AC/DC converter being responsive to the bus voltage control signal; and a DC/HFAC inverter receiving the bus voltage, the DC/HFAC inverter supplying the lamp current and the lamp frequency.
- 12. The circuit of claim 1, the ballast further comprising:a controller responsive to the control signal, the controller providing a frequency control signal; an AC/DC converter supplying a bus voltage; and a DC/HFAC inverter receiving the bus voltage, the DC/HFAC inverter being responsive to the frequency control signal, the DC/HFAC inverter supplying the lamp current and the lamp frequency.
- 13. A system for electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture, the bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture having a first lamp group and a second lamp group, the first lamp group and the second lamp group powered from a ballast at a lamp current and a lamp frequency, comprising:means for sensing a control signal, the control signal sensing means providing a control signal sensor output; means for biasing electrically connected to the control signal sensing means, the biasing means being responsive to the control signal sensor output and providing a biased output, and means for switching electrically connected to the biasing means, the switching means being responsive to the control signal sensor output; wherein the second lamp group is being switched by the switching means without switching off the first lamp group.
- 14. The system of claim 13 wherein the control signal sensing means further comprises means for filtering and rectifying the control signal, and an optocoupler responsive to the filtered and rectified control signal.
- 15. The system of claim 13 wherein the biased output is a positive voltage when the control signal is on and a negative voltage when the control signal is off.
- 16. The system of claim 13 wherein the switching means further comprises a first diode in series with a transistor, the transistor having a transistor switching time, and a second opposite diode connected in parallel to the series.
- 17. The system of claim 13 further comprising means for controlling the lamp current, the current controlling means being responsive to the control signal.
- 18. The system of claim 13 further comprising means for controlling the lamp frequency, the frequency controlling means being responsive to the control signal.
- 19. The system of claim 13 further comprising:means for converting an AC signal to a DC signal; means for controlling the AC to DC converting means, the controlling means being responsive to the control signal; and means for inverting the DC signal to an HFAC signal, the DC to HFAC inverting means supplying the lamp current and the lamp frequency.
- 20. The system of claim 13 further comprising:means for converting an AC signal to a DC signal; means for inverting the DC signal to an HFAC signal, the DC to HFAC inverting means supplying the lamp current and the lamp frequency; and means for controlling the DC to HFAC inverting means, the controlling means being responsive to the control signal.
- 21. A method of electronic switching for a bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture, the bi-level fluorescent lamp fixture having a first lamp group and a second lamp group, the first lamp group and the second lamp group powered from a ballast at a lamp current and a lamp frequency, comprising the steps of:sensing a control signal and providing a control signal sensor output; biasing the control signal sensor output and providing a biased output, and switching the second lamp group in response to the biased output within a switching time without switching off the first lamp group.
- 22. The method of claim 21 wherein the control signal is at line voltage.
- 23. The method of claim 21 wherein the step of sensing a control signal and providing a control signal sensor output further comprises filtering and rectifying the control signal, and generating the control signal sensor output from the filtered and rectified control signal using an optocoupler.
- 24. The method of claim 23 wherein the optocoupler is a digital optocoupler using a Schmitt trigger.
- 25. The method of claim 21 wherein the biased output is one polarity when the control signal is on and the opposite polarity when the control signal is off.
- 26. The method of claim 21 wherein the step of switching the second lamp group in response to the biased output further comprises switching a transistor, the transistor having a transistor switching time.
- 27. The method of claim 26 wherein the transistor is a high voltage power transistor.
- 28. The method of claim 26 wherein the transistor switching time is selected from the group consisting of 0 μseconds to 100 μseconds, 0 μseconds to 50 μseconds, and 0 μseconds to 10 μseconds.
- 29. The method of claim 21 further comprising the step of adjusting lamp current in response to the control signal.
- 30. The method of claim 21 further comprising the step of adjusting lamp frequency in response to the control signal.
- 31. The method of claim 21 further comprising the steps of:converting an AC signal to a DC signal, the DC signal voltage depending on the control signal; and inverting the DC signal to an HFAC signal supplying the lamp current and the lamp frequency.
- 32. The method of claim 21 further comprising the steps of:converting an AC signal to a DC signal; and inverting the DC signal to an HFAC signal supplying the lamp current and the lamp frequency, the HFAC signal frequency depending on the control signal.
- 33. The method of claim 21 further comprising the steps of:converting an AC signal to a DC signal, the DC signal voltage depending on the control signal; and inverting the DC signal to an HFAC signal supplying the lamp current and the lamp frequency, the HFAC signal frequency depending on the control signal.
US Referenced Citations (7)