Examples and embodiments of the invention are in the field of power systems and batteries. More particularly, examples and embodiments of the invention are directed an emergency driver system for providing a low float charge power to a rechargeable battery.
Rechargeable batteries are a common type of power source. One type of rechargeable battery is a lithium ferro phosphate battery (LFP) such as a LiFePO4 battery. These types of batteries use a lithium iron phosphate as a cathode and a graphitic carbon electrode with a metallic current collector grid as an anode. During charging, charged particles accumulate on the anode from the cathode, and for discharging the charged particles move back to the cathode form the anode. LiFePO4 batteries can have any number of applications. For example, one application for LiFePO4 rechargeable battery can be a power source for an emergency illumination or lighting source such as an emergency light emitting diode (LED) driver or an EM driver. These types of emergency EM drivers for an LED light source require efficient use of the LiFePO4 rechargeable battery in providing emergency power to an illuminating light source LED so as not to waste energy during battery charging or discharging including battery standby and off modes.
An emergency driver system is disclosed for providing a low float charge power to a rechargeable battery. For one example, an emergency light emitting diode (LED) driver system includes a LED light source, a rechargeable battery, and emergency (EM) driver. The emergency LED driver system can also include a multi-color indicator circuit configured to a provide at least two LED light indicators providing information regarding the mode of operation for the EM driver. The rechargeable battery is coupled with the LED light source. The EM driver is coupled with the rechargeable battery and the LED light source. In one example, the EM driver includes a charge circuit configured to supply a charge current to the rechargeable battery, and a micro-controller unit configured to control the charge current from the charge circuit such that a power loss in at least standby mode is less than 0.5 watts (W). The rechargeable battery can be a LiFePO4 rechargeable battery providing an emergency illumination light source.
For one example, the charge circuit includes a flyback circuit followed by a buck circuit. The flyback circuit and the buck circuit can each be configured to supply the charge current to the rechargeable battery. The micro-controller unit is further configured to control the charge current to be maintained at a charge rate (C-rate) of at least 0.005 C for providing at least 9.6 volts (V) and 3000 mili-amps (mA) to the rechargeable battery. By providing standby power of less than 0.5 W for a LiFePO4 rechargeable battery, the EM driver with a flyback circuit followed by a buck circuit can save energy when the rechargeable battery is fully charged. The micro-controller unit is also configured to provide a minimum switching frequency of 600 Hz to 1 kHZ, and the minimum switching frequency can be user configurable in order to maintain a standby power consumption of less than 200 mW. The micro-controller unit is also configured to provide a charge current of 15 mA to the rechargeable battery and maintain the rechargeable battery when fully charged to about 10.65 V.
The present invention will be understood more fully from the detailed description given below and from the accompanying drawings of various examples and examples which, however, should not be taken to the limit the invention to the specific examples and examples, but are for explanation and understanding only.
An emergency driver system is disclosed for providing a low float charge power to a rechargeable battery. For one example, an emergency light emitting diode (LED) driver system includes a LED light source, a rechargeable battery, and emergency (EM) driver. The emergency LED driver system can also include a multi-color indicator circuit configured to a provide at least two LED light indicators providing information regarding the mode of operation for the EM driver. The rechargeable battery is coupled with the LED light source. The EM driver is coupled with the rechargeable battery and the LED light source. In one example, the EM driver includes a charge circuit configured to supply a charge current to the rechargeable battery, and a micro-controller unit configured to control the charge current from the charge circuit such that a power loss in at least standby mode is less than 0.5 watts (W). The rechargeable battery can be a LiFePO4 rechargeable battery providing an emergency illumination light source. The charge circuit can include a flyback circuit followed by a buck circuit. The flyback circuit and the buck circuit can be configured to supply the charge current to the rechargeable battery. By providing standby power of less than 0.5 W for a LiFePO4 rechargeable battery, the EM driver with a flyback circuit followed by a buck circuit can save energy when the rechargeable battery is fully charged.
For one example, the micro-controller unit controls the charge current to be maintained at a charge rate (C-rate) of at least 0.005 C for providing at least 9.6 volts (V) and 3000 mili-amps (mA) to the rechargeable battery. For one example, the micro-controller unit can provide a minimum switching frequency of 600 Hz to 1 kHZ, and the minimum switching frequency can be user configurable in order to maintain a standby power consumption of less than 200 mW. For one example, the micro-controller can provide a charge current of 15 mA to the rechargeable battery and maintain the rechargeable battery when fully charged to about 10.65 V.
As set forth herein, various embodiments, examples and aspects will be described with reference to details discussed below, and the accompanying drawings will illustrate various embodiments and examples. The following description and drawings are illustrative and are not to be construed as limiting. Numerous specific details are described to provide a thorough understanding of various embodiments and examples. However, in certain instances, well-known or conventional details are not described in order to provide a concise discussion of the embodiments and examples. Although the following examples and embodiments are directed to an emergency driver for an LED light source, the emergency driver and power features disclosed herein can apply and directed to any type of device receiving power from a rechargeable power source.
For the example of
For one example, in providing such a conversion, flyback circuit 106 and buck circuit 108 for charge circuit can have circuitry as shown in
Regarding the pins for AC/DC controller 130, the VIN pin is a multi-function pin to control active start-up and sense line voltage. The FB/FMAX pin is a multi-function pin to configure maximum switching frequency (FMAX). This pin can also enable or disable an over-load protection (OLP) at start-up and can also provide output voltage sense for primary regulation during normal operation. The VCC pin can provide power supply to control logic and drive transistors within controller 130. The CVP pin or output can be used as the gate driver for external MOSFET transistor or switch such as Q3. The CS/FMIN pin can be a multi-function pin used to configure minimum switching frequency (FMIN) and at start-up. This pin can also provide primary current sense for cycle-by-cycle peak current control and limit during normal operation. In one example, the CS/FMIN pin is user configurable that control a minimum switching frequency to be between 600 Hz and 1 kHz in order to provide light standby power consumption of less than <200 mW.
For example, micro-controller 160 can have a VDD input pin to receive a voltage of 16V from flyback circuit 106 at node 1, a VSS pin to receive a DC voltage from capacitor CS23 at node 2, a OVP (over-voltage protection) pin to determine a voltage at node 3 and if exceeds a threshold to shut off power to rechargeable battery 110 or cutoff switch (transistor) QS15, and a FB pin to receive and sense an LED feedback current related to sensing resistor RS76. Micro-controller 160 can also have a SW pin for switch output connected to power inductor LS2, a bootstrap BST pin that produce a floating supply for the power switch QS15 by way of capacitor CS26, input ground reference INGND pin providing a reference for the on/off control input and dimming control EN/DIM signal, and an EN/DIM pin to receive the on/off control input and dimming control signal which can implement DC and pulse width modulation dimming.
Micro-controller 160 can provide a PWM charge current for rechargeable battery 110 at approximately 15 mA, which can maintain rechargeable battery 110 at fully charged around 10.65V. For one example, when the voltage on rechargeable battery 110 is above 10.65V, micro-controller 160 can stop charge circuit 104 from providing power from charge circuit 104to rechargeable battery 110 by disabling the BAT_ON pin. For one example, if the voltage on rechargeable battery 110 is below 10.3V micro-controller 160 can provide a PWM pulse charge such voltage on rechargeable battery 110 is above 10.3V to ensure adequate power to rechargeable battery 110 with minimum power loss in standby mode or operation. In one example, micro-controller 160 of
For the examples of
For one example, the two color LEDs (GREEN and RED) show different status for EM driver 102. For example, when inputs on LED GREEN is high and LED RED is low to respective transistors or switches (QS1A, QS211A, Q51B, QS211B), a green LED indicator (upside) can turn on indicating a fully charged battery, otherwise, a RED light can turn on indicating the battery is not fully charged. In another example, multi-color indicator circuit 114 can receive on its BUT_ON pin detected voltage on rechargeable battery 110 which can inform micro-controller unit 109 to cutoff power to rechargeable battery 110 or when the total power loss of the circuit is not above 70 mW which can be indicated by a RED LED. It should be noted that more than one GREEN and RED LEDs can be provided to indicate the various modes of operation for EM driver 102 regarding rechargeable battery 110.
At block 514, a decision is made if AC-power is on (Y/N). If AC-power is on (Y), operation 500 proceeds to block 516. If AC-power is not on (N), operation 500 proceeds to block 522. At block 516, a decision is made if emergency flag is set—i.e., Intoem_flg=1? (Y/N). If the emergency flag is set to 1 (Y) and Intoem_flg=1, operation 500 proceeds to block 518 and if emergency flag is not set to 1 (N) and Intoem flg is not set to 1, operation 500 proceeds to block 520. At block 518, update emergency data is performed Intoem_flg is set to zero—i.e., Intoem_flg=0 and a function call is made to EndataSave( ):. At block 520, go to normal work is performed and function calls are made to Vbat_Ctl( ):, Indi_Dutytrl(indiduty):, and normalwork( ):. At block 522, save work time is performed and emergency mode is entered and function calls are made to WorkRecSave( ): and emergmode( ):. At block 524, watchdog function IWDG_ReloadCounter( ): is called.
At block 710, a decision is made if tim4 value of the interrupt is less <8 mS. If Y, operation 700 proceeds to block 712, and, if N, operation 700 proceeds to block 728. At block 712, stop charging battery (e.g., rechargeable battery 110) and a function call is made to GPIO_WriteLow (GPIOC, BAT_ON):. At block 714, a decision is made if the tim4 value of the interrupt equals=4 ms (Y/N). If Y, operation 700 proceeds to block 716, and, if N, operation 700 proceeds to block 728. At block 716, the battery voltage is read and an analog-to-digital (AD) conversion function is called and operation 700 proceeds to block 735 where the operation can return to a previous operation such as block 704 or block 702. At block 728, a decision is made if the tim4 value of the interrupt is less <11 ms (Y/N). If Y, operation 700 proceeds to block 730, and, if N, operation 700 proceeds to block 735 and can return to a previous operation such as block 704 or block 702. At block 730, the battery is charged (e.g., rechargeable battery 110) and a function call is made to GPIO_WriteHigh(GPIOC, BAT_ON). At block 732, a decision is made if the tim4 value of the interrupt is equal=10 ms (Y/N). If Y, operation 700 proceeds to block 734, and, if N, operation 700 proceeds to block 735 and can return to a previous operation. At block 734, the battery voltage is read and the analog-to-digital (AD) conversion function is called and the operation returns to a previous operation such as block 704 or block 702.
At block 764 if the decision at block 738 is N, a decision is made if tim4<1000 ms (Y/N). If Y, operation 700 proceeds to block 766 and if N operation 700 proceeds to block 768. At block 766, the battery is stopped from charging and a function call is made to GPIO_WriteLow(GPIOC, BAT_ON). At block 768, a decision is made if tim4<30000 ms (Y/N). If Y, operation 700 proceeds to block 770 and if N operation 700 proceeds to block 771. At block 770, the battery is charged and a function call is made to GPIO_WriteHigh(GPIOC, BAT_ON). At block 771, operation 700 can return to a previous operation such as block 704 or block 702.
Regarding (C) continued from
At block 788, if N for block 774, a decision is made if the battery needs to stop charging (Y/N). If Y, operation 700 proceeds to block 790, and, if N, operation 700 proceeds to block 796 and can return to a previous operation. At block 790, a decision is made if the tim4 value equals=30000 ms (Y/N). If Y, at block 792, the battery voltage is read and a function call is made to the analog-to-digital (AD) conversion function and operation 700 proceeds to block 794. If N, operation 700 proceeds to block 796 and can return to a previous operation. At block 794, the battery is stopped from charging and a function call is made to GPIO_WriteLow (GPIOC, BAT_ON): and operation 700 proceed: to block 796 that can return to a previous operation.
Thus, the disclosed embodiments and examples provide operations for an emergency (EM) driver including determining if a voltage for a rechargeable battery is below a first threshold; charging the rechargeable battery with a constant charge current if the voltage for rechargeable battery is determined to be below the first threshold; determining if the voltage for the rechargeable battery is not increasing; and floating the charge current for the rechargeable battery if the voltage for the rechargeable battery is determined not to be increasing.
For one example, an EM driver operation includes determining if the rechargeable battery is fully charged and the voltage on the rechargeable battery is below a second threshold; and maintaining the constant charge current to the rechargeable battery if the rechargeable battery is determined to be fully charged and the voltage on the rechargeable battery is determined to below the second threshold. The EM driver operation also includes stopping the constant charge current to the rechargeable battery if the rechargeable battery is determined to be fully charged and the voltage on the rechargeable battery is determined not to be below the second threshold. The first threshold can be 10.3V and the second threshold can be 10.65V. The rechargeable battery can be a LiFePO4 rechargeable battery.
For one example, the constant charge current is approximately 15 mA and charging the rechargeable battery with the constant charge current includes sustaining a standby power loss of less than 0.5 W. The EM driver operation can further include providing the constant charge current from a charge circuit including a flyback circuit followed by a buck circuit and providing power to a multi-color indicator circuit and a micro-controller unit of about 100 mW. The EM driver operation can also include turning on at least two LED light indicators providing information regarding the mode of operation for the EM driver.
In the foregoing specification, specific examples and exemplary embodiments have been disclosed and described. It will be evident that various modifications may be made to those examples and embodiments without departing from the broader spirit and scope. The specification and drawings are, accordingly, to be regarded in an illustrative sense rather than a restrictive sense.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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201820522465.7 | Apr 2018 | CN | national |