The present invention relates generally to a Light Emitting Diode (LED) driver and, more specifically, to a switching converter capable of a very high step-up ratio and offering High efficiency at high switching frequency.
Recent developments of light emitting diode (LED) backlights for LCD panel displays in laptops and monitors require driving large arrays of LEDs. In these types of LED arrays, the typical input voltage ranges between 9 and 20V, whereas the total forward voltage of the LED array can exceed 200V.
Common prior art solutions to drive large LED arrays is to use a boost voltage regulator followed by multiple linear current regulators, such that the LED array is broken into a number of LED strings. All of the LED strings are supplied from the output of the boost regulator in parallel. Corresponding linear regulators control the current in each string individually. Driving all LEDs in a single string is a less expensive approach since it requires less circuitry. However, a boost converter is typically quite inefficient at such a high step-up ratio, especially when operated at switching frequencies required to fit the small size constraints typical for LCD screen backlight units (BLU).
Therefore, it would be desirable to provide a circuit and method that overcomes the above problems. The circuit would be a switching converter capable of a very high step-up ratio and offering High efficiency at high switching frequency.
A current driver for powering a string of LEDs has a boost converter coupled to an input voltage source. A voltage multiplier circuit is coupled to the boost converter and to the string of LEDs. A latch is provided having an output coupled to the boost converter. A current sense element is coupled to the boost converter. A current comparator is provided having an output coupled to a first input of the latch, a first input coupled to the current sense element, and a second input coupled to a reference current. A zero-volt detector circuit is provided having an output coupled to a second input of the latch and an input coupled to the boost converter and the voltage multiplier circuit.
The features, functions, and advantages can be achieved independently in various embodiments of the disclosure or may be combined in yet other embodiments.
Embodiments of the disclosure will become more fully understood from the detailed description and the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Referring to
In accordance with one embodiment, the boost converter 120 has an inductor 103, a power switch 102, a rectifier diode 105 and an output filter capacitor 106. The inductor 103 has a first terminal coupled to the input source 101. A second terminal of the inductor 103 is attached to a first terminal of the power switch 102 and to a first terminal of the rectifier diode 105. The output filter capacitor 106 has a first terminal attached to a second terminal of the rectifier diode 105. A second terminal of the rectifier diode 105 is grounded.
The driver 100 also has a voltage doubler circuit comprising of diodes 107 and 109, flying capacitor 108 and output filter capacitor 110. The total parasitic capacitance at the switching node is represented by capacitor 117. The driver also comprises current sense element 104, current comparator 115 with current reference IREF, PWM latch 116 and zero-volt detector circuit 113.
In the present embodiment, a first terminal of the diode 107 is attached to the second terminal of the rectifier diode 105 and to the first terminal of the output filter capacitor 106. A second terminal of the diode 107 is coupled to the first terminal of the diode 109. The flying capacitor 108 has a first terminal coupled to the first terminal of the diode 109 and to the second terminal of the diode 107. A second terminal of the flying capacitor 108 is coupled to the first terminal of the rectifier diode 105. The output capacitor 110 has a first terminal coupled to a second terminal of the diode 109 and a second terminal which is grounded.
The current sense element 104 is coupled to a third terminal of the power switch 102. A current comparator 115 has a first input coupled to the current sense element 104 and a second input coupled to the current reference IREF. The output of the current comparator 115 is coupled to a reset input of the PWM latch 116. The set input of the PWM latch 116 is coupled to the zero-volt detector circuit 113 which is coupled to the second terminal of the flying capacitor 108. The output of the PWM latch 116 is coupled, to the second terminal of the power switch 102.
In operation, when detector circuit 113 detects zero-voltage condition at switch 102, the latch 116 sets, and the switch 102 turns on. At this moment, its body diode has been conducting negative current of inductor 103. Inductor 103 becomes connected across input voltage source 101. The current in inductor 103 ramps up until it exceeds IREF. At this moment, latch 116 resets, and switch 102 turns off. The current of inductor 103 is now charging parasitic capacitance 117 of the switching node and discharging capacitor 108 via diode 109, until diode 105 conducts. The current in inductor 103 ramps down while its energy is transferred to capacitors 106, 108 and 110. When the energy of inductor 103 is fully depleted, its current reverses direction, and diode 105 becomes reverse biased. The current of inductor 103 is now discharging parasitic capacitance 117 of the switching node until diode 107 becomes forward-biased, and the inductor current 103 mainly redirected into the capacitor 108.
The value of capacitor 108 is selected such that the energy stored in parasitic capacitance 117 at the moment when diode 105 conducts exceeds the energy transferred from capacitor 108 to capacitor 110 and LED load 111 while diode 109 is in conduction. Hence, capacitor 108 will continue charging until the body diode of switch 102 conducts, and the switching cycle repeats itself.
One could realize from the above description, that the driver 100 of the present invention features zero-voltage switching transitions in the boost converter stage, as well as zero-current switching transitions in the doubler circuit. Hence, it can be operated at high switching frequency to achieve good efficiency, as well as a very high step-up ratio.
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While embodiments of the disclosure have been described in terms of various specific embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that the embodiments of the disclosure can be practiced with modifications within the spirit and scope of the claims.
The present patent application is related to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/022,743, filed Jan. 22, 2008, in the name of the same inventors listed above, and entitled, “HIGH EFFICIENCY BOOST LED DRIVER WITH OUTPUT VOLTAGE MULTIPLIER”. The present patent application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §119(e).
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61022743 | Jan 2008 | US |