This application claims the benefit of Taiwan patent application No. 101108258, filed on Mar. 12, 2012, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a dimming control device of a lamp and more particularly to a dimmer applied to a high-power load without high heat generated and having switchable power modes.
2. Description of the Related Art
With reference to
Basically, it is inconvenient to physically implement the aforementioned approach due to complicated wiring and too much time and effort involved. For instance, if tens of or even hundreds of lighting devices are mounted in a large-scale site, only the wiring work of the power lines 74 is already complicated and tremendous, not to mention enough space required to accommodate the control signal lines 72. Besides, connecting the control signal lines 72 is also another complicated task to do. When the power lines 74 are inadvertently connected with the control signal lines 72, the entire lighting system could be ruined.
The disadvantage of the conventional dimming controller 70 connected with the lighting devices in
To constantly convert the AC power into the full-wave DC power, the rectification circuit 82 of the dimming controller 80 needs to be always maintained at an operating state. With reference to
According to circuit operation, no matter whether users control the dimming controller 80 to adjust brightness of the lighting devices 90 or not, current constantly passes through the rectification circuit 82 and the power switch 84 inside the dimming controller 80 when the lighting devices 90 are normally lit. In other words, the dimming controller 80 continuously consumes power.
Consequently, the circuit in
(1) a turn-on voltage of the diode of the rectification circuit 82 is 1V and the consumed power of the rectification circuit 82 is (1V+1V)×0.9=1.8 W because two diodes are on each path through which current flows; and
(2) the power consumed by the n-MOSFET power switch 84 is 0.9 A×0.9 A×0.5Ω=0.4 W.
To such low-power load, the rectification circuit 82 and the power switch 84 can still be normally operated as long as heat generated therefrom is slightly dissipated.
If the original twenty 5 W lighting devices 90 are replaced by a 44 W LED grid light, the overall consumed power is 880 W, an operating power under the 110V AC power is approximately 8 A, and the power switch is composed of n-MOSFET and its turn-on resistance is 0.5Ω, then
(1) the power consumed by the rectification circuit 82 is (1V+1V)×8 A=16 W; and
(2) the power consumed by the n-MOSFET power switch is 8 A×8 A×0.5Ω=32 W.
To such high power load, besides a large-scale heat sink, a fan is also needed to achieve the intended heat-dissipating effect. Up to here, commercial value and feasibility of such product has already gone.
Moreover, when the rectification circuit 82 is operated above 100° C., the rated current thereof starts dropping. For example, the rated current may drop to 5 A from the original 10 A. The lower withstand current rating may lead to direct burn-out of the rectification circuit 82.
A first objective of the present invention is to provide a high power dimmer having switchable power modes activated only when performing a dimming adjustment and directly taking the bypass and transmitting power to lighting device connected with the dimmer when staying at a non-dimming mode to lower power consumed by the dimmer itself.
To achieve the foregoing objective, the high power dimmer having switchable power modes has a power input terminal, a rectification circuit, a dimming controller, a power switch, an output selector and a power and signal output terminal.
The power input terminal receives an AC power.
The rectification circuit is connected to the power input terminal for rectifying the AC power under a dimming mode to generate an output power.
The dimming controller outputs a switching command and a dimming command under the dimming mode.
The power switch is normally on and is turned on and off according to the dimming command to convert the output power into a dimming output power having the dimming embedded therein.
The output selector has a first input port, a second input port and an output port.
The first input port is connected to the power input terminal to receive the AC power.
The second input port is connected to the power switch to receive the dimming output power.
The output port is selectively connected to the first input port or the second input port according to the switching command generated by the dimming controller.
The power and signal output terminal is connected to the output port of the output selector to output the AC power or the dimming output power.
Given the foregoing circuit design, the high power dimmer allows current to flow through the rectification circuit and control the power switch to turn on and off in generation of a dimming output power and the output port of the output selector is connected to the second input port only when the dimmer performs a dimming adjustment. Thus, the dimmer sends out the dimming output power containing a dimming command therein.
When the dimmer performs no dimming adjustment, the output port of the output selector is connected to the first output port and the AC power is directly transmitted to the lighting device with the dimmer being bypassed, thereby consuming no power as the rectification circuit and the power switch are bypassed. Practically, as the time for performing a dimming adjustment is very short, the dimmer consumes very little power and no heat dissipation issue arises accordingly. Moreover, since the input power is transmitted to the lighting devices with the dimmer being bypassed, even high power lighting devices introduce no over-heated issue to the dimmer.
A second objective of the present invention is to provide a dimming system having switchable power modes.
To achieve the foregoing objective, the dimming system having switchable power modes has the foregoing high power dimmer and at least one lighting device. Each one of the at least one lighting device has a dimmable power source and at least one lighting unit.
The dimmable power source has a power and signal input terminal, a power supply, a light source driving circuit, a dimming decoder and a control circuit.
The power and signal input terminal is connected to the power and signal output terminal of the dimmer to receive the AC power or the dimming output power outputted from the dimmer.
The power supply receives the AC power or the dimming output power through the power and signal input terminal to generate a DC power supplying the lighting device.
The light source driving circuit is connected to the power supply to receive the DC power and further drive the lighting unit to emit light.
The dimming decoder receives the dimming output power through the power and signal input terminal, fetches a dimming signal portion in the dimming output power, and decodes the dimming signal portion to the original dimming command.
The control circuit generates a control signal according to the dimming command and sends the control signal to the light source driving circuit for the light source driving circuit to drive the lighting unit to present specific lighting variations.
In the foregoing dimming system, when the dimmer performs no dimming adjustment, the AC power is directly transmitted to the lighting devices with the dimmer being bypassed. The power supply in the lighting device converts the AC power into a DC power. As the lighting device provides normal lighting according to an original dimming command and the dimmer is only responsible for the bypassed transmission of the AC power, the dimmer consumes extremely low power and causes no heat dissipation issue.
When the dimmer performs a dimming adjustment, the rectification circuit therein is activated to control the power switch to turn on and off in generation of a dimming output power, and the output port of the output selector outputs the dimming output power having a dimming command to each lighting device. The lighting device then decodes a dimming command used as a basis of subsequent lighting.
A third objective of the present invention is to provide a dimming device having the foregoing high power dimmer and a dimmable power source. The dimmable power source has a power and signal input terminal, a power supply, a light source driving circuit, a dimming decoder and a control circuit.
The power and signal input terminal is connected to the power and signal output terminal of the dimmer to receive the AC power or the dimming output power outputted from the dimmer.
The power supply receives the AC power or the dimming output power through the power and signal input terminal to generate a DC power supplying the lighting device.
The light source driving circuit is connected to the power supply to receive the DC power and further drive the lighting unit.
The dimming decoder receives the dimming output power through the power and signal input terminal, fetches a dimming signal portion in the dimming output power, and decodes the dimming signal portion to the original dimming command.
The control circuit generates a control signal according to the dimming command and sends the control signal to the light source driving circuit for the light source driving circuit to adjust a driving current.
Given a dimming device composed of the high power dimmer and the dimmable power source, the dimming device can be applied to control a lighting mode and luminance required by a lighting device, such as light-emitting diode (LED), organic light-emitting diode (OLED) or polymer light-emitting diode (PLED).
A fourth objective of the present invention is to provide a method for transmitting power and dimming commands performed by a dimmer having switchable power modes and multiple lighting devices electrically connected therewith, and the method has the following steps.
The dimmer determines if receiving a user command to perform a dimming adjustment.
If the dimmer is not instructed to perform a dimming adjustment, the dimmer performs a bypass mode when an AC power is directly transmitted to the lighting devices with the dimmer being bypassed.
If the dimmer is instructed to perform a dimming adjustment, the dimmer performs a dimming mode when the dimmer further performs steps of:
converting the AC power into a full-wave DC power;
modulating the full-wave DC power by turning on and off the full-wave DC power according to pulses of a dimming command so as to generate a dimming output power having the pulses of the dimming command embedded therein; and
transmitting the dimming output power to the lighting devices for the lighting devices to decode the dimming command and receive a required power and performing the dimming adjustment according to the decoded dimming command.
Other objectives, advantages and novel features of the invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
With reference to
The power input terminal 100 is connected to an AC power source and a waveform of the AC power source is shown in
The rectification circuit 10 is a bridge rectifier connected to the power input terminal 100, and rectifying and outputting the AC power. If the AC power source is a regular mains power, an output waveform of the rectified power taking a continuous positive half wave form and named as a full-wave DC power is shown in
The dimming controller 11 is a microprocessor capable of outputting a dimming command. The dimming command is a pulse train having a waveform as shown in
The signal detection receiver 13 serves to receive an external dimming signal for the dimming controller 11 to encode dimming commands according to the dimming signal. Based on the external dimming signal, the dimming controller 11 can generate dimming commands with different dimming modes. The signal detection receiver 13 may be selected from one of an IrDA (Infrared Data Association) infrared receiver, RF (Radio frequency) receiver, PIR (Passive infrared)-based motion sensor, audio receiver, RS485 receiver, DMX512 receiver, RS232 receiver, PLC (Power line communication) receiver, keyboard/keypad receiver and VR (Variable resistor) receiver. According to a specific type of the signal detection receiver 13, users can transmit external dimming commands to the signal detection receiver 13 via a corresponding user interface controller, such as an IrDA infrared remote control, RF remote control, Audio control, RS232/RS485/PLC interface and computer, or DMX512 controller. With reference to
The voltage detector 14 is connected between the rectification circuit 10 and the dimming controller 11 and is preset with a reference voltage. An input terminal of the voltage detector 14 is connected to an output terminal of the rectification circuit 10 to compare the rectified output voltage of the rectification circuit 10 with the reference voltage. With reference to
The power switch 12 is connected to the dimming controller 11 and the rectification circuit 10. The power switch 12 is normally on and is turned on and off only when receiving a dimming command to control the rectification circuit 10 to alternately turn on and off according to the dimming command. The output power of the rectification circuit 10 becomes a dimming output power having a dimming command therein and its waveform is shown in
The output selector 15 has a first input port 151, a second input port 152 and an output port 153. The first input port 151 is directly connected to the power input terminal 100 to receive the AC power. The second input port 152 is connected to the power switch 12 to receive the dimming output power having the dimming signal therein. The output port 153 is selectively connected to the first input port 151 or the second input port 152 according to a switching command generated by the dimming controller 11.
The power and signal output terminal 101 is connected to the output port 153 of the output selector 15 to output the AC power or the dimming output power having the dimming signal therein. With reference to
Each lighting device 2 connected to the dimmer 1 has a dimmable power source 20 and at least one lighting unit 30. The dimmable power source 20 has a power and signal input terminal 200, a power supply 21, a light source driving circuit 22, a dimming decoder 24 and a control circuit 25.
The power and signal input terminal 200 is connected to the power and signal output terminal 101 of the dimmer 1.
The power supply 21 receives the AC power or the dimming output power through the power and signal input terminal 200 to generate a DC power supplying the lighting device 2. The power supply 21 may be composed of a bridge rectifier and a voltage stabilization circuit.
The light source driving circuit 22 is connected to the power supply 21 to receive the DC power and further output a driving current to the lighting unit 30.
The dimming decoder 24 receives the dimming output power through the power and signal input terminal 200, fetches the dimming signal in the dimming output power, and recovers to an original dimming command. With reference to
An input terminal of the control circuit 25 is connected to the dimming decoder 24, and an output terminal is connected to the light source driving circuit 22. The control circuit 25 receives and records a dimming command decoded by the dimming decoder 24 and generates a control signal according to the dimming command and sends the control signal to the light source driving circuit 22 so that the light source driving circuit 22 can drive the lighting unit 30 to present specific luminance or lighting variations. Therefore, the lighting unit 30 not only possesses luminance presentation but also versatile variation effects in accordance with the dimming signal. Furthermore, the control circuit 25 has a flash memory for recording a lighting condition of the lighting unit 30 and an address of the pertaining lighting device 2.
The lighting unit 30 is connected to and driven by the light source driving circuit 22 to emit light. The lighting unit 30 may be composed of at least one light-emitting diode (LED), at least one organic light-emitting diode (OLED) or at least one polymer light-emitting diode (PLED) to emit chromatic light having different wavelengths, such as light having three primary colors (red, green and blue) or mixed colors of the primary colors, or a combination of blue phosphor and yellow phosphor to emit white light.
The circuit operation of the present invention can be classified as a bypass mode and a dimming mode depending on if the dimmer 1 is activated. The detailed operation of the two modes is described as follows.
A. Bypass Mode
With reference to
Each lighting device 2 receives the AC power through the power and signal input terminal 200, converts the AC power into DC power using the power supply 21 therein, and supplies the DC power to the light source driving circuit 22. The control circuit 25 controls the light source driving circuit 22 according to an original lighting condition stored therein for the lighting unit 30 to generate a corresponding luminance or lighting mode.
During the bypass mode, as each lighting device 2 provides normal lighting based on a preset dimming command and the dimmer 1 is just responsible for bypass transmission of the AC power, the rectification circuit 10 and the power switch 12 hardly consume any power.
Similarly, when the power switch 12 adopts a p-MOSFET, the current-flowing path during the bypass mode is shown in
B. Dimming Mode
With reference to
After the lighting device 2 receives the dimming output power, the dimming decoder 24 decodes the dimming command contained in the dimming output power and the dimming command is sent to the control circuit 25. The control circuit 25 then stores the dimming command and drives the light source driving circuit 22 with the dimming command for the lighting unit 30 to generate a corresponding luminance or lighting mode.
After the dimming command is transmitted, a switching command issued from the dimming controller 11 instructs the output port 153 of the output selector 15 to switch to the first input port 151.
Similarly, when the power switch 12 adopts a p-MOSFET, the current-flowing path during the dimming mode is shown in
Since the dimming controller 11 is stored with multiple dimming commands configured for different schedules, the present invention can automatically generate dimming commands upon configured schedules without having to receive users' adjustment commands through the signal detection receiver 13.
The foregoing circuit operation points out that the present invention only needs to let current flow through the rectification circuit 10 and turns on the switch in the power switch when it is necessary to adjust a lighting condition. When it is unnecessary to adjust a lighting condition, the AC power is bypassed and transmitted to the lighting devices 2 and there is no additional power consumption as no current flows through the rectification circuit 10 and the power switch 12.
The time required to perform dimming adjustment is very short. Suppose that ten dimming adjustments are needed in a day and each dimming adjustment lasts about 0.1 second, total ten dimming adjustments require just one second. One second out of 86,400 seconds in a day is spent for dimming adjustment while the rest of 86,399 seconds are consumed in the non-dimming modes. The over-heated issue of the rectification circuit 10 and the power switch 12 certainly will not happen. Accordingly, the present invention significantly enhances the heat-dissipating capability of the conventional dimmers and also increases the wattage output of dimmers.
With reference to
Additionally, the high power dimmer 1 and the dimmable power source 20 can be combined into a dimming device, which is applied to control the lighting units, such as a lighting unit constituting an LED device, to generate required lighting modes and luminance, and to inherit the advantage of the high power dimmer in terms of low power consumption.
With reference to
Step 101: The dimmer 1 determines if receiving a user command to perform a dimming adjustment.
Step 102: If the dimmer 1 is not instructed to perform a dimming adjustment, the dimmer performs a bypass mode when an AC power is directly transmitted to the lighting devices 2 with the dimmer being bypassed.
Step 103: If the dimmer 1 is instructed to perform a dimming adjustment, the dimmer 1 performs a dimming mode when the dimmer 1 further performs steps of converting the AC power into a full-wave DC power, modulating the full-wave DC power by turning on and off the full-wave DC power according to pulses of a dimming command so as to generate a dimming output power having the pulses of the dimming command embedded therein, and transmitting the dimming output power to the lighting devices 2 for the lighting devices to decode the dimming command and receive a required power and performs the dimming adjustment according to the decoded dimming command.
In sum, the high power dimmer having switchable power modes of the present invention is appropriately switched in terms of its power modes by the output selector so that most of the time power is directly transmitted to the lighting device with the rectification circuit and the power switch in the dimmer being bypassed. As the rectification circuit and the power switch only perform circuit operation during the dimming mode and the time for the dimming operation is extremely short, the present invention is advantageous in low heat generation and its applicability to high power lighting devices.
Even though numerous characteristics and advantages of the present invention have been set forth in the foregoing description, together with details of the structure and function of the invention, the disclosure is illustrative only. Changes may be made in detail, especially in matters of shape, size, and arrangement of parts within the principles of the invention to the full extent indicated by the broad general meaning of the terms in which the appended claims are expressed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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101108258 A | Mar 2012 | TW | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5483144 | Marek | Jan 1996 | A |
7432717 | Frederick et al. | Oct 2008 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130234615 A1 | Sep 2013 | US |