1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to incandescent lights, and, more particularly, to adapters designed to improve their performance.
2. Background Information
Over the past 40 years, particularly since semiconductor devices have become readily available, there has been substantial activity (including patenting such devices) relating to adapters which can enhance or modify the performance of incandescent lights, which henceforth will be referred to collectively as lamps. Most of the prior art has related to adaptive devices which can be affixed to the external screw base of the lamps in either a removable or non removable way. U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,818,263 and 4,989,607 illustrate removable adapters, and U.S. Pat. No. 3,823,339 shows a permanent adapter. Some configurations have involved adaptations within the glass envelope itself prior to the screw base being attached, for example U.S. Pat. No. 4,480,212 describes such an assembly. Each of the foregoing U.S. Patents are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Present in virtually all of the adaptive approaches is concern about filament-generated heat. Such heat can degrade performance of the semiconductors or other electronic components involved. Silicon semiconductor devices typically do not have ratings much over 150 degrees C. The presence of self-generated heat, along with a very high filament cause ambient temperature can be a destructive combination. U.S. Pat. No. 4,480,212 notes such heat considerations. This Patent is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
An earlier patent, U.S. Pat. No. 3,215,891, notes that silicon rectifiers have a relatively high temperature capability, typically to 150 degrees C. (Celsius), and, having a relatively simple device structure, do not exhibit the thermal runaway characteristics of semiconductors which either have multiple junctions or have properties which are very sensitive to thermal effects. This patent is hereby incorporated herein by reference. Consequently, it is feasible to place such device within the glass envelope of the lamp and still have them survive the high ambient temperature.
However, as adaptive techniques have evolved which employ multi-junction semiconductors, there tends to be more vulnerability to performance degradation at high temperatures. An article by the present inventor, E. Rodriguez, entitled, “Cooling a High Density DC-DC Converter Impacts Performance and Reliability” PCIM Magazine, November 1999 pp 60-66 describes in detail the principles of heat removal from a semiconductor chip and the subtleties of optimizing such heat removal paths. U.S. Pat. No. 6,515,858 further describes such heat removal principles and how the functional stability or failure susceptibility of any given semiconductor is a function of its closeness to its maximum operating temperature. This patent is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
It has been noted that it is the combination of ambient temperature with self-generated heat which is the destructive combination. In other words, a device might very well survive the high temperature within a lamp glass envelope but the self generated heat, if not removed, raises the junction temperature far above acceptable levels. Consequently, in prior art, it has generally not been possible to place within the glass envelope of a lamp any silicon semiconductors of a dissipative nature other than simple rectifier diodes. Non silicon, multi-junction semiconductors, employing materials such as gallium arsenide can withstand much higher temperatures, but the costs and performance limitations of such devices has precluded them from commercial lighting applications.
In a typical Edison base incandescent lamp, it is customary to have the filament enclosed with a sealed glass envelope, essentially evacuated of air and then filled with certain inert gases within that envelope to promote longer filament life. The design of the filament and the types of gases employed within the envelope are not particularly relevant to the proposed embodiment and will therefore be omitted from further description. Suffice it to say a wire is connected, within the sealed glass bulb envelope, to each end of the filament. In one small area of the glass envelope, through which the air is evacuated, the glass is essentially pinched and sealed by heating the glass in that area to the melting point in the manner noted in the bottom of a typical glass thermometer.
The two wires from the filament pass through that pinched and sealed glass area. This forms what is called a glass-to-metal seal in that no air or other gas can escape or pass through the same tiny hole through the wire passes. The two wires, now being outside of the sealed glass envelope, are directed to, and soldered or welded within, two holes in the screw base, one hole being in the center and one being on the periphery. The center connection will subsequently make contact with the center contact of a socket while the outer contact will make contact to the outer screw shell of a socket.
In a final configuration, having the screw base attached to the glass envelope, there is very little air space within the screw base in which to place any electronic device or circuit board.
Furthermore, because of the special shapes involved for the pinched and sealed glass area, as well as glass insulation cones within the screw base, there is a less than ideal environment in which to install an electronic circuit, aside from the need to address thermal considerations. It is therefore a principal objective of the proposed embodiment to make best use of the minimal space in a way which exhibits thermal advantages.
To those skilled in the art relative to power semiconductors and associated heat sinking or cooling considerations, it is known that cooling is very dependent on the metallic surface area to which a semiconductor chip is attached. Reference 1 describes in detail the concept of thermal resistance and the physics of such a concept need not be further described. Generally, it is known that the junction of a semiconductor will elevate in temperature in accordance with what is called its thermal resistance, specified in degrees C. per watt to the ambient air. That means, for example that the semiconductor will increase in temperature a predictable amount for every watt of power. The temperature rise will typically be cut in half for every quadrupling of the surface area to which the semiconductor chip is affixed in a thermal conductive manner.
When the semiconductor is in chip form (i.e. unpackaged) or is in a small surface mount package, It has very little surface area and its thermal resistance for example can be as high or higher than 200 degrees C. per watt. Therefore, it is imperative for a device handling any amount of power that the surface area, to be significantly more than the chip itself. Otherwise, the chip can handle almost no power—not because it can intrinsically carry little current but because it simply overheats.
For example, microprocessor chip in a computer by itself might handle only a small fraction of a watt, and therefore be rendered useless, but mounted properly onto a metallic thermally conductive surface of area much greater than the chip itself, can handle tens of watts. In the proposed embodiment therefore, it is the intent to define a configuration in which the mounting surface is substantially greater than the component itself. It is not the three dimensional shape of the mounting surface which is most important but rather the total surface area.
The limitations of the prior art are overcome and other advantages are provided by the present invention. Accordingly, within the tiny confined area within an Edison lamp, such as a typical 60 or 100 watt lamp, it can be observed that, for purposes of the proposed embodiment, that there is room for a cylindrical metal surface having a diameter of approximately 300 mils (a mil being one/thousandths of an inch) and a length of approximately 750 mils. The available space is in a recess resulting from the way the overall glass envelope is shaped and sealed. This thermally conductive metal cylinder, spread out as a flat surface, would have a surface area of approximately 135,000 square mils.
When a chip, 60 by 60 mils, having an area of only 3600 mils, is attached to the metal surface, it can be noted that the thermally useful surface area is increased more close to 36 times. The power capability increases approximately as a function of the square root of the surface area so it can be determined that with the cylinder, the chip can handle about six times more power. A surface area of about 135,000 square mils provides a thermal resistance of about 30-35 degrees C. per watt in non-moving air.
To illustrate the implications of such an arrangement, it is useful to use such a device as the Sidac chip employed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,980,607. This patent is incorporated herein by reference. The Sidac is a multi junction, bi-directional device, which can operate effectively up to a junction temperature of 150 degrees although lower operating temperature is preferred. Within the lower enclosed portion of a typical 100-watt Edison base lamp operating in a base-down position, in a 25 degrees C. outer room temperature environment, the temperature can typically be in the 85-95 degrees C. range.
If such a Sidac chip were to be by itself, it would have a forward voltage drop of approximately 1.2 volts at the approximate 0.75 amps (somewhat less than with a bulb having no Sidac circuit) associated with a 100 watt lamp at a nominal 115 VAC. These figures would translate into chip dissipation of about 0.9 watts.
With a bare chip having a thermal resistance of about 180 degrees C. per watt, the chip would rise to nearly 240 degrees C. and be damaged. Attached to the cylinder with its 30 degrees C. per watt characteristic, it would only increase to about 110-120 degrees. In a base up configuration, rising heat from the filament can make the inner ambient temperature 30-40 degrees hotter, making operation acceptable but not recommended at 100 watts but quite satisfactory with a 60 or 75 watt lamp since the self heating is less and the final Sidac temperature is less. It can be seen from these considerations that the surface area is extremely important. A reduction in cylinder surface area of 40-50% could render the Sidac inoperable inside a 60 or 100-watt lamp due to excessive Sidac junction temperature.
In practice, the thermally conductive metal cylinder can be the copper foil layer which is part of a conventional printed circuit board (PCB). With this approach a Sidac chip and any other appropriate chips can be surface mounted onto the circuit board and interconnected by the etched traces on the PCB. The copper thickness of such a PCB can be up to about 6 mils thick and still be within the range of commercially available cost effective materials. The non-copper base material for the PCB, such as G-10 epoxy glass laminate, is available in thickness of only a few mils. Using such a thin laminate of G-10 or of a high-temperature polyimide used in what are called “flex circuits” allows the PCB to be easily formed into a cylinder.
Prior to such cylindrical forming, many small device-containing PCB's can be fabricated as what is known as a pallet and then separated into individual PCB's. Those skilled in the art of circuit board manufacturing are familiar with such multiple PCB, palletized manufacturing techniques. Once the cylindrical PCB has been formed with the appropriate components already attached, it can be inserted into the intended space with one of the wires from the lamp filament, which would have normally gone to the center hole of the screw base, instead go to a hole in the PCB.
Another wire then goes from a second hole in the PCB to the screw base center hole. In other words, the PCB and its circuitry are interjected into one of the AC lines intended for the lamp filament. With this embodiment, the performance of the lamp can be appropriately enhanced while retaining, for the end user, the appearance and installation simplicity of a standard bulb.
The interjected, now integral with the bulb, circuitry may serve to extend lamp life, react to external signals or perform any other such desired function requiring temperature-sensitive multi-junction semiconductor devices for meeting those performance objectives. Furthermore, the approach allows fabrication of an enhanced end product without the need to alter in any way the basic manufacturing process of the lamp itself. In other words, the fundamental technology of lamp manufacturing is in the filament and placement within the sealed glass envelope.
The addition of the screw base, while an important aspect, is considered a secondary, less critical operation and simply a means to connect to the filament. In other words, the proposed embodiment can be added to a lamp without meaningfully altering the economies of scale of the most important lamp production processes. U.S. Pat. No. 4,480,212 shows elements placed within the glass envelope of a lamp for conceptual purposes but in terms of the overwhelming majority of Edison base lamps produced for consumer use, it is not practical to incorporate electronic devices within the evacuated portion of the glass envelope without creating an extremely specialized manufacturing process unique to the assembly. This patent is incorporated herein by reference.
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that although the following Detailed Description will proceed with reference being made to illustrative embodiments, the drawings, and methods of use, the present invention is not intended to be limited to these embodiments and methods of use. Rather, the present invention is of broad scope and is intended to be defined as only set forth in the accompanying claims.
Similarly, wires from the filament are passed though holes 9 in the glass in a manner which maintains the hermetic seal. It can be noted that the outer surface of the glass bulb comes down from the spherical portion to a lower portion, with a flat lower surface 10, before reversing direction, traveling upward toward the filament and then reversing again to drop down toward the sealed portion. That lower surface 10 sets the glass bulb position within the screw base shown in
In the cross-sectional view of
The copper layer 16 can be on one side or both and, while
Those skilled in the art will recognize that the circuitry between points 26 and 27 of
In the various figures describing the invention, the most popular residential lamp, known as the medium-base type, are shown Those skilled in the art will recognize that other lamps may advantageously incorporate the present invention. For example, the present invention may be used with halogen lamps that, although having a different filament, glass envelope and filament design, with the glass envelope filled with a performance-enhancing gas, are, nevertheless, incandescent lamps with screw bases attached to sealed glass envelopes as shown in
Similarly, smaller lamps, known as candelabra types, have the base of the glass envelope situated within a screw base cavity in an overall configuration comparable to
With candelabra type lamps, the wattage rating is invariably much less than that typical of the more popular medium base lamps and the lower level of heat generated from the Sidac chip, make sit that much easier to employ a smaller heat removing circuit board.
It should be understood that above-described embodiments are being presented herein as examples and that many variations and alternatives thereof are possible. Accordingly, the present invention should be viewed broadly as being defined only as set forth in the hereinafter appended claims.
The present application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/643,083, which was filed on Jan. 11, 2005 of common inventorship and title and which provisional application is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60643083 | Jan 2005 | US |