The present invention relates to a power supply system for supplying lamp unit power, and to a power supply method for supplying lamp unit power.
Various arrangements for lighting systems are known which provide both conventional and emergency lighting. Such emergency lighting is intended to be activated when the conventional lighting is no longer operative because the direct mains supply to the conventional lighting is no longer available or malfunctions. Emergency lighting is typically powered by a battery or other energy storage device. Conventional lighting is controlled by an on/off switch by means of which a user (or control system) can control whether the lighting is illuminated or not. Generally, emergency lighting is intended to be automatically illuminated when the absence of mains power or the malfunction of mains power for the conventional lighting is detected in some way. Emergency lighting may be used to allow escape from buildings that would otherwise be in darkness due to the inoperativeness of the conventional lighting.
Emergency lighting and conventional lighting may share components. For example, the same lamp (such as a gas discharge lamp or light emitting diode) may be used for both conventional and emergency lighting. Other components may also be shared.
A lighting system comprising emergency lighting and conventional lighting may be considered to have two operating modes. In a normal mode, when the direct mains supply is operating normally (within the normal voltage range), a switched mains input, controlled by an on/off switch, is monitored, and the lamp is illuminated or extinguished in dependence upon the switched mains input. In an emergency mode, when the mains supply is not available or is malfunctioning (is outside the normal voltage range), the lamp is illuminated automatically, irrespective of the status of the switched mains input, using power from a battery or other storage element.
To provide the emergency mode, the emergency lighting arrangement includes, in addition to the mains relay 7, relay control line 9 and emergency relay 11, a battery charger 13, a battery 15 and an emergency driver 17.
When the mains AC supply 1 is operating normally (and the lamp 5 is powered by the mains ballast 3), the battery 15 is charged (continuously or when required) by the battery charger 13. The battery charger 13 provides galvanic isolation between the AC mains supply 1 and the battery 15. When the control circuit detects that the AC supply 1 is interrupted (or malfunctioning), the emergency relay 11 is closed (the mains relay 7 is opened), and the emergency driver 17 illuminates the lamp 5 using power from the battery 15. Emergency driver 17 provides galvanic isolation of the battery 15 from the lamp 5.
As will be known to those skilled in the art, gas discharge lamps, such as fluorescent lamps, require an arc voltage to be applied between the lamp electrodes by a lamp arc supply. For most gas discharge lamps the lamp cathodes are heated by a cathode supply in order to heat the cathode filaments to cause them to emit electrodes into the gas within the lamp tube by thermionic emission.
Known emergency lighting arrangements do not provide an effective way of controlling lamp power for optimum lamp operation.
Known emergency lighting arrangements do not provide an effective way of controlling the battery discharge for optimum battery operation.
In one aspect, the present invention provides a power supply system for supplying lamp unit power, the system including a driver for receiving power from a power supply and operable to provide the lamp power from the power supply, characterised in that the driver is operable to adjust the total power provided to the lamp unit from the power supply.
The driver can vary the proportion of current drawn from the battery. The driver can also adjust the total power provided to the lamp unit from the power supply and optionally can adjust the power provided as the arc power and as the cathode power.
The lighting system may be an emergency lighting system. The power supply may be a battery or other charge storage device.
The lamp unit may comprise one or more lamps, such as light emitting diodes (LED) or gas discharge lamps, e.g. fluorescent lamps.
In another aspect, the present the invention provides a power supply system for supplying a lamp unit, the system including a driver for receiving power from a battery as power supply and operable to provide the lamp power from the power supply, characterised in that the driver is operable to adjust the total power provided to the lamp unit from the power supply and to adjust the current drawn from the battery at the optimum level despite the changes to the characteristics of the battery or alternation of the lamp unit characteristics.
The driver may adjust the current or power drawn from the battery at the optimum level despite the changes to the characteristics of the battery or alternation of the lamp unit characteristics.
The driver may adjust a first parameter to set the ratio of arc power to cathode power supplied, and then may adjust a second (different) parameter to set the total power provided to the lamp unit whilst maintaining the set ratio. The first parameter may be the frequency of operation of at least one switch of the driver and the second parameter may be the duty cycle of at least one switch of the driver, the or each switch controlling application of power from the power supply to the lamp.
The driver may include an input part and an output part. Preferably, the input part and the output part are galvanically isolated.
The output part may include a plurality of circuits, each having a different frequency response, and wherein the input part is operable to supply the output part at a selected frequency to provide a desired proportion of the arc power to the cathode power. Because the circuits have different frequency responses the proportion of the power supply current in the respective circuits is different at different frequencies. The embodiment to be described allows a desired proportion of the available power to be provided as arc power and as cathode power by selecting an appropriate frequency at which the frequency responses are such that the respective proportions of power for the arc power and the cathode power exist. The battery current at the selected frequency may, however, not be at a desired level and, in the embodiment, the battery current may be reduced in order to adjust the total power provided to the lamp unit. The circuits may be multiple-order circuits. The circuits may be second order circuits, such as L and C series and L series and C parallel circuits.
The output part may be formed by passive components only. The output part may comprise a filter stage and a rectifier. The input part can be operable to supply the output part at a selected frequency or pulse width to provide a desired amount of the lamp power or to adjust the amount of current or power drawn from the battery.
The input part may include pulse width modulation means operable to adjust the total power provided to the lamp unit, and thereby enable an optimal current to be drawn from the power supply, which is controllable independently of the frequency selection.
The driver may comprise a push-pull converter, such as a DC-AC push-pull inverter, a flyback converter, a boost converter or another type of switched converter.
The system may be operable to maintain a desired level of arc power and a desired level of cathode power when a quality or quantity of the lamp(s) when a lamp unit is changed. For example, a lamp may be changed for a lamp with different characteristics, or a further lamp may be added to the lamp unit. This may be done by a user after installation of the system.
The system may be operable to maintain a desired level of lamp power when the power supply is altered. For example, a battery may be replaced, or an additional cell may be added. This may be done by a user after installation of the system.
The present invention also provides an emergency lighting arrangement including the power supply system as defined above, which may further include the power supply mentioned above.
The present invention also provides a power supply method as defined in the claims.
The present invention also a power supply method for supplying lamp unit power, wherein a driver receives power from a power supply to provide the lamp power from the power supply, characterised in that the driver is operable to maintain a desired level of total power provided to the lamp unit from the power supply when a quantity or quality of the lamp(s) in the lamp unit is changed or when the power supply is altered.
In one embodiment to be described a power control method uses pulse width modulation (PWM) in the form of dead time or duty cycle control in order to obtain the correct current or power levels drawn from a battery set in order to power a lamp at the output of an emergency converter for driving the lamp from a battery set. A step-up inverter supplies high frequency rectangular symmetric waveform to the output with galvanic isolation. The converter used may be an inverting flyback type. Other output circuit arrangements are possible. Other modulation methods can be applied as well.
The system allows the addition of another battery as a means of improving lamp power in emergency mode. PWM can be applied for regulating the total output power, adapting the emergency system to the extra battery. If the battery is changed, for example by adding additional cells (or replacing the battery with a different battery), or in any other way, this may alter the nominal current. In response to this, the switch duty cycle may be adjusted so that the current drawn from the battery is at the optimum level despite the changes to the characteristics of the battery.
In one embodiment to be described a power control method uses pulse width modulation (PWM) in the form of dead time or duty cycle control and frequency modulation (FM) in order to obtain the correct power levels for lamp arc and cathodes in the output of an emergency converter for driving fluorescent lamps from a battery set. A step-up inverter supplies high frequency rectangular symmetric waveform to the output with galvanic isolation. The converter used may be an inverting dc-ac push-pull type. The output comprises three second order circuits: one L series and C parallel for the arc; two equal L and C series for the cathodes. Other output circuit arrangements are possible.
If the respective output circuit arrangements for the lamp arc and lamp cathodes have a different frequency response, in principle frequency modulation can be used to select a frequency at which the response of the respective output circuits provides a desired proportion of power to the lamp arc and a desired proportion of power to the lamp cathode. However, at the frequency which provides the desired frequency response, the current drawn from the battery set may not be the optimum current. PWM allows the optimum current to be drawn at any selected frequency.
For example, if only applying frequency modulation/control, the need for a multi-lamp compatible system together with the fixed frequency response of the two filter types leads to a non-optimised power ratio in some loads cases. PWM can be applied to add another degree of freedom in the power regulation, enabling optimised arc and cathodes supply. Once the frequency for achieving the right arc to cathodes power ratio is set, PWM can regulate the right level of total output power, which yields in an optimised power in the lamp. In the embodiment, power regulation consists of setting a certain value of average battery discharge current.
The system allows the addition of another battery as a means of improving only lamp arc power in emergency mode. Such feature is not realisable, however, applying only FM. Again, FM can set the optimum power ratio and PWM can be applied for regulating the total output power, adapting the emergency system to the extra battery.
The embodiment to be described illustrates how to implement a system and method able to supply the correct arc and cathode power for all lamp cases in the most optimised way. Further, the embodiment allows the possible addition of an extra battery for improving only the arc power instead of transferring the extra power with similar arc-cathode ratio to the load. Battery count reduction is also enabled by applying such regulation technique.
One possible implementation of the system and method of the embodiment for optimising the regulation of power levels delivered to the lamp arc and cathodes in emergency mode may be the following:
The embodiment provides power regulation/control in the lamp (e.g. fluorescent lamp arc and cathodes), independently of the lamp type and battery set voltage. As it may not be possible to set proper power levels for multi-lamp and multi-battery applying only FM due to filters and lamps characteristics, the use of PWM adds another degree of freedom, enabling the required regulation.
As some embodiments describe a fluorescent lamp driver it has to be stated such system is only one example described for better understanding and the invention may be used for other kinds of lamp drivers such as light emitting diodes as well. The arc power correlates to the lamp power which is the light generating power.
For a better understanding of the present invention an embodiment will now be described by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In the drawings generally like elements are designated with the same reference sign.
As briefly discussed above, the lighting arrangement shown in
When the control unit detects that the AC mains supply 1 is interrupted or malfunctioning—such as when the mains AC supply 1 presents a voltage lower than a certain threshold (145 volts in a 230 volt nominal supply, for example) the control unit opens the mains relay 7, closes the emergency relay 11, and activates the emergency driver 17. Emergency driver 17 provides power to illuminate the lamp 5 from only the battery 15 via the closed emergency relay 11. Isolation is provided from the AC mains line 1 to the battery 15 for safety reasons. The lamp 5 may be a gas discharge lamp or a light emitting diode (LED).
An emergency driver 17 in accordance with an embodiment of the invention is shown in
The emergency driver 17 may provide a first cathode supply 21 and a second cathode supply 23 to heat the cathode filaments in case where the lamp 5 is a fluorescent lamp and a lamp arc supply 25. In case of a light emitting diode as lamp 5 there may be only a lamp supply 25. The lamp supply 25 may be a single stage converter as e.g. a flyback converter which takes over the function of the boosting converter stage 19.
The emergency driver 17 comprises an input part X in the form of a bi-directional push-pull inverter. The input part X includes identical first and second portions connected in parallel across the battery 15. Each of the portions comprises a switch S1/S2 and a primary winding section N1. By alternate operation of the switches S1/S2, the input part produces a rectangular alternating output voltage, as shown in
The input part X of the emergency driver 17 supplies an output part Y. The respective lamp cathodes 30A and 30B are supplied via the two identical secondary windings N3 of the push-pull inverter of the output part Y with LC series identical filters connected to them. The first cathode 30A is connected to the first secondary winding 32A via series connected capacitor Cf1 and inductor Lf1. The second cathode 30B is connected to a second secondary winding 32B via a series connected second capacitor Cf2 and inductor Lf2.
The lamp arc supply is provided by another secondary winding 40 of the push-pull inverter through a L series C parallel filter, comprising inductor Ls (connected in series between the secondary winding 40 and the first cathode 30A) and capacitor CL (connected in parallel across the first cathode 30A and the second cathode 30B).
A voltage is applied to the lamp filters with a magnitude proportional to the battery voltageand the turns ratio, as described by equation (1).
where NP and NS are the primary and secondary turns number and UBatt is the battery 17 voltage.
The primary turns number is the same for both arc and cathodes supply (N1 in
The rectangular waveform shown in
For a given lamp, the typical frequency response of the lamp arc current AC for a certain L series C parallel filter (Ls and CL), considering the lamp as an equivalent resistance RL (fixed), is shown in
Where L is the inductance
For a given lamp, the typical frequency response of the cathode current Cc for a certain LC series filter (Lf1, and Cf1, or Lf2 and Cf2) and a certain cathode resistance Rcath supplied with a rectangular waveform is shown in
Where L is the inductance
The response of
As an objective is to regulate the power,
As can be seen in the plots of
At first, based on the current and power responses and particular characteristic of a certain lamp, the fratio frequency (50 kHz in this example) is chosen as it offers the required power ratio between lamp arc and cathodes. All plots (in
However, in this example, the total power is too high for the battery nominal current of 1 A. The power for fratio yields in approximately 1.25 A in the battery (see
As the ratio between arc and cathodes power is correct at fratio, the total power is regulated independently of that. In this example, that is realised by reducing the duty cycle of the converter. This is done by reducing the duty cycle of both of the switches S, and S2 so that the dead time is increased. In this example, the duty cycle is reduced to 80% to provide the desired current of 1 A.
If the battery is changed, for example by adding additional cells (or replacing the battery with a different battery), or in any other way, this may alter the nominal current. In response to this, the switch duty cycle may be adjusted so that the current drawn from the battery is at the optimum level despite the changes to the characteristics of the battery. Further, if the characteristics of the battery are changed, this may alter the optimum proportion of power that is provided to the lamp (e.g. to the lamp arc and the lamp cathodes). If a cell is added, typically, the power applied to the lamp (e.g. arc and cathodes) should remain the same (increasing the power applied to the cathodes would just generate heat and increasing the power used for light would just lead to increased light output). The embodiment allows the proportion of power provided to the lamp cathodes and the lamp arc to be adjusted by selecting an appropriate frequency of the operation of the switches of the emergency converter. This allows to extend the time where power can provided by the additional cell to be applied to the lamp, and thereby resulting in increased time of illumination in emergency mode, rather than being used for higher light output. This could also allow additional power provided by the additional cell to be applied to the lamp arc, and thereby resulting in increased illumination, rather than being wasted by producing heat. It also allows to keep the current or power drawn from the battery constant independent of the number or type of battery and also independent of the type of lamp connected. In case of a light emitting diode as a lamp it is sufficient to control the power provided to the lamp as no cathode heating is necessary. In case of such LED lamp the current or power drawn from the battery can be adjusted to a fixed value irrespective of the lamp load or battery load.
If the nature of the lamp unit is changed, the embodiment allows the altered lamp unit to be driven in an optimal way. For example, if an additional fluorescent bulb or light emitting diode is added to the lamp unit, this could increase the total current drawn from the battery. Adjusting the duty cycle of the switches S1 and S2 allows the optimal nominal current drawn from the battery to be maintained despite the alternation of the lamp unit characteristics.
The system may control the current or power drawn from the battery set. It may be important that the current drawn from the battery (which is the battery discharge current) remains constant in order to extend the overall battery life time and to extend the time where the battery can supply the lamp in an emergency mode. As the battery voltage is almost constant for most of the discharge period it may be also possible to control the power drawn from the battery as this power control will lead to an almost constant current for most of the discharge period.
For simplifying the explanation, harmonics changes with duty cycle are not included in this example, although they may become significant in the design.
Although the embodiment uses a push-pull converter, several converter arrangements are able to provide a suitable higher rectangular voltage output, such as a simple cascade of a boost converter and an inverter. All drivers where pulse modulation, e.g. pulse width modulation, and frequency modulation can be applied may be used in accordance with the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1204787.4 | Mar 2012 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2013/055654 | 3/19/2013 | WO | 00 |