This application is a U.S. National Phase Application under 35 USC 371 of International Application PCT/EP2007/058118, filed Aug. 6, 2007, which is incorporated herein in its entirety by this reference.
The invention relates to a luminaire in accordance with claim 1.
It is an object of the invention to provide a luminaire that permits a color adaptive illumination.
This object is achieved according to the invention by the features of claim 1. Particularly advantageous designs of the invention are described in the dependent claims.
The inventive luminaire has a first light source which comprises at least one fluorescent lamp or one incandescent lamp and has a second light source, which comprises at least one light-emitting diode arrangement, and has a reflector for the light emitted by the light sources, a cooling device for the at least one light-emitting diode arrangement being provided that is thermally coupled to the at least one light-emitting diode arrangement and is arranged on the reflector, and the luminaire comprising a transparent, light-scattering means that is arranged in the beam path of the light emitted by the luminaire. The combination of the abovementioned features produces a luminaire that enables an adaptation of the hue and the color temperature of the light emitted by it within wide units. By means of the first light source, white light with a color locus and color temperature defined by the characteristics of this light source is generated, while, by means of the second light source, which comprises at least one light-emitting diode arrangement, the color locus or/and the color temperature is/are shifted to a desired value. In particular, the color locus of the luminaire can be shifted along the Planckian locus in
The reflector advantageously has an inner side that faces the two light sources and is designed to reflect light, and an outer side averted from the light sources, and the cooling device for the at least one light-emitting diode arrangement being arranged on the outer side of the reflector. It is thereby possible to use the reflector for both light sources, and the cooling device is not heated up by the electromagnetic radiation emitted by the light sources.
In accordance with a preferred exemplary embodiment, for the purpose of ease of mounting, the cooling device is arranged at the edge of a light exit opening of the reflector.
The at least one light-emitting diode arrangement is advantageously arranged on the inner side of the reflector in order to enable simple mounting and optimal coupling to the light-reflecting surface of the reflector.
The at least one light-emitting diode arrangement is advantageously mounted on a surface of the cooling device, in order to ensure good thermal coupling between the light-emitting diodes and the cooling device. This surface of the cooling device preferably faces the outer side of the reflector, and the at least one light-emitting diode arrangement projects through one or more cutouts in the reflector, in order to permit simple and space-saving mounting of the light-emitting diode arrangement and of the associated cooling device on the reflector. The cooling device can thereby be fixed on the outer side of the reflector such that the light-emitting diode arrangement projects through the abovementioned cutouts. In order to ensure a better thermal insulation between the reflector and the heat sink, a thermal insulation layer can be arranged between the surface of the cooling device provided with the at least one light-emitting diode arrangement and the outer side of the reflector. This insulation layer can consist, for example, of a plastic of low thermal conductivity, or be formed by the reflector itself if the latter is fabricated from a plastic of low thermal conductivity and its inside reflecting light is designed, for example, as a metallic coating.
The cooling device advantageously has cooling ribs that are arranged in such a way that they lie outside the beam path of the light emitted by the luminaire. Consequently, the cooling ribs do not cause any occlusion and are not heated up by the light emitted by the luminaire. Alternatively, the cooling device can be designed as a cooling plate, for example made from an aluminum plate, over whose surface the heat produced by the luminaire is dissipated to the outside. In this case, it is advantageous to provide an interspace or cavity between the cooling plate and the reflector, in order for an operating device or an operating circuit for the light sources to be placed there.
In accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention, the at least one light-emitting diode arrangement comprises a combination of red or orange shining light-emitting diodes with green shining light-emitting diodes, and the first light source comprises one or more fluorescent lamps. It is preferred to use fluorescent lamps that generate daylight-like light, that is to say light with a color temperature in the range from approximately 5400 kelvin to 6000 kelvin, during their operation. The combination of red and/or orange-colored light-emitting diodes with green light-emitting diodes can be used to generate white light of low color temperature, and the color temperature of the light emitted by the luminaire can be reduced to values of up to 2700 kelvin in an efficient way. Both the red and/or orange-colored and green light-emitting diodes have a higher efficiency than another color-complementary combination of light-emitting diodes such as, for example blue and yellow light-emitting diodes. Fluorescent lamps are preferred instead of incandescent lamps as first light source, because the former have a higher luminous efficiency, and daylight-like light can be generated by means of halogen incandescent lamps only with a high outlay on filter means and a low efficiency.
In accordance with another preferred exemplary embodiment, the at least one light-emitting diode arrangement comprises light-emitting diodes that generate warm white light, that is to say white light with a color temperature in the range from approximately 2700 kelvin to 3000 kelvin during their operation, and the first light source comprises one or more light-emitting diodes. It is preferred to use fluorescent lamps that generate daylight-like light during their operation. By means of combining the light-emitting diodes generating warm white light with the fluorescent lamp(s), it is possible for the color temperature of the light emitted by the luminaire likewise to be reduced in an efficient way.
In accordance with a further exemplary embodiment, the at least one light-emitting diode arrangement comprises a combination of red, green and blue shining light-emitting diodes. It is possible thereby for each luminous color of the color spectrum to be generated and mixed with the white light of the first light source such that the range of tones of the light emitted by the luminaire can be varied within wide limits. In particular, it is also possible to vary the color temperature of the light emitted by this luminaire.
In accordance with the preferred exemplary embodiments, the transparent, light-scattering means is arranged at the light exit opening of the reflector and designed as a cover pane, thus enabling simple mounting and ensuring that the entire light generated by the light sources must pass the light-scattering means.
The inventive luminaire is advantageously equipped with a color sensor that serves to control the color temperature or the color of the light emitted by the luminaire. The color sensor can be used to adapt the color temperature or the range of hues of the light emitted by the luminaire automatically to changes in the natural ambient light in the course of the day. Moreover, in an illumination system that comprises a number of the inventive luminaires, the color sensors can be used to carry out an exact color tuning of the individual luminaires to one another, for example, to adapt the illumination in a space to changes in the natural ambient light.
It is preferred for the inventive luminaire to be equipped with a brightness sensor that serves to control the brightness of the light emitted by the luminaire. The light sensor can be used to adapt to the brightness of the light emitted by the luminaire automatically to the change in the brightness of the natural ambient light in the course of the day. For the abovementioned reasons, it is particularly preferred to combine a color sensor and a brightness sensor.
In accordance with a preferred exemplary embodiment of the inventive luminaire, which is chiefly provided for use in office or business spaces, the reflector is of trough-like design, the first light source is aligned parallel to the longitudinal extent of the trough-like reflector, and the second light source is formed by two light-emitting diode arrangements that are arranged on both sides of the first light source and respectively extend in a fashion parallel to the longitudinal extent of the reflector. The abovenamed reflector can be fabricated in a simple way, for example as a press-drawn section made from plastic, the inner side of the trough-shaped reflector being metallized, for example, in order to attain a high degree of light reflection. The two light-emitting diode arrangements are preferably respectively arranged along an edge of the trough-like reflector running parallel to the longitudinal extent. It is thereby possible to fix the associated cooling device at the edge of the reflector. The two light-emitting diode arrangements are respectively advantageously arranged along a reflector section bent back in the direction of the inside trough bottom, such that, before leaving the luminaire, the light emitted by the light-emitting diode arrangements is reflected at least once on the inner side, designed to reflect light, of the reflector. As a result, a better mixing of the light emitted by the two types of light source is achieved, and the individual light-emitting diodes are not visible through the light exit opening. The cooling devices of the two light-emitting diode arrangements preferably extend along the outer sides of the abovenamed bent-back reflector sections such that they can be fixed on these bent-back or angled-off reflector sections.
In accordance with another preferred exemplary embodiment of the inventive luminaire, which is primarily provided for use in private spaces or in the housing sector, the reflector is of hood-like and substantially rotationally symmetrical design, and the first light source is arranged along the rotation axis of the reflector, and the second light source comprises at least one annular or annular segment light-emitting diode arrangement that is arranged on the inner side and coaxially with the rotation axis of the reflector. This luminaire is suitable for illuminating only a specific part of a space, or for implementing accentuated illumination. The cooling device for the at least one annular or annular segment light-emitting diode arrangement is advantageously arranged on the outer side of the reflector, at the level of the light-emitting diode arrangement, in order to enable good thermal coupling between the light-emitting diodes and the cooling device, and simple mounting of the cooling device from the reflector, as well as to prevent the light emitted by the luminaire from heating up the cooling device. A fluorescent lamp with a base at one end and whose axis of longitudinal extent is aligned parallel to the rotation axis of the reflector preferably serves as first light source. Consequently, the reflector can be fixed on the base of the fluorescent lamp. In contrast with an incandescent lamp with a base at one end, the use of a fluorescent lamp with a base at one end has the advantage of a higher light efficiency. The fluorescent light with a base at one end is preferably a so-called compact fluorescent lamp that has an operating device integrated in the base. There is thus no need for a separate operating device for the luminaire.
The invention is explained below in more detail with the aid of a few preferred exemplary embodiments. In the drawing:
A luminaire in accordance with the first exemplary embodiment of the invention is illustrated schematically in
During operation, the fluorescent lamp 2 generates white light with a color temperature of approximately 6000 kelvin. The light-emitting diodes 41, 42 and 51, 52, respectively, which lie closely next to one another, of each light-emitting diode pair generate red and green light that, after reflection on the inner side 10 of the reflector 1 and passing of the light-scattering cover pane 3, is added as yellowish mixed light to the bluish, daylight-like light of the fluorescent lamp in a homogeneous fashion such that the light emitted by the luminaire has a color temperature that is reduced by comparison with the light generated by the fluorescent lamp 2. The red light-emitting diodes 41 and 51, respectively, can be dimmed independently of the green light-emitting diodes 42 or 52, that is to say the brightness of the red and green light-emitting diode light that is added to the fluorescent lamp light can be controlled independently of one another. It is possible thereby for the color locus of the light emitted by the luminaire to be shifted from the color locus of the fluorescent lamp with a color temperature of 6000 kelvin to a color locus with reduced color temperature. Illustrated in
As may be seen from
The color temperature and the brightness of the light emitted by the luminaire in accordance with the first exemplary embodiment are preferably automatically controlled with the aid of the color and light sensor 91, 92 as a function of the natural ambient light by an external central control device to which a multiplicity of inventive luminaires can be or are connected. The central control device communicates via bidirectional control lines with the operating circuits of the inventive luminaires and, if appropriate, with further, conventional luminaires that belong to the illumination system. These control lines are used to transmit control commands to the operating circuits and to interrogate operating states of the individual luminaires. The communication between the central control device and the operating circuits of the individual luminaires on the illumination system is performed according to the DALI standard (DALI stands for Digitally Addressable Lighting Interface). The central control device and the color and brightness sensors 91, 92 can be used in conjunction with the communication in accordance with the DALI standard to ensure automatic control of the inventive luminaires as a function of the ambient light, without the occurrence of an appreciable color scattering in the case of the light emitted by a number of inventive luminaires.
A second exemplary embodiment of the inventive luminaire is illustrated schematically in
A third exemplary embodiment of an inventive luminaire is illustrated schematically in
During operation, the fluorescent lamp generates white light that has a color temperature of approximately 4000 kelvin and is homogeneously mixed with the light of the light-emitting diodes 300 by means of the reflector 100 and the light-scattering cover pane 500 such that the luminaire can emit light with a cover temperature in the range from approximately 2700 kelvin to 4000 kelvin. In addition to the switch-on head, it is preferred for the luminaire to be provided with a further switch with the aid of which a number of, for example two or three, predetermined differing color temperatures can be selected for the white light emitted by the luminaire. In addition, it is possible to fit on the outer side of the reflector 100 a color and brightness sensor 600 that enables automatic and continuous control of color and brightness of the white light emitted by the luminaire as a function of the ambient air as has already been described in conjunction with the previous exemplary embodiments. Furthermore, in order to generate colored light it is possible to provide a controller that is to be actuated manually and enables the red, green and blue light-emitting diodes to be continuously controlled manually for brightness in a fashion independent of one another in order to vary the color locus and the color of the light emitted by the luminaire in the triangle delimited in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 037 376 | Aug 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2007/058118 | 8/6/2007 | WO | 00 | 5/4/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2008/017652 | 2/14/2008 | WO | A |
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