The present invention relates to a lamp or bulb adapted to emit light and removably fittable with a standard socket. More particularly this invention concerns an LED lamp.
The main problem with the standard lamp having a resistive, e.g. tungsten, heating element is that such a lamp expends more energy as heat than as light. Fluorescent lamps run substantially cooler, but have a substantial lag time between when they are initially turned on and when they actually start emitting light, and also are often fairly bulky. Halogen lamps are highly efficient, but need to be handled very carefully and can in fact generate considerable heat when they are dimensioned big enough to generate a usable amount of light, even when powered with low, e.g. 12 V, voltage.
The most recent development involves the use of light-emitting diodes (LED's) that are quite efficient in that they are able to convert virtually all of their supply voltage into light, not into heat. In addition they are very small and have an extremely long service life, mainly due to the fact that they operate cool. The main problem with such LED lamps is that when used to replace a conventional incandescent bulb they must have special driving circuits that convert the incoming alternating-current line voltage to the direct-current low voltage needed by the lamp. Such a circuit is normally a small printed-circuit board that is permanently mounted right in the lamp and to which the LED is normally directly soldered. It typically incorporates a transformer to step down the incoming voltage and a rectifier and similar power-supply elements that produce the necessary steady low voltage.
The problem with this construction is that the driving circuit itself generates heat, particularly when the LED itself requires some meaningful amperage, albeit at low voltage. Since the LED itself is carried right on the circuit board, when the circuit elements heat up, the LED is heated. Unfortunately the efficiency of an LED falls off rapidly as it gets hot, so that the known LED lamps tend to dim somewhat after they have been in use for a while and their driving circuits have gotten warm.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide an improved LED lamp.
Another object is the provision of such an improved LED lamp that overcomes the above-given disadvantages, in particular that produces a high light output even when its driving circuit is dissipating considerable heat.
A lamp has according to the invention an at least partially transparent globe and a base carried on the globe, forming a massive heat-dissipating sink, and fittable in a socket. An LED is fitted to an inner surface of the base. Heat-generating driver circuitry connected to the LED is in heat-conducting contact with the base.
Thus the instant invention exploits the normally metallic base by designing it to dissipate the heat generated by the LED, or more by its driver circuitry. This makes it possible to use a high-power, e.g. 5 W, LED in a format that directly replaces a standard incandescent bulb, right down to the screw-type E14 or E17 base and glass globe.
The base according to the invention has an external formation adapted to mate with the socket. This formation can be a bayonet coupling or a screwthread.
The circuitry in accordance with the invention includes a transformer, and normally also a rectifier and various capacitors, chokes, and the like intended to convert the incoming line-voltage alternating current to the required low-voltage direct current.
The base according to the invention has an extension projecting into the globe and forming the surface carrying the LED. More specifically the base is formed with heat-dissipating ribs. It can also have at least one heat-dissipating bore.
In an embodiment of this invention the base comprises an externally and internally threaded sheet-metal shell adapted to fit a standard incandescent-bulb socket, a massive metallic element threaded snugly into the shell and in intimate heat-exchange contact therewith, and a tubular extension projecting inward from and formed unitarily with the element and having an inner end forming the surface carrying the circuitry and LED. This extension is provided with at least one radially projecting heat-dissipating disk.
The above and other objects, features, and advantages will become more readily apparent from the following description, it being understood that any feature described with reference to one embodiment of the invention can be used where possible with any other embodiment and that reference numerals or letters not specifically mentioned with reference to one figure but identical to those of another refer to structure that is functionally if not structurally identical. In the accompanying drawing:
As seen in
Internally the heat-sink base 12 is formed with a crosswise throughgoing bore 21 and with a blind central longitudinal passage 14 and two flanking axially throughgoing passages 20. These passages 20 and 21 increase the surface area from which heat can be radiated.
In the arrangement of
In
Of course, instead of a screwthread, the heat-sink base 12 could be formed with pins of a bayonet coupling, or otherwise comply with standard lamp-base forms. Similarly the LED 10 can be mounted via heat-dissipating metal strips or the like to the heat-sink base 12. The circuit board 13 can carry a transformer and even a rectifier so that an LED lamp according to the invention using a low-voltage direct-current LED can be screwed into a higher voltage—110 or 220 volt alternating-current—socket to directly replace a conventional incandescent or fluorescent bulb.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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202004013773.9 | Sep 2004 | DE | national |