The invention relates to a control circuit for setting an output current of a voltage converter and to a light having such a control circuit, in particular for use in lights with LED lighting means.
Electrical light sources are operated with supply voltages and supply currents which are usually adjusted to the type and characteristics of the light sources. Specifically in the case of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) this adjustment is frequently implemented by means of converter circuits which rectify an input AC voltage into a supply DC voltage with a predetermined DC intensity. The power consumption and therefore the brightness can be set by means of the level of the controllable DC intensity in the case of LEDs. Converter circuits with a controllable constant current control the output current intensity in such a way that the operating current of one or more operated LED modules is in the optimum range.
Typically, the setpoint value of the output current intensity in conventional converter circuits for lights with LED lighting means is preset at the works. As a result, the brightness of the light is invariable. Various approaches in the prior art attempt to provide room for manoeuvre in the selection of the brightness of the LEDs for a user of such LED lights: document WO 2010/021675 A1 discloses, for example, an LED light with a converter circuit which is integrated into the socket and whose output current intensity can be controlled by means of a switching mechanism which is also integrated into the socket. Document DE 10 2010 002 996 A1 discloses a lighting arrangement having an LED light and a socket into which an operator control element for setting lighting properties of the LED light is integrated.
One of the ideas of the invention is therefore to find solutions for actuating voltage converters in which the setpoint output current can be adapted flexibly. A further idea of the invention is also to find easy-to-implement solutions for lights with LED lighting means in which the brightness of the LED lighting means can be set flexibly and without a large amount of installation expenditure.
According to a first aspect of the invention, a light comprises a lighting means carrier, at least one LED lighting means which is arranged on the lighting means carrier, and a voltage converter circuit which is configured to supply the at least one LED lighting means with electrical current and whose output current can be controlled.
Embodiments and developments of the invention can, where appropriate, be combined with one another as desired. Further possible embodiments, developments and implementations of the invention also comprise non-explicitly specified combinations of features of the invention which have been described above or below with respect to the exemplary embodiments. In particular, the person skilled in the art will also add individual aspects as improvements or additions to the respective basic form of the present invention.
The present invention will be explained in more detail below on the basis of the exemplary embodiments specified in the schematic figures. In the drawings:
The appended figures are intended to permit further understanding of the embodiments of the invention. They illustrate embodiments and serve, in conjunction with the description, to clarify principles and concepts of the invention. Other embodiments and many of the specified advantages become apparent by means of the drawings. The elements of the drawings are not necessarily shown true to scale with respect to one another. Direction-indicating terminology such as, for example, “at the top”, “at the bottom”, “on the left”, “on the right”, “above”, “below”, “horizontally”, “vertically”, “at the front”, “at the rear” and similar indications are used merely for explanatory purposes and do not serve to restrict the general application to specific refinements as shown in the figures.
In the figures, identical, functionally identical and identically acting elements, features and components are each provided with the same reference symbols unless stated otherwise.
For example, a supply voltage can be applied to the LED lighting means 22 via a voltage converter circuit (not illustrated explicitly). The voltage converter circuit is configured here to supply one or more LED lighting means 22 with electrical current. For this purpose, the output current of the voltage converter circuit can be controlled. As a result of the possibility of controlling the output current, the lighting current, which is generated by the one or more LED lighting means 22, can be set to desired values. For example, the output current of the voltage converter circuit can be adjustable to at least two discrete stages, as a result of which the LED lighting means 22 can be set to two different brightness stages. Alternatively, the output current of the voltage converter circuit can also be controllable continuously in an output current range, for example by using a potentiometer. The potentiometer can be integrated here, for example, into the lighting means carrier 21. As a result, the LED lighting means 22 can be operated with a continuously varying brightness.
In particular, the voltage converter circuit can have a rectifier, with which a power grid AC voltage can be converted into a DC voltage, and a converter with which a constant and controllable output DC current can be output at a predefined output voltage level to the LED lighting means 22. The electrical circuits can be arranged, for example, on the side of the lighting means carrier 21 facing away from the viewer in
The light 20 can be, for example, an LED strip here which has a generally elongate form and whose lighting means carrier 21 is embedded as a strip in a lighting means housing 23. A light cover (not explicitly illustrated), which makes the lighting means carrier 21, the LED lighting means 22 and the electrical circuits inaccessible to a user of the light 20, can be arranged above the lighting means carrier 21, flush with the lighting means housing 23.
The light 20 also has a switch 10 which is arranged in a switch housing 11 on the lighting means carrier 21 or in the vicinity of the lighting means carrier 21. The switch 10 has an actuation element 12, the actuation of which serves to set the setpoint output current of the voltage converter circuit—here a setpoint output DC current. The actuation element 12 can be embodied, for example, in such a way that it can be moved into a multiplicity of different switched positions which correlate with various values of the adjustable setpoint output DC current. For example, the actuation element 12 can be a slide which can be moved linearly to and fro in a recess of the switch housing. In this context, the actuation element 12 can be embodied in a mechanical fashion such that it can latch in the various switched positions and therefore set the setpoint output DC current. Alternatively, the actuation element 12 can also have a rotary knob, a pushbutton key, a select lever, a toggle switch, a rocker switch, a latching switch, a pull switch or a similar mechanical operator control element.
It can be advantageous if a one-way switch, which remains irreversibly activated after an operating position has been set once, is provided for the switch 10. For example, for this purpose a mechanical toothed arrangement or a latching mechanism can be arranged in the interior of a housing of the switch 10, which switch triggers an irreversible self-locking mechanism after actuation. This can be particularly advantageous if just a single setting of a brightness value at the works is desired, and no further setting possibility is to be permitted to a user of the light.
By means of the manual actuation of the actuation element 12 by a user, the user can set the light intensity means or brightness, dependent on the setpoint output DC current of the voltage converter circuit which has been set, of the LED lighting means 22 which are supplied by the voltage converter circuit. In particular, the brightness of the light 20 can therefore be adapted in situ flexibly and in accordance with the requirements by a technician during the installation of the light 20, without special precautions or presettings having to have been implemented by the manufacturer of the light. The switch 20 can be arranged here in the lighting means housing 23 in such a way that in the usual use of the light 20 it is not visible to the viewer, behind the light cover, or cannot be readily accessed. As a result, the aesthetics of the light 20 are not restricted, and at the same time the basic accessibility by an installer, electrical technician or maintenance personnel is not significantly adversely affected.
The switch 10 also has an actuation element 12 in the form of a sliding controller. The sliding controller 12 can be connected in a recess of the switch housing 11 along an adjustment path between a plurality of switch positions. For this purpose, a scale 13 with lettering for the various switch positions can be printed or embossed on the switch housing 11.
As a result of a sliding movement S, the mechanical actuation element 12 can move the connecting bridge 14 to and fro in the switch housing 11 between various positions at which the contact element 14a electrically connects the input contact 15 via the connecting bridge 14 to, in each case, one of the branch contacts 16a, 16b, 16c arranged in the direction of the adjustment path of the mechanical actuation element 12. For example, a second switch position, in which the input contact 15 is electrically conductively connected to the branch contact 16c via the connecting bridge 14, is illustrated in a dashed illustration.
The adjustable electrical connection which is provided by means of the switch 10 is shown in the circuit diagrams in
For example, a DC voltage can be applied between the connections 2a, 2b. Alternatively, an AC voltage can also be applied between the connections 2a, 2b, wherein a further rectifier (not shown explicitly) can then be arranged upstream of the voltage converter 4, with the result that a DC voltage is applied between the nodes 6a and 6b in
The control circuit 1 also comprises a detector circuit 5 which is configured to detect in which of the current-conducting branches a current flows, that is to say which of the branch contacts 16a, 16b, 16c is actively connected to the input contact 15. For this purpose, the detector circuit 5 can determine, for example, the voltage drop of the branch voltages Ua, Ub, Uc across the respective (shunt) resistors 17a, 17b, 17c. Depending on the determined voltage drop of the branch voltages Ua, Ub, Uc, the detector circuit 5 can then generate an actuation signal C for the voltage converter 4, which actuation signal C sets the voltage converter 4 to a predetermined setpoint output current. The predetermined setpoint output currents which can be set by means of the actuation signal C can be adapted, in particular, to desired brightness values of the power consumer 3 which is embodied as an LED lighting means.
Depending on the mechanical operating position of the switch 10, the resistance value which is applied to the branch between the two control inputs 4a and 4b of the voltage converter 4 is therefore varied. As a result of the actuation of the contact maker 18, in each case one of the multiplicity of parallel-connected current-conducting branches is coupled selectively between the two control inputs 4a and 4b of the voltage converter (4).
In both voltage converter circuits in
In the preceding detailed description, various features for improving the stringency of the illustration have been combined in one or more examples. However, it should be clear here that the above description is merely illustrative, and is not of a restrictive nature in any way. It serves to cover all the alternatives, modifications and equivalents of the various features and exemplary embodiments. Many other examples will be clear immediately and directly to a person skilled in the art on the basis of his specialist knowledge in view of the above description.
The exemplary embodiments have been selected and described, in order to be able to present the principles underlying the invention and their application possibilities in practice as well as possible. As a result, specialist personnel can modify and use the invention and its various exemplary embodiments in an optimum way with respect to the intended purpose of use. In the claims and the description, the term “having” is used as a neutral term for the corresponding term “comprising”. Furthermore, a use of the terms “a”, an and one is not intended to basically exclude a multiplicity of features and components which are described in such a way.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102015219367.5 | Oct 2015 | DE | national |