LED TUBE LAMP WITH IMPROVED COMPATIBILITY WITH AN ELECTRICAL BALLAST

Abstract
An LED tube lamp includes a lamp tube, a first external connection terminal and a second external connection terminal coupled to the lamp tube and for receiving an external driving signal; an LED lighting module coupled to the first external connection terminal and configured to receive a signal for emitting light, the signal derived from the first external driving signal; and a ballast interface circuit coupled between the first external connection terminal and the LED lighting module. The ballast interface circuit may be configured such that when the external driving signal is initially input at the first external connection terminal and second external connection terminal, the ballast interface circuit will initially be in an open-circuit state, which prevents the LED tube lamp from emitting light, until the ballast interface circuit enters a conduction state, which conduction state allows a current input at the first external connection terminal/second external connection terminal to flow through the LED lighting module and thereby allows the LED tube lamp to emit light
Description
FIELD

The present disclosure relates to illumination devices, and more particularly to an LED tube lamp with improved compatibility with an electrical ballast.


BACKGROUND

LED (light emitting diode) lighting technology is rapidly developing to replace traditional incandescent and fluorescent lightings. LED tube lamps are mercury-free in comparison with fluorescent tube lamps that need to be filled with inert gas and mercury. Thus, it is not surprising that LED tube lamps are becoming a highly desired illumination option among different available lighting systems used in homes and workplaces, which used to be dominated by traditional lighting options such as compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs) and fluorescent tube lamps. Benefits of LED tube lamps include improved durability and longevity and far less energy consumption; therefore, when taking into account all factors, they would typically be considered as a cost effective lighting option.


Typical LED tube lamps have a lamp tube, a circuit board disposed inside the lamp tube with light sources being mounted on the circuit board, and end caps accompanying a power supply provided at two ends of the lamp tube with the electricity from the power supply transmitted to the light sources through the circuit board. However, existing LED tube lamps have certain drawbacks.


First, the typical circuit board is rigid and allows the entire lamp tube to maintain a straight tube configuration when the lamp tube is partially ruptured or broken, and this gives the user a false impression that the LED tube lamp remains usable and is likely to cause the user to be electrically shocked upon handling or installation of the LED tube lamp.


Second, the rigid circuit board is typically electrically connected with the end caps by way of wire bonding, in which the wires may be easily damaged and even broken due to any move during manufacturing, transportation, and usage of the LED tube lamp and therefore may disable the LED tube lamp.


Further, circuit design of current LED tube lamps mostly doesn't provide suitable solutions for complying with relevant certification standards and for better compatibility with the driving structure using an electronic ballast originally for a fluorescent lamp. For example, since there are usually no electronic components in a fluorescent lamp, it's fairly easy for a fluorescent lamp to be certified under EMI (electromagnetic interference) standards and safety standards for lighting equipment as provided by Underwriters Laboratories (UL). However, there are a considerable number of electronic components in an LED tube lamp, and therefore consideration of the impacts caused by the layout (structure) of the electronic components is important, resulting in difficulties in complying with such standards.


Common main types of electronic ballast include instant-start ballast and program-start ballast. Electronic ballast typically includes a resonant circuit and is designed to match the loading characteristics of a fluorescent lamp in driving the fluorescent lamp. For example, for properly starting a fluorescent lamp, the electronic ballast provides driving methods respectively corresponding to the fluorescent lamp working as a capacitive device before emitting light, and working as a resistive device upon emitting light. But an LED is a nonlinear component with significantly different characteristics from a fluorescent lamp. Therefore, using an LED tube lamp with an electronic ballast impacts the resonant circuit design of the electronic ballast, which may cause a compatibility problem. Generally, a program-start ballast will detect the presence of a filament in a fluorescent lamp, but traditional LED driving circuits cannot support the detection and may cause a failure of the filament detection and thus failure of the starting of the LED tube lamp. Further, electronic ballast is in effect a current source, and when it acts as a power supply of a DC-to-DC converter circuit in an LED tube lamp, problems of overvoltage and overcurrent or undervoltage and undercurrent are likely to occur, resulting in damaging of electronic components in the LED tube lamp or unstable provision of lighting by the LED tube lamp.


Further, the driving of an LED uses a DC driving signal, but the driving signal for a fluorescent lamp is a low-frequency, low-voltage AC signal as provided by an AC powerline, a high-frequency, high-voltage AC signal provided by a ballast, or even a DC signal provided by a battery for emergency lighting applications. Since the voltages and frequency spectrums of these types of signals differ significantly, simply performing a rectification to produce the required DC driving signal in an LED tube lamp is typically not competent at achieving the LED tube lamp's compatibility with traditional driving systems of a fluorescent lamp. For example, recent developments provide a structure and technique for operating a light source, based on e.g. LEDs, by making use of a high frequency fluorescent lamp driver. The structure is an interface circuit for operating the light source and has a string interconnecting two pairs of input terminals, wherein the two pairs of input terminals are for connection to the fluorescent lamp driver. The string includes a switching element for controlling the conductive state of the string, and the structure uses a sensor for sensing the amplitude of a high frequency AC voltage between the two pairs of input terminals and for rendering the switching element conductive when the amplitude of the high frequency AC voltage reaches a predetermined value. This is just one way to improve the compatibility of the LED tube lamp with traditional driving systems of a fluorescent lamp.


Accordingly, the present disclosure and its embodiments are herein provided.


SUMMARY

It's specially noted that the present disclosure may actually include one or more inventions claimed currently or not yet claimed, and for avoiding confusion due to unnecessarily distinguishing between those possible inventions at the stage of preparing the specification, the possible plurality of inventions herein may be collectively referred to as “the (present) invention” herein.


Various embodiments are summarized in this section, and are described with respect to the “present invention,” which terminology is used to describe certain presently disclosed embodiments, whether claimed or not, and is not necessarily an exhaustive description of all possible embodiments, but rather is merely a summary of certain embodiments. Certain of the embodiments described below as various aspects of the “present invention” can be combined in different manners to form an LED tube lamp or a portion thereof. As such, the term “present invention” used in this specification is not intended to limit the claims in any way or to indicate that any particular embodiment or component is required to be included in a particular claim, and is intended to be synonymous with the “present disclosure.”


The present disclosure provides a novel LED tube lamp, and aspects thereof.


The present disclosure provides, in some embodiments, an LED tube lamp including a lamp tube, a first external connection terminal and a second external connection terminal coupled to the lamp tube and for receiving an external driving signal; a first rectifying circuit coupled to the first external connection terminal and the second external connection terminal and configured to rectify the external driving signal to produce a rectified signal; a filtering circuit coupled to the first rectifying circuit and configured to filter the rectified signal to produce a filtered signal; an LED lighting module coupled to the filtering circuit and configured to receive the filtered signal for emitting light; and a ballast interface circuit coupled to the first rectifying circuit. In this LED tube lamp, the ballast interface circuit is configured such that when the external driving signal is initially input at the first external connection terminal and second external connection terminal, the ballast interface circuit will initially be in an open-circuit state, which prevents the LED tube lamp from emitting light, until the ballast interface circuit enters a conduction state, which conduction state allows a current input at the first external connection terminal/second external connection terminal to flow through the LED lighting module and thereby allows the LED tube lamp to emit light.


In some embodiments, the first rectifying circuit includes a rectifying unit and a terminal adapter circuit. The rectifying unit is coupled to the terminal adapter circuit and is configured to perform half-wave rectification, and the terminal adapter circuit is configured to transmit the external driving signal received via at least one of the first pin and the second pin.


The filtering circuit may be coupled to the first rectifying circuit may be configured to filter the rectified signal to produce a filtered signal. The LED lighting module may be coupled to the filtering circuit and may be configured to receive the filtered signal for emitting light. And the ballast interface circuit may be coupled between the rectifying unit and the terminal adapter circuit.


According to certain embodiments, an LED tube lamp includes a lamp tube, a first external connection terminal and a second external connection terminal coupled to the lamp tube and for receiving an external driving signal; an LED lighting module coupled to the first external connection terminal and configured to receive a signal for emitting light, the signal derived from the first external driving signal; and a ballast interface circuit coupled between the first external connection terminal and the LED lighting module. The ballast interface circuit may be configured such that when the external driving signal is initially input at the first external connection terminal and second external connection terminal, the ballast interface circuit will initially be in an open-circuit state, which prevents the LED tube lamp from emitting light, until the ballast interface circuit enters a conduction state, which conduction state allows a current input at the first external connection terminal/second external connection terminal to flow through the LED lighting module and thereby allows the LED tube lamp to emit light.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 is a sectional view schematically illustrating an LED light strip that includes a bendable circuit sheet with ends thereof passing across a transition region of a lamp tube of an LED tube lamp to be soldering bonded to the output terminals of the power supply according to one embodiment;



FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view schematically illustrating a bi-layered structure of a bendable circuit sheet of an LED light strip of an LED tube lamp according to an embodiment;



FIG. 3 is a perspective view schematically illustrating the soldering pad of a bendable circuit sheet of an LED light strip for soldering connection with a printed circuit board of a power supply of an LED tube lamp according to one embodiment;



FIG. 4 is a perspective view schematically illustrating a circuit board assembly composed of a bendable circuit sheet of an LED light strip and a printed circuit board of a power supply according to another embodiment;



FIG. 5 is a perspective view schematically illustrating another exemplary arrangement of the circuit board assembly of FIG. 4;



FIG. 6 is a perspective view schematically illustrating a bendable circuit sheet of an LED light strip formed with two conductive wiring layers according to another embodiment;



FIG. 7A is a block diagram of an exemplary power supply system for an LED tube lamp according to some embodiments;



FIG. 7B is a block diagram of an exemplary power supply system for an LED tube lamp according to some embodiments;



FIG. 7C is a block diagram showing elements of an exemplary LED lamp according to some embodiments;



FIG. 7D is a block diagram of an exemplary power supply system for an LED tube lamp according to some embodiments;



FIG. 7E is a block diagram showing elements of an LED lamp according to some embodiments;



FIG. 8A is a schematic diagram of a rectifying circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 8B is a schematic diagram of a rectifying circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 8C is a schematic diagram of a rectifying circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 8D is a schematic diagram of a rectifying circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 9A is a schematic diagram of a terminal adapter circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 9B is a schematic diagram of a terminal adapter circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 9C is a schematic diagram of a terminal adapter circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 9D is a schematic diagram of a terminal adapter circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 10A is a block diagram of a filtering circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 10B is a schematic diagram of a filtering unit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 10C is a schematic diagram of a filtering unit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 10D is a schematic diagram of a filtering unit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 10E is a schematic diagram of a filtering unit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 11A is a schematic diagram of an LED module according to some embodiments;



FIG. 11B is a schematic diagram of an LED module according to some embodiments;



FIG. 11C is a plan view of a circuit layout of an LED module according to some embodiments;



FIG. 11D is a plan view of a circuit layout of an LED module according to some embodiments;



FIG. 11E is a plan view of a circuit layout of an LED module according to some embodiments;



FIG. 12A is a block diagram of an LED lamp according to some embodiments;



FIG. 12B is a block diagram of a driving circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 12C is a schematic diagram of a driving circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 12D is a schematic diagram of a driving circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 12E is a schematic diagram of a driving circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 12F is a schematic diagram of a driving circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 12G is a block diagram of a driving circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 12H is a graph illustrating the relationship between the voltage Vin and the objective current Iout according to certain embodiments;



FIG. 13A is a block diagram of an LED lamp according to some embodiments;



FIG. 13B is a block diagram of an LED lamp according to some embodiments;



FIG. 13C illustrates an arrangement with a ballast-compatible circuit in an LED lamp according to some embodiments;



FIG. 13D is a block diagram of an LED lamp according to some embodiments;



FIG. 13E is a block diagram of an LED lamp according to some embodiments;



FIG. 13F is a schematic diagram of a ballast-compatible circuit according to some embodiments;



FIG. 13G is a block diagram of an exemplary power supply module in an LED lamp according to some embodiments;



FIG. 13H is a schematic diagram of a ballast-compatible circuit according to some embodiments;





DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The present disclosure provides a novel LED tube lamp. The present disclosure will now be described in the following embodiments with reference to the drawings. The following descriptions of various embodiments of this invention are presented herein for purpose of illustration and giving examples only. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to be limited to the precise form disclosed. These example embodiments are just that—examples—and many implementations and variations are possible that do not require the details provided herein. It should also be emphasized that the disclosure provides details of alternative examples, but such listing of alternatives is not exhaustive. Furthermore, any consistency of detail between various examples should not be interpreted as requiring such detail—it is impracticable to list every possible variation for every feature described herein. The language of the claims should be referenced in determining the requirements of the invention.


In the drawings, the size and relative sizes of components may be exaggerated for clarity. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout.


The terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only and is not intended to be limiting of the invention. As used herein, the singular forms “a”, “an” and “the” are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. As used herein, the term “and/or” includes any and all combinations of one or more of the associated listed items and may be abbreviated as “/”.


It will be understood that, although the terms first, second, third etc. may be used herein to describe various elements, components, regions, layers, or steps, these elements, components, regions, layers, and/or steps should not be limited by these terms. Unless the context indicates otherwise, these terms are only used to distinguish one element, component, region, layer, or step from another element, component, region, or step, for example as a naming convention. Thus, a first element, component, region, layer, or step discussed below in one section of the specification could be termed a second element, component, region, layer, or step in another section of the specification or in the claims without departing from the teachings of the present invention. In addition, in certain cases, even if a term is not described using “first,” “second,” etc., in the specification, it may still be referred to as “first” or “second” in a claim in order to distinguish different claimed elements from each other.


It will be further understood that the terms “comprises” and/or “comprising,” or “includes” and/or “including” when used in this specification, specify the presence of stated features, regions, integers, steps, operations, elements, and/or components, but do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, regions, integers, steps, operations, elements, components, and/or groups thereof.


It will be understood that when an element is referred to as being “connected” or “coupled” to or “on” another element, it can be directly connected or coupled to or on the other element or intervening elements may be present. In contrast, when an element is referred to as being “directly connected” or “directly coupled,” or “immediately connected” or “immediately coupled” to another element, there are no intervening elements present. Other words used to describe the relationship between elements should be interpreted in a like fashion (e.g., “between” versus “directly between,” “adjacent” versus “directly adjacent,” etc.). However, the term “contact,” as used herein refers to a direct connection (i.e., touching) unless the context indicates otherwise.


Embodiments described herein will be described referring to plan views and/or cross-sectional views by way of ideal schematic views. Accordingly, the exemplary views may be modified depending on manufacturing technologies and/or tolerances. Therefore, the disclosed embodiments are not limited to those shown in the views, but include modifications in configuration formed on the basis of manufacturing processes. Therefore, regions exemplified in figures may have schematic properties, and shapes of regions shown in figures may exemplify specific shapes of regions of elements to which aspects of the invention are not limited.


Spatially relative terms, such as “beneath,” “below,” “lower,” “above,” “upper” and the like, may be used herein for ease of description to describe one element's or feature's relationship to another element(s) or feature(s) as illustrated in the figures. It will be understood that the spatially relative terms are intended to encompass different orientations of the device in use or operation in addition to the orientation depicted in the figures. For example, if the device in the figures is turned over, elements described as “below” or “beneath” other elements or features would then be oriented “above” the other elements or features. Thus, the term “below” can encompass both an orientation of above and below. The device may be otherwise oriented (rotated 90 degrees or at other orientations) and the spatially relative descriptors used herein interpreted accordingly.


Terms such as “same,” “equal,” “planar,” or “coplanar,” as used herein when referring to orientation, layout, location, shapes, sizes, amounts, or other measures do not necessarily mean an exactly identical orientation, layout, location, shape, size, amount, or other measure, but are intended to encompass nearly identical orientation, layout, location, shapes, sizes, amounts, or other measures within acceptable variations that may occur, for example, due to manufacturing processes. The term “substantially” may be used herein to emphasize this meaning, unless the context or other statements indicate otherwise. For example, items described as “substantially the same,” “substantially equal,” or “substantially planar,” may be exactly the same, equal, or planar, or may be the same, equal, or planar within acceptable variations that may occur, for example, due to manufacturing processes.


Terms such as “about” or “approximately” may reflect sizes, orientations, or layouts that vary only in a small relative manner, and/or in a way that does not significantly alter the operation, functionality, or structure of certain elements. For example, a range from “about 0.1 to about 1” may encompass a range such as a 0%-5% deviation around 0.1 and a 0% to 5% deviation around 1, especially if such deviation maintains the same effect as the listed range.


Unless otherwise defined, all terms (including technical and scientific terms) used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which this disclosure belongs. It will be further understood that terms, such as those defined in commonly used dictionaries, should be interpreted as having a meaning that is consistent with their meaning in the context of the relevant art and/or the present application, and will not be interpreted in an idealized or overly formal sense unless expressly so defined herein.


As used herein, items described as being “electrically connected” are configured such that an electrical signal can be passed from one item to the other. Therefore, a passive electrically conductive component (e.g., a wire, pad, internal electrical line, etc.) physically connected to a passive electrically insulative component (e.g., a prepreg layer of a printed circuit board, an electrically insulative adhesive connecting two devices, an electrically insulative underfill or mold layer, etc.) is not electrically connected to that component. Moreover, items that are “directly electrically connected,” to each other are electrically connected through one or more passive elements, such as, for example, wires, pads, internal electrical lines, resistors, etc. As such, directly electrically connected components do not include components electrically connected through active elements, such as transistors or diodes. Two immediately adjacent conductive components may be described as directly electrically connected and directly physically connected.


Referring to FIG. 1 and FIG. 6, an LED tube lamp in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention includes a lamp tube 1, which may be formed of glass and may be referred to herein as a glass lamp tube 1, two end caps respectively disposed at two ends of the glass lamp tube 1, a power supply 5, and an LED light strip 2 disposed inside the glass lamp tube 1. The glass lamp tube 1 extending in a first direction along a length of the glass lamp tube 1 includes a main body region, a rear end region, and a transition region connecting the main body region and the rear end region, wherein the main body region and the rear end region are substantially parallel. As shown in the embodiment of FIG. 1, the bendable circuit sheet 2 (as an embodiment of the light strip 2) passes through a transition region to be soldered or traditionally wire-bonded with the power supply 5, and then the end cap of the LED tube lamp is adhered to the transition region, respectively to form a complete LED tube lamp. As discussed herein, a transition region of the lamp tube refers to regions outside a central portion of the lamp tube and inside terminal ends of the lamp tube. For example, a central portion of the lamp tube may have a constant diameter, and each transition region between the central portion and a terminal end of the lamp tube may have a changing diameter (e.g., at least part of the transition region may become more narrow moving in a direction from the central portion to the terminal end of the lamp tube). End caps including the power supply may be disposed at the terminal ends of the lamp tube, and may cover part of the transition region.


With reference to FIG. 2, in this embodiment, the LED light strip 2 is fixed by the adhesive sheet 4 to an inner circumferential surface of the lamp tube 1, so as to increase the light illumination angle of the LED tube lamp and broaden the viewing angle to be greater than 330 degrees.


In one embodiment, the inner peripheral surface or the outer circumferential surface of the glass made lamp tube 1 is coated with an adhesive film such that the broken pieces are adhered to the adhesive film when the glass made lamp tube is broken. Therefore, the lamp tube 1 would not be penetrated to form a through hole connecting the inside and outside of the lamp tube 1 and this helps prevent a user from touching any charged object inside the lamp tube 1 to avoid electrical shock. In addition, in some embodiments, the adhesive film is able to diffuse light and allows the light to transmit such that the light uniformity and the light transmittance of the entire LED tube lamp increases. The adhesive film can be used in combination with the adhesive sheet 4, an insulation adhesive sheet, and an optical adhesive sheet to constitute various embodiments. As the LED light strip 2 is configured to be a bendable circuit sheet, no coated adhesive film is thereby required.


In some embodiments, the light strip 2 may be an elongated aluminum plate, FR 4 board, or a bendable circuit sheet. When the lamp tube 1 is made of glass, adopting a rigid aluminum plate or FR4 board would make a broken lamp tube, e.g., broken into two parts, remain a straight shape so that a user may be under a false impression that the LED tube lamp is still usable and fully functional, and it is easy for him to incur electric shock upon handling or installation of the LED tube lamp. Because of added flexibility and bendability of the flexible substrate for the LED light strip 2, the problem faced by the aluminum plate, FR4 board, or conventional 3-layered flexible board having inadequate flexibility and bendability, are thereby addressed. In certain embodiments, a bendable circuit sheet is adopted as the LED light strip 2 because such an LED light strip 2 would not allow a ruptured or broken lamp tube to maintain a straight shape and therefore would instantly inform the user of the disability of the LED tube lamp to avoid possibly incurred electrical shock. The following are further descriptions of a bendable circuit sheet that may be used as the LED light strip 2.


Referring to FIG. 2, in one embodiment, the LED light strip 2 includes a bendable circuit sheet having a conductive wiring layer 2a and a dielectric layer 2b that are arranged in a stacked manner, wherein the wiring layer 2a and the dielectric layer 2b have same areas. The LED light source 202 is disposed on one surface of the wiring layer 2a, the dielectric layer 2b is disposed on the other surface of the wiring layer 2a that is away from the LED light sources 202 (e.g., a second, opposite surface from the first surface on which the LED light source 202 is disposed). The wiring layer 2a is electrically connected to the power supply 5 to carry direct current (DC) signals. Meanwhile, the surface of the dielectric layer 2b away from the wiring layer 2a (e.g., a second surface of the dielectric layer 2b opposite a first surface facing the wiring layer 2a) is fixed to the inner circumferential surface of the lamp tube 1 by means of the adhesive sheet 4. The portion of the dielectric layer 2b fixed to the inner circumferential surface of the lamp tube 1 may substantially conform to the shape of the inner circumferential surface of the lamp tube 1. The wiring layer 2a can be a metal layer or a power supply layer including wires such as copper wires.


In another embodiment, the outer surface of the wiring layer 2a or the dielectric layer 2b may be covered with a circuit protective layer made of an ink with function of resisting soldering and increasing reflectivity. Alternatively, the dielectric layer can be omitted and the wiring layer can be directly bonded to the inner circumferential surface of the lamp tube, and the outer surface of the wiring layer 2a may be coated with the circuit protective layer. Whether the wiring layer 2a has a one-layered, or two-layered structure, the circuit protective layer can be adopted. In some embodiments, the circuit protective layer is disposed only on one side/surface of the LED light strip 2, such as the surface having the LED light source 202. In some embodiments, the bendable circuit sheet is a one-layered structure made of just one wiring layer 2a, or a two-layered structure made of one wiring layer 2a and one dielectric layer 2b, and thus is more bendable or flexible to curl when compared with the conventional three-layered flexible substrate (one dielectric layer sandwiched with two wiring layers). As a result, the bendable circuit sheet of the LED light strip 2 can be installed in a lamp tube with a customized shape or non-tubular shape, and fitly mounted to the inner surface of the lamp tube. The bendable circuit sheet closely mounted to the inner surface of the lamp tube is preferable in some cases. In addition, using fewer layers of the bendable circuit sheet improves the heat dissipation and lowers the material cost.


Nevertheless, the bendable circuit sheet is not limited to being one-layered or two-layered; in other embodiments, the bendable circuit sheet may include multiple layers of the wiring layers 2a and multiple layers of the dielectric layers 2b, in which the dielectric layers 2b and the wiring layers 2a are sequentially stacked in a staggered manner, respectively. These stacked layers may be between the outermost wiring layer 2a (with respect to the inner circumferential surface of the lamp tube), which has the LED light source 202 disposed thereon, and the inner circumferential surface of the lamp tube, and may be electrically connected to the power supply 5. Moreover, in some embodiments, the length of the bendable circuit sheet is greater than the length of the lamp tube, or at least greater than a central portion of the lamp tube between two transition regions (e.g., where the circumference of the lamp tube narrows) on either end.


Referring to FIG. 1, FIG. 3, and FIG. 6, in some embodiments, the LED light strip 2 is disposed inside the glass lamp tube 1 with a plurality of LED light sources 202 mounted on the LED light strip 2. The LED light strip 2 includes a bendable circuit sheet electrically connecting the LED light sources 202 with the power supply 5. The power supply 5 may include various elements for providing power to the LED light strip 2. For example, the elements may include power converters or other circuit elements for providing power to the LED light strip 2. In some embodiments, the length of the bendable circuit sheet is larger than the length of the glass lamp tube 1, and the bendable circuit sheet has a first end and a second end opposite to each other along the first direction, and at least one of the first and second ends of the bendable circuit sheet is bent away from the glass lamp tube 1 to form a freely extending end portion 21 along a longitudinal direction of the glass lamp tube 1. In some embodiments, if two power supplies 5 are adopted, then the other of the first and second ends might also be bent away from the glass lamp tube 1 to form another freely extending end portion 21 along the longitudinal direction of the glass lamp tube 1. The freely extending end portion 21 is electrically connected to the power supply 5. Specifically, in some embodiments, the power supply 5 has soldering pads “a” which are capable of being soldered with the soldering pads “b” of the freely extending end portion 21 by soldering material “g”.


Referring to FIG. 6, in one embodiment, the LED light strip 2 includes a bendable circuit sheet having in sequence a first wiring layer 2a, a dielectric layer 2b, and a second wiring layer 2c. The thickness of the second wiring layer 2c (e.g., in a direction in which the layers 2a through 2c are stacked) is greater than that of the first wiring layer 2a, and the length of the LED light strip 2 is greater than that of the lamp tube 1, or at least greater than a central portion of the lamp tube between two transition regions (e.g., where the circumference of the lamp tube narrows) on either end. The end region of the light strip 2 extending beyond the end portion of the lamp tube 1 without disposition of the light source 202 (e.g., an end portion without light sources 202 disposed thereon) may be formed with two separate through holes 203 and 204 to respectively electrically communicate the first wiring layer 2a and the second wiring layer 2c. The through holes 203 and 204 are not communicated to each other to avoid short.


In this way, the greater thickness of the second wiring layer 2c allows the second wiring layer 2c to support the first wiring layer 2a and the dielectric layer 2b, and meanwhile allow the LED light strip 2 to be mounted onto the inner circumferential surface without being liable to shift or deform, and thus the yield rate of product can be improved. In addition, the first wiring layer 2a and the second wiring layer 2c are in electrical communication such that the circuit layout of the first wiring later 2a can be extended downward to the second wiring layer 2c to reach the circuit layout of the entire LED light strip 2. Moreover, since the land for the circuit layout becomes two-layered, the area of each single layer and therefore the width of the LED light strip 2 can be reduced such that more LED light strips 2 can be put on a production line to increase productivity.


Furthermore, the first wiring layer 2a and the second wiring layer 2c of the end region of the LED light strip 2 that extends beyond the end portion of the lamp tube 1 without disposition of the light source 202 can be used to accomplish the circuit layout of a power supply module so that the power supply module can be directly disposed on the bendable circuit sheet of the LED light strip 2.


The power supply 5 according to some embodiments of the present invention can be formed on a single printed circuit board provided with a power supply module as depicted for example in FIG. 1.


In still another embodiment, the connection between the power supply 5 and the LED light strip 2 may be accomplished via tin soldering, rivet bonding, or welding. One way to secure the LED light strip 2 is to provide the adhesive sheet 4 at one side thereof and adhere the LED light strip 2 to the inner surface of the lamp tube 1 via the adhesive sheet 4. Two ends of the LED light strip 2 can be either fixed to or detached from the inner surface of the lamp tube 1.


In case where two ends of the LED light strip 2 are fixed to the inner surface of the lamp tube and that the LED light strip 2 is connected to the power supply 5 via wire-bonding, any movement in subsequent transportation is likely to cause the bonded wires to break. Therefore, a useful option for the connection between the light strip 2 and the power supply 5 could be soldering. Specifically, referring to FIG. 1, the ends of the LED light strip 2 including the bendable circuit sheet are arranged to pass over the strengthened transition region and be directly solder bonded to an output terminal of the power supply 5. This may improve the product quality by avoiding using wires and/or wire bonding.


Referring to FIG. 3, an output terminal of the printed circuit board of the power supply 5 may have soldering pads “a” provided with an amount of solder (e.g., tin solder) with a thickness sufficient to later form a solder joint. Correspondingly, the ends of the LED light strip 2 may have soldering pads “b”. The soldering pads “a” on the output terminal of the printed circuit board of the power supply 5 are soldered to the soldering pads “b” on the LED light strip 2 via the tin solder on the soldering pads “a”. The soldering pads “a” and the soldering pads “b” may be face to face during soldering such that the connection between the LED light strip 2 and the printed circuit board of the power supply 5 is the most firm. However, this kind of soldering typically includes that a thermo-compression head presses on the rear surface of the LED light strip 2 and heats the tin solder, i.e. the LED light strip 2 intervenes between the thermo-compression head and the tin solder, and therefore may easily cause reliability problems.


Referring again to FIG. 3, two ends of the LED light strip 2 detached from the inner surface of the lamp tube 1 are formed as freely extending portions 21, while most of the LED light strip 2 is attached and secured to the inner surface of the lamp tube 1. One of the freely extending portions 21 has the soldering pads “b” as mentioned above. Upon assembling of the LED tube lamp, the freely extending end portions 21 along with the soldered connection of the printed circuit board of the power supply 5 and the LED light strip 2 would be coiled, curled up or deformed to be fittingly accommodated inside the lamp tube 1. When the bendable circuit sheet of the LED light strip 2 includes in sequence the first wiring layer 2a, the dielectric layer 2b, and the second wiring layer 2c as shown in FIG. 6, the freely extending end portions 21 can be used to accomplish the connection between the first wiring layer 2a and the second wiring layer 2c and arrange the circuit layout of the power supply 5.


In this embodiment, during the connection of the LED light strip 2 and the power supply 5, the soldering pads “b” and the soldering pads “a” and the LED light sources 202 are on surfaces facing toward the same direction and the soldering pads “b” on the LED light strip 2 are each formed with a through hole such that the soldering pads “b” and the soldering pads “a” communicate with each other via the through holes. When the freely extending end portions 21 are deformed due to contraction or curling up, the soldered connection of the printed circuit board of the power supply 5 and the LED light strip 2 exerts a lateral tension on the power supply 5. Furthermore, the soldered connection of the printed circuit board of the power supply 5 and the LED light strip 2 also exerts a downward tension on the power supply 5 when compared with the situation where the soldering pads “a” of the power supply 5 and the soldering pads “b” of the LED light strip 2 are face to face. This downward tension on the power supply 5 comes from the tin solders inside the through holes and forms a stronger and more secure electrical connection between the LED light strip 2 and the power supply 5. As described above, the freely extending portions 21 may be different from a fixed portion of the LED light strip 2 in that they fixed portion may conform to the shape of the inner surface of the lamp tube 1 and may be fixed thereto, while the freely extending portion 21 may have a shape that does not conform to the shape of the lamp tube 1. For example, there may be a space between an inner surface of the lamp tube 1 and the freely extending portion 21. As shown in FIG. 3, the freely extending portion 21 may be bent away from the lamp tube 1.


The through hole communicates the soldering pad “a” with the soldering pad “b” so that the solder (e.g., tin solder) on the soldering pads “a” passes through the through holes and finally reach the soldering pads “b”. A smaller through hole would make it difficult for the tin solder to pass. The tin solder accumulates around the through holes upon exiting the through holes and condenses to form a solder ball “g” with a larger diameter than that of the through holes upon condensing. Such a solder ball “g” functions as a rivet to further increase the stability of the electrical connection between the soldering pads “a” on the power supply 5 and the soldering pads “b” on the LED light strip 2.


Referring to FIGS. 4 and 5, in another embodiment, the LED light strip 2 and the power supply 5 may be connected by utilizing a circuit board assembly 25 instead of solder bonding. The circuit board assembly 25 has a long circuit sheet 251 and a short circuit board 253 that are adhered to each other with the short circuit board 253 being adjacent to the side edge of the long circuit sheet 251. The short circuit board 253 may be provided with power supply module 250 to form the power supply 5. The short circuit board 253 is stiffer or more rigid than the long circuit sheet 251 to be able to support the power supply module 250.


The long circuit sheet 251 may be the bendable circuit sheet of the LED light strip including a wiring layer 2a as shown in FIG. 2. The wiring layer 2a of the long circuit sheet 251 and the power supply module 250 may be electrically connected in various manners depending on the demand in practice. As shown in FIG. 4, the power supply module 250 and the long circuit sheet 251 having the wiring layer 2a on one surface are on the same side of the short circuit board 253 such that the power supply module 250 is directly connected to the long circuit sheet 251. As shown in FIG. 5, alternatively, the power supply module 250 and the long circuit sheet 251 including the wiring layer 2a on one surface are on opposite sides of the short circuit board 253 such that the power supply module 250 is directly connected to the short circuit board 253 and indirectly connected to the wiring layer 2a of the LED light strip 2 by way of the short circuit board 253.


As shown in FIG. 4, in one embodiment, the long circuit sheet 251 and the short circuit board 253 are adhered together first, and the power supply module 250 is subsequently mounted on the wiring layer 2a of the long circuit sheet 251 serving as the LED light strip 2. The long circuit sheet 251 of the LED light strip 2 herein is not limited to include only one wiring layer 2a and may further include another wiring layer such as the wiring layer 2c shown in FIG. 6. The light sources 202 are disposed on the wiring layer 2a of the LED light strip 2 and electrically connected to the power supply 5 by way of the wiring layer 2a. As shown in FIG. 5, in another embodiment, the long circuit sheet 251 of the LED light strip 2 may include a wiring layer 2a and a dielectric layer 2b. The dielectric layer 2b may be adhered to the short circuit board 253 first and the wiring layer 2a is subsequently adhered to the dielectric layer 2b and extends to the short circuit board 253. All these embodiments are within the scope of applying the circuit board assembly concept of the present invention.


In the above-mentioned embodiments, the short circuit board 253 may have a length generally of about 15 mm to about 40 mm and in some preferable embodiments about 19 mm to about 36 mm, while the long circuit sheet 251 may have a length generally of about 800 mm to about 2800 mm and in some embodiments of about 1200 mm to about 2400 mm. A ratio of the length of the short circuit board 253 to the length of the long circuit sheet 251 ranges from, for example, about 1:20 to about 1:200.


When the ends of the LED light strip 2 are not fixed on the inner surface of the lamp tube 1, the connection between the LED light strip 2 and the power supply 5 via soldering bonding would likely not firmly support the power supply 5, and it may be necessary to dispose the power supply 5 inside the end cap. For example, a longer end cap to have enough space for receiving the power supply 5 may be used. However, this will reduce the length of the lamp tube under the prerequisite that the total length of the LED tube lamp is fixed according to the product standard, and may therefore decrease the effective illuminating areas.


Next, examples of the circuit design and using of the power supply module 250 are described as follows.



FIG. 7A is a block diagram of a power supply system for an LED tube lamp according to an embodiment.


Referring to FIG. 7A, an AC power supply 508 is used to supply an AC supply signal, and may be an AC powerline with a voltage rating, for example, of 100-277 volts and a frequency rating, for example, of 50 or 60 Hz. A lamp driving circuit 505 receives and then converts the AC supply signal into an AC driving signal as an external driving signal (external, in that it is external to the LED tube lamp). Lamp driving circuit 505 may be for example an electronic ballast used to convert the AC powerline into a high-frequency high-voltage AC driving signal. Common types of electronic ballast include instant-start ballast, program-start or rapid-start ballast, etc., which may all be applicable to the LED tube lamp of the present disclosure. The voltage of the AC driving signal is in some embodiments higher than 300 volts, and is in some embodiments in the range of about 400-700 volts. The frequency of the AC driving signal is in some embodiments higher than 10 k Hz, and is in some embodiments in the range of about 20 k-50 k Hz. The LED tube lamp 500 receives an external driving signal and is thus driven to emit light via the LED light sources 202. In one embodiment, the external driving signal comprises the AC driving signal from lamp driving circuit 505. In one embodiment, LED tube lamp 500 is in a driving environment in which it is power-supplied at only one end cap having two conductive pins 501 and 502, which are coupled to lamp driving circuit 505 to receive the AC driving signal. The two conductive pins 501 and 502 may be electrically and physically connected to, either directly or indirectly, the lamp driving circuit 505. The two conductive pins 501 and 502 may be formed, for example, of a conductive material such as a metal. The conductive pins may have, for example, a protruding rod-shape, or a ball shape. Conductive pins such as 501 and 502 may be generally referred to as external connection terminals, for connecting the LED tube lamp 500 to an external socket. The external connection terminals may have an elongated shape, a ball shape, or in some cases may even be flat or may have a female-type connection for connecting to protruding male connectors in a lamp socket.


It is worth noting that lamp driving circuit 505 may be omitted and is therefore depicted by a dotted line. In one embodiment, if lamp driving circuit 505 is omitted, AC power supply 508 is directly connected to pins 501 and 502, which then receive the AC supply signal as an external driving signal.


In addition to the above use with a single-end power supply, LED tube lamp 500 may instead be used with a dual-end power supply to one pin at each of the two ends of an LED lamp tube. FIG. 7B is a block diagram of a power supply system for an LED tube lamp according to one embodiment. Referring to FIG. 7B, compared to that shown in FIG. 7A, pins 501 and 502 are respectively disposed at the two opposite end caps of LED tube lamp 500, forming a single pin at each end of LED tube lamp 500, with other components and their functions being the same as those in FIG. 7A.



FIG. 7C is a block diagram showing elements of an LED lamp according to one embodiment. Referring to FIG. 7C, the power supply module 250 of the LED lamp may include a rectifying circuit 510 and a filtering circuit 520, and may also include some components of an LED lighting module 530. Rectifying circuit 510 is coupled to pins 501 and 502 to receive and then rectify an external driving signal, so as to output a rectified signal at output terminals 511 and 512. The external driving signal may be the AC driving signal or the AC supply signal described with reference to FIGS. 7A and 7B, or may even be a DC signal, which in some embodiments does not alter the LED lamp of the present invention. Filtering circuit 520 is coupled to the first rectifying circuit for filtering the rectified signal to produce a filtered signal. For instance, filtering circuit 520 is coupled to terminals 511 and 512 to receive and then filter the rectified signal, so as to output a filtered signal at output terminals 521 and 522. LED lighting module 530 is coupled to filtering circuit 520, to receive the filtered signal for emitting light. For instance, LED lighting module 530 may include a circuit coupled to terminals 521 and 522 to receive the filtered signal and thereby to drive an LED unit (e.g., LED light sources 202 on an LED light strip 2, as discussed above, and not shown in FIG. 7C). For example, as described in more detail below, LED lighting module 530 may include a driving circuit coupled to an LED module to emit light. Details of these operations are described in below descriptions of certain embodiments.


It is worth noting that although there are two output terminals 511 and 512 and two output terminals 521 and 522 in embodiments of these Figs., in practice the number of ports or terminals for coupling between rectifying circuit 510, filtering circuit 520, and LED lighting module 530 may be one or more depending on the needs of signal transmission between the circuits or devices.


In addition, the power supply module of the LED lamp described in FIG. 7C, and embodiments of the power supply module of an LED lamp described below, may each be used in the LED tube lamp 500 in FIGS. 7A and 7B, and may instead be used in any other type of LED lighting structure having two conductive pins used to conduct power, such as LED light bulbs, personal area lights (PAL), plug-in LED lamps with different types of bases (such as types of PL-S, PL-D, PL-T, PL-L, etc.), etc.



FIG. 7D is a block diagram of a power supply system for an LED tube lamp according to an embodiment. Referring to FIG. 7D, an AC power supply 508 is used to supply an AC supply signal. A lamp driving circuit 505 receives and then converts the AC supply signal into an AC driving signal. An LED tube lamp 500 receives an AC driving signal from lamp driving circuit 505 and is thus driven to emit light. In this embodiment, LED tube lamp 500 is power-supplied at its both end caps respectively having two pins 501 and 502 and two pins 503 and 504, which are coupled to lamp driving circuit 505 to concurrently receive the AC driving signal to drive an LED unit (not shown) in LED tube lamp 500 to emit light. AC power supply 508 may be, e.g., the AC powerline, and lamp driving circuit 505 may be a stabilizer or an electronic ballast.



FIG. 7E is a block diagram showing components of an LED lamp according to an embodiment. Referring to FIG. 7E, the power supply module of the LED lamp includes a rectifying circuit 510, a filtering circuit 520, and a rectifying circuit 540, and may also include some components of an LED lighting module 530. Rectifying circuit 510 is coupled to pins 501 and 502 to receive and then rectify an external driving signal conducted by pins 501 and 502. Rectifying circuit 540 is coupled to pins 503 and 504 to receive and then rectify an external driving signal conducted by pins 503 and 504. Therefore, the power supply module of the LED lamp may include two rectifying circuits 510 and 540 configured to output a rectified signal at output terminals 511 and 512. Filtering circuit 520 is coupled to terminals 511 and 512 to receive and then filter the rectified signal, so as to output a filtered signal at output terminals 521 and 522. LED lighting module 530 is coupled to terminals 521 and 522 to receive the filtered signal and thereby to drive an LED unit (not shown) of LED lighting module 530 to emit light.


The power supply module of the LED lamp in this embodiment of FIG. 7E may be used in LED tube lamp 500 with a dual-end power supply in FIG. 7D. It is worth noting that since the power supply module of the LED lamp comprises rectifying circuits 510 and 540, the power supply module of the LED lamp may be used in LED tube lamps 500 with a single-end power supply in FIGS. 7A and 7B, to receive an external driving signal (such as the AC supply signal or the AC driving signal described above). The power supply module of an LED lamp in this embodiment and other embodiments herein may also be used with a DC driving signal.



FIG. 8A is a schematic diagram of a rectifying circuit according to an embodiment. Referring to FIG. 8A, rectifying circuit 610 includes rectifying diodes 611, 612, 613, and 614, configured to full-wave rectify a received signal. Diode 611 has an anode connected to output terminal 512, and a cathode connected to pin 502. Diode 612 has an anode connected to output terminal 512, and a cathode connected to pin 501. Diode 613 has an anode connected to pin 502, and a cathode connected to output terminal 511. Diode 614 has an anode connected to pin 501, and a cathode connected to output terminal 511.


When pins 501 and 502 (generally referred to as terminals) receive an AC signal, rectifying circuit 610 operates as follows. During the connected AC signal's positive half cycle, the AC signal is input through pin 501, diode 614, and output terminal 511 in sequence, and later output through output terminal 512, diode 611, and pin 502 in sequence. During the connected AC signal's negative half cycle, the AC signal is input through pin 502, diode 613, and output terminal 511 in sequence, and later output through output terminal 512, diode 612, and pin 501 in sequence. Therefore, during the connected AC signal's full cycle, the positive pole of the rectified signal produced by rectifying circuit 610 remains at output terminal 511, and the negative pole of the rectified signal remains at output terminal 512. Accordingly, the rectified signal produced or output by rectifying circuit 610 is a full-wave rectified signal.


When pins 501 and 502 are coupled to a DC power supply to receive a DC signal, rectifying circuit 610 operates as follows. When pin 501 is coupled to the anode of the DC supply and pin 502 to the cathode of the DC supply, the DC signal is input through pin 501, diode 614, and output terminal 511 in sequence, and later output through output terminal 512, diode 611, and pin 502 in sequence. When pin 501 is coupled to the cathode of the DC supply and pin 502 to the anode of the DC supply, the DC signal is input through pin 502, diode 613, and output terminal 511 in sequence, and later output through output terminal 512, diode 612, and pin 501 in sequence. Therefore, no matter what the electrical polarity of the DC signal is between pins 501 and 502, the positive pole of the rectified signal produced by rectifying circuit 610 remains at output terminal 511, and the negative pole of the rectified signal remains at output terminal 512.


Therefore, rectifying circuit 610 in this embodiment can output or produce a proper rectified signal regardless of whether the received input signal is an AC or DC signal.



FIG. 8B is a schematic diagram of a rectifying circuit according to an embodiment. Referring to FIG. 8B, rectifying circuit 710 includes rectifying diodes 711 and 712, configured to half-wave rectify a received signal. Diode 711 has an anode connected to pin 502, and a cathode connected to output terminal 511. Diode 712 has an anode connected to output terminal 511, and a cathode connected to pin 501. Output terminal 512 may be omitted or grounded depending on actual applications.


Next, exemplary operation(s) of rectifying circuit 710 is described as follows.


In one embodiment, during a received AC signal's positive half cycle, the electrical potential at pin 501 is higher than that at pin 502, so diodes 711 and 712 are both in a cutoff state as being reverse-biased, making rectifying circuit 710 not outputting a rectified signal. During a received AC signal's negative half cycle, the electrical potential at pin 501 is lower than that at pin 502, so diodes 711 and 712 are both in a conducting state as being forward-biased, allowing the AC signal to be input through diode 711 and output terminal 511, and later output through output terminal 512, a ground terminal, or another end of the LED tube lamp not directly connected to rectifying circuit 710. Accordingly, the rectified signal produced or output by rectifying circuit 710 is a half-wave rectified signal.



FIG. 8C is a schematic diagram of a rectifying circuit according to an embodiment. Referring to FIG. 8C, rectifying circuit 810 includes a rectifying unit 815 and a terminal adapter circuit 541. In this embodiment, rectifying unit 815 comprises a half-wave rectifier circuit including diodes 811 and 812 and configured to half-wave rectify. Diode 811 has an anode connected to an output terminal 512, and a cathode connected to a half-wave node 819. Diode 812 has an anode connected to half-wave node 819, and a cathode connected to an output terminal 511. Terminal adapter circuit 541 is coupled to half-wave node 819 and pins 501 and 502, to transmit a signal received at pin 501 and/or pin 502 to half-wave node 819. By means of the terminal adapting function of terminal adapter circuit 541, rectifying circuit 810 includes two input terminals (connected to pins 501 and 502) and two output terminals 511 and 512.


Next, in certain embodiments, rectifying circuit 810 operates as follows.


During a received AC signal's positive half cycle, the AC signal may be input through pin 501 or 502, terminal adapter circuit 541, half-wave node 819, diode 812, and output terminal 511 in sequence, and later output through another end or circuit of the LED tube lamp. During a received AC signal's negative half cycle, the AC signal may be input through another end or circuit of the LED tube lamp, and later output through output terminal 512, diode 811, half-wave node 819, terminal adapter circuit 541, and pin 501 or 502 in sequence.


Terminal adapter circuit 541 may comprise a resistor, a capacitor, an inductor, or any combination thereof, for performing functions of voltage/current regulation or limiting, types of protection, current/voltage regulation, etc. Descriptions of these functions are presented below.


In practice, rectifying unit 815 and terminal adapter circuit 541 may be interchanged in position (as shown in FIG. 8D), without altering the function of half-wave rectification. FIG. 8D is a schematic diagram of a rectifying circuit according to an embodiment. Referring to FIG. 8D, diode 811 has an anode connected to pin 502 and diode 812 has a cathode connected to pin 501. A cathode of diode 811 and an anode of diode 812 are connected to half-wave node 819. Terminal adapter circuit 541 is coupled to half-wave node 819 and output terminals 511 and 512. During a received AC signal's positive half cycle, the AC signal may be input through another end or circuit of the LED tube lamp, and later output through output terminal 511 or 512, terminal adapter circuit 541, half-wave node 819, diode 812, and pin 501 in sequence. During a received AC signal's negative half cycle, the AC signal may be input through pin 502, diode 811, half-wave node 819, terminal adapter circuit 541, and output node 511 or 512 in sequence, and later output through another end or circuit of the LED tube lamp.


Terminal adapter circuit 541 in embodiments shown in FIGS. 8C and 8D may be omitted and is therefore depicted by a dotted line. If terminal adapter circuit 541 of FIG. 8C is omitted, pins 501 and 502 will be coupled to half-wave node 819. If terminal adapter circuit 541 of FIG. 8D is omitted, output terminals 511 and 512 will be coupled to half-wave node 819.


Rectifying circuit 510 as shown and explained in FIGS. 8A-D can constitute or be the rectifying circuit 540 shown in FIG. 7E, as having pins 503 and 504 for conducting instead of pins 501 and 502.


Next, an explanation follows as to choosing embodiments and their combinations of rectifying circuits 510 and 540, with reference to FIGS. 7C and 7E.


Rectifying circuit 510 in embodiments shown in FIG. 7C may comprise, for example, the rectifying circuit 610 in FIG. 8A.


Rectifying circuits 510 and 540 in embodiments shown in FIG. 7E may each comprise, for example, any one of the rectifying circuits in FIGS. 8A-D, and terminal adapter circuit 541 in FIGS. 8C-D may be omitted without altering the rectification function used in an LED tube lamp. When rectifying circuits 510 and 540 each comprise a half-wave rectifier circuit described in FIGS. 8B-D, during a received AC signal's positive or negative half cycle, the AC signal may be input from one of rectifying circuits 510 and 540, and later output from the other rectifying circuit 510 or 540. Further, when rectifying circuits 510 and 540 each comprise the rectifying circuit described in FIG. 8C or 8D, or when they comprise the rectifying circuits in FIGS. 8C and 8D respectively, only one terminal adapter circuit 541 may be needed for functions of voltage/current regulation or limiting, types of protection, current/voltage regulation, etc. within rectifying circuits 510 and 540, omitting another terminal adapter circuit 541 within rectifying circuit 510 or 540.



FIG. 9A is a schematic diagram of a terminal adapter circuit according to an embodiment. Referring to FIG. 9A, terminal adapter circuit 641 comprises a capacitor 642 having an end connected to pins 501 and 502, and another end connected to half-wave node 819. In one embodiment, capacitor 642 has an equivalent impedance to an AC signal, which impedance increases as the frequency of the AC signal decreases, and decreases as the frequency increases. Therefore, capacitor 642 in terminal adapter circuit 641 in this embodiment works as a high-pass filter. Further, terminal adapter circuit 641 is connected in series to an LED unit in the LED tube lamp, producing an equivalent impedance of terminal adapter circuit 641 to perform a current/voltage limiting function on the LED unit, thereby preventing damaging of the LED unit by an excessive voltage across and/or current in the LED unit. In addition, choosing the value of capacitor 642 according to the frequency of the AC signal can further enhance voltage/current regulation.


Terminal adapter circuit 641 may further include a capacitor 645 and/or capacitor 646. Capacitor 645 has an end connected to half-wave node 819, and another end connected to pin 503. Capacitor 646 has an end connected to half-wave node 819, and another end connected to pin 504. For example, half-wave node 819 may be a common connective node between capacitors 645 and 646. And capacitor 642 acting as a current regulating capacitor is coupled to the common connective node and pins 501 and 502. In such a structure, series-connected capacitors 642 and 645 exist between one of pins 501 and 502 and pin 503, and/or series-connected capacitors 642 and 646 exist between one of pins 501 and 502 and pin 504. Through equivalent impedances of series-connected capacitors, voltages from the AC signal are divided. Referring to FIGS. 7E and 9A, according to ratios between equivalent impedances of the series-connected capacitors, the voltages respectively across capacitor 642 in rectifying circuit 510, filtering circuit 520, and LED lighting module 530 can be controlled, making the current flowing through an LED module coupled to LED lighting module 530 being limited within a current rating, and then protecting/preventing filtering circuit 520 and LED module from being damaged by excessive voltages.



FIG. 9B is a schematic diagram of a terminal adapter circuit according to an embodiment. Referring to FIG. 9B, terminal adapter circuit 741 comprises capacitors 743 and 744. Capacitor 743 has an end connected to pin 501, and another end connected to half-wave node 819. Capacitor 744 has an end connected to pin 502, and another end connected to half-wave node 819. Compared to terminal adapter circuit 641 in FIG. 9A, terminal adapter circuit 741 has capacitors 743 and 744 in place of capacitor 642. Capacitance values of capacitors 743 and 744 may be the same as each other, or may differ from each other depending on the magnitudes of signals to be received at pins 501 and 502.


Similarly, terminal adapter circuit 741 may further comprise a capacitor 745 and/or a capacitor 746, respectively connected to pins 503 and 504. Thus, each of pins 501 and 502 and each of pins 503 and 504 may be connected in series to a capacitor, to achieve the functions of voltage division and other protections.



FIG. 9C is a schematic diagram of the terminal adapter circuit according to an embodiment. Referring to FIG. 9C, terminal adapter circuit 841 comprises capacitors 842, 843, and 844. Capacitors 842 and 843 are connected in series between pin 501 and half-wave node 819. Capacitors 842 and 844 are connected in series between pin 502 and half-wave node 819. In such a circuit structure, if any one of capacitors 842, 843, and 844 is shorted, there is still at least one capacitor (of the other two capacitors) between pin 501 and half-wave node 819 and between pin 502 and half-wave node 819, which performs a current-limiting function. Therefore, in the event that a user accidentally gets an electric shock, this circuit structure will prevent an excessive current flowing through and then seriously hurting the body of the user.


Similarly, terminal adapter circuit 841 may further comprise a capacitor 845 and/or a capacitor 846, respectively connected to pins 503 and 504. Thus, each of pins 501 and 502 and each of pins 503 and 504 may be connected in series to a capacitor, to achieve the functions of voltage division and other protections.



FIG. 9D is a schematic diagram of a terminal adapter circuit according to an embodiment. Referring to FIG. 9D, terminal adapter circuit 941 comprises fuses 947 and 948. Fuse 947 has an end connected to pin 501, and another end connected to half-wave node 819. Fuse 948 has an end connected to pin 502, and another end connected to half-wave node 819. With the fuses 947 and 948, when the current through each of pins 501 and 502 exceeds a current rating of a corresponding connected fuse 947 or 948, the corresponding fuse 947 or 948 will accordingly melt and then break the circuit to achieve overcurrent protection. The terminal adapter circuits described above may be described as current limiting circuits, and/or voltage limiting circuits.


Each of the embodiments of the terminal adapter circuits as described in rectifying circuits 510 and 810 coupled to pins 501 and 502 and shown and explained above can be used or included in the rectifying circuit 540 shown in FIG. 7E, to be connected to conductive pins 503 and 504 in a similar manner as described above in connection with conductive pins 501 and 502.


Capacitance values of the capacitors in the embodiments of the terminal adapter circuits shown and described above are in some embodiments in the range, for example, of about 100 pF-100 nF. Also, a capacitor used in embodiments may be equivalently replaced by two or more capacitors connected in series or parallel. For example, each of capacitors 642 and 842 may be replaced by two series-connected capacitors, one having a capacitance value chosen from the range, for example of about 1.0 nF to about 2.5 nF and which may be in some embodiments preferably 1.5 nF, and the other having a capacitance value chosen from the range, for example of about 1.5 nF to about 3.0 nF, and which is in some embodiments about 2.2 nF.



FIG. 10A is a block diagram of a filtering circuit according to an embodiment. Rectifying circuit 510 is shown in FIG. 10A for illustrating its connection with other components, without intending filtering circuit 520 to include rectifying circuit 510. Referring to FIG. 10A, filtering circuit 520 includes a filtering unit 523 coupled to rectifying output terminals 511 and 512 to receive, and to filter out ripples of a rectified signal from rectifying circuit 510, thereby outputting a filtered signal whose waveform is smoother than the rectified signal. Filtering circuit 520 may further comprise another filtering unit 524 coupled between a rectifying circuit and a pin, which are for example rectifying circuit 510 and pin 501, rectifying circuit 510 and pin 502, rectifying circuit 540 and pin 503, or rectifying circuit 540 and pin 504. Filtering unit 524 is for filtering of a specific frequency, in order to filter out a specific frequency component of an external driving signal. In this embodiment of FIG. 10A, filtering unit 524 is coupled between rectifying circuit 510 and pin 501. Filtering circuit 520 may further comprise another filtering unit 525 coupled between one of pins 501 and 502 and a diode of rectifying circuit 510, or between one of pins 503 and 504 and a diode of rectifying circuit 540, for reducing or filtering out electromagnetic interference (EMI). In this embodiment, filtering unit 525 is coupled between pin 501 and a diode (not shown in FIG. 10A) of rectifying circuit 510. Since filtering units 524 and 525 may be present or omitted depending on actual circumstances of their uses, they are depicted by a dotted line in FIG. 10A. Filtering units 523, 524, and 525 may be referred to herein as filtering sub-circuits of filtering circuit 520, or may be generally referred to as a filtering circuit.



FIG. 10B is a schematic diagram of a filtering unit according to one embodiment. Referring to FIG. 10B, filtering unit 623 includes a capacitor 625 having an end coupled to output terminal 511 and a filtering output terminal 521 and another end coupled to output terminal 512 and a filtering output terminal 522, and is configured to low-pass filter a rectified signal from output terminals 511 and 512, so as to filter out high-frequency components of the rectified signal and thereby output a filtered signal at output terminals 521 and 522.



FIG. 10C is a schematic diagram of a filtering unit according to one embodiment. Referring to FIG. 10C, filtering unit 723 comprises a pi filter circuit including a capacitor 725, an inductor 726, and a capacitor 727. As is well known, a pi filter circuit looks like the symbol π in its shape or structure. Capacitor 725 has an end connected to output terminal 511 and coupled to output terminal 521 through inductor 726, and has another end connected to output terminals 512 and 522. Inductor 726 is coupled between output terminals 511 and 521. Capacitor 727 has an end connected to output terminal 521 and coupled to output terminal 511 through inductor 726, and has another end connected to output terminals 512 and 522.


As seen between output terminals 511 and 512 and output terminals 521 and 522, filtering unit 723 compared to filtering unit 623 in FIG. 10B additionally has inductor 726 and capacitor 727, which are like capacitor 725 in performing low-pass filtering. Therefore, filtering unit 723 in this embodiment compared to filtering unit 623 in FIG. 10B has a better ability to filter out high-frequency components to output a filtered signal with a smoother waveform.


Inductance values of inductor 726 in the embodiment described above are chosen in some embodiments in the range of about 10 nH to about 10 mH. And capacitance values of capacitors 625, 725, and 727 in the embodiments described above are chosen in some embodiments in the range, for example, of about 100 pF to about 1 uF.



FIG. 10D is a schematic diagram of a filtering unit according to one embodiment. Referring to FIG. 10D, filtering unit 824 includes a capacitor 825 and an inductor 828 connected in parallel. Capacitor 825 has an end coupled to pin 501, and another end coupled to rectifying output terminal 511 (not shown), and is configured to high-pass filter an external driving signal input at pin 501, so as to filter out low-frequency components of the external driving signal. Inductor 828 has an end coupled to pin 501 and another end coupled to rectifying output terminal 511, and is configured to low-pass filter an external driving signal input at pin 501, so as to filter out high-frequency components of the external driving signal. Therefore, the combination of capacitor 825 and inductor 828 works to present high impedance to an external driving signal at one or more specific frequencies. Thus, the parallel-connected capacitor and inductor work to present a peak equivalent impedance to the external driving signal at a specific frequency.


Through appropriately choosing a capacitance value of capacitor 825 and an inductance value of inductor 828, a center frequency f on the high-impedance band may be set at a specific value given by







f
=

1

2

π


LC




,




where L denotes inductance of inductor 828 and C denotes capacitance of capacitor 825. The center frequency is in some embodiments in the range of about 20˜30 kHz, and may be in some embodiments about 25 kHz. In one embodiment, an LED lamp with filtering unit 824 is able to be certified under safety standards, for a specific center frequency, as provided by Underwriters Laboratories (UL).


In some embodiments, filtering unit 824 may further comprise a resistor 829, coupled between pin 501 and filtering output terminal 511. In FIG. 10D, resistor 829 is connected in series to the parallel-connected capacitor 825 and inductor 828. For example, resistor 829 may be coupled between pin 501 and parallel-connected capacitor 825 and inductor 828, or may be coupled between filtering output terminal 511 and parallel-connected capacitor 825 and inductor 828. In this embodiment, resistor 829 is coupled between pin 501 and parallel-connected capacitor 825 and inductor 828. Further, resistor 829 is configured for adjusting the quality factor (Q) of the LC circuit comprising capacitor 825 and inductor 828, to better adapt filtering unit 824 to application environments with different quality factor requirements. Since resistor 829 is an optional component, it is depicted in a dotted line in FIG. 10D.


Capacitance values of capacitor 825 are in some embodiments in the range of about 10 nF-2 uF. Inductance values of inductor 828 are in some embodiments smaller than 2 mH, and may be in some embodiments smaller than 1 mH. Resistance values of resistor 829 are in some embodiments larger than 50 ohms, and may be in some embodiments larger than 500 ohms.


Besides the filtering circuits shown and described in the above embodiments, traditional low-pass or band-pass filters can be used as the filtering unit in the filtering circuit in the present invention.



FIG. 10E is a schematic diagram of a filtering unit according to an embodiment. Referring to FIG. 10E, in this embodiment filtering unit 925 is disposed in rectifying circuit 610 as shown in FIG. 8A, and is configured for reducing the EMI (Electromagnetic interference) caused by rectifying circuit 610 and/or other circuits. In this embodiment, filtering unit 925 includes an EMI-reducing capacitor coupled between pin 501 and the anode of rectifying diode 613, and also between pin 502 and the anode of rectifying diode 614, to reduce the EMI associated with the positive half cycle of the AC driving signal received at pins 501 and 502. The EMI-reducing capacitor of filtering unit 925 is also coupled between pin 501 and the cathode of rectifying diode 611, and between pin 502 and the cathode of rectifying diode 612, to reduce the EMI associated with the negative half cycle of the AC driving signal received at pins 501 and 502. In some embodiments, rectifying circuit 610 comprises a full-wave bridge rectifier circuit including four rectifying diodes 611, 612, 613, and 614. The full-wave bridge rectifier circuit has a first filtering node connecting an anode and a cathode respectively of two diodes 613 and 611 of the four rectifying diodes 611, 612, 613, and 614, and a second filtering node connecting an anode and a cathode respectively of the other two diodes 614 and 612 of the four rectifying diodes 611, 612, 613, and 614. And the EMI-reducing capacitor of the filtering unit 925 is coupled between the first filtering node and the second filtering node.


Similarly, with reference to FIGS. 8C, and 9A-9C, each capacitor in each of the circuits in FIGS. 9A-9C may be coupled between pins 501 and 502 (or pins 503 and 504) and any diode in FIG. 8C, so any or each capacitor in FIGS. 9A-9C can work as an EMI-reducing capacitor to achieve the function of reducing EMI. For example, rectifying circuit 510 in FIGS. 7C and 7E may comprise a half-wave rectifier circuit including two rectifying diodes and having a half-wave node connecting an anode and a cathode respectively of the two rectifying diodes, and any or each capacitor in FIGS. 9A-9C may be coupled between the half-wave node and at least one of the first pin and the second pin. And rectifying circuit 540 in FIG. 7E may comprise a half-wave rectifier circuit including two rectifying diodes and having a half-wave node connecting an anode and a cathode respectively of the two rectifying diodes, and any or each capacitor in FIGS. 9A-9C may be coupled between the half-wave node and at least one of the third pin and the fourth pin.


It's worth noting that the EMI-reducing capacitor in the embodiment of FIG. 10E may also act as capacitor 825 in filtering unit 824, so that in combination with inductor 828 the capacitor 825 performs the functions of reducing EMI and presenting high impedance to an external driving signal at specific frequencies. For example, when the rectifying circuit comprises a full-wave bridge rectifier circuit, capacitor 825 of filtering unit 824 may be coupled between the first filtering node and the second filtering node of the full-wave bridge rectifier circuit. When the rectifying circuit comprises a half-wave rectifier circuit, capacitor 825 of filtering unit 824 may be coupled between the half-wave node of the half-wave rectifier circuit and at least one of the first pin and the second pin.



FIG. 11A is a schematic diagram of an LED module according to an embodiment. Referring to FIG. 11A, LED module 630 has an anode connected to the filtering output terminal 521, has a cathode connected to the filtering output terminal 522, and comprises at least one LED unit 632. When two or more LED units are included, they are connected in parallel. An anode of each LED unit 632 forms the anode of LED module 630 and is connected to output terminal 521, and a cathode of each LED unit 632 forms the cathode of LED module 630 and is connected to output terminal 522. Each LED unit 632 includes at least one LED 631. When multiple LEDs 631 are included in an LED unit 632, they are connected in series, with the anode of the first LED 631 forming the anode of the LED unit 632 that it is a part of, and the cathode of the first LED 631 connected to the next or second LED 631. And the anode of the last LED 631 in this LED unit 632 is connected to the cathode of a previous LED 631, with the cathode of the last LED 631 forming the cathode of the LED unit 632 that it is a part of.


It's worth noting that LED module 630 may produce a current detection signal S531 reflecting a magnitude of current through LED module 630 and used for controlling or detecting current on the LED module 630. As described herein, an LED unit may refer to a single string of LEDs arranged in series, and an LED module may refer to a single LED unit, or a plurality of LED units connected to a same two nodes (e.g., arranged in parallel). For example, the LED light strip 2 described above may be an LED module and/or LED unit.



FIG. 11B is a schematic diagram of an LED module according to an embodiment. Referring to FIG. 11B, LED module 630 has an anode connected to the filtering output terminal 521, has a cathode connected to the filtering output terminal 522, and comprises at least two LED units 732, with an anode of each LED unit 732 forming the anode of LED module 630, and a cathode of each LED unit 732 forming the cathode of LED module 630. Each LED unit 732 includes at least two LEDs 731 connected in the same way as described in FIG. 11A. For example, the anode of the first LED 731 in an LED unit 732 forms the anode of the LED unit 732 that it is a part of, the cathode of the first LED 731 is connected to the anode of the next or second LED 731, and the cathode of the last LED 731 forms the cathode of the LED unit 732 that it is a part of. Further, LED units 732 in an LED module 630 are connected to each other in this embodiment. All of the n-th LEDs 731 respectively of the LED units 732 are connected by every anode of every n-th LED 731 in the LED units 732, and by every cathode of every n-th LED 731, where n is a positive integer. In this way, the LEDs in LED module 630 in this embodiment are connected in the form of a mesh.


In some embodiments, compared to the embodiments of FIGS. 12A-12G, LED lighting module 530 of the above embodiments includes LED module 630, but doesn't include a driving circuit for the LED module 630 (e.g., does not include an LED driving unit for the LED module or LED unit).


Similarly, LED module 630 in this embodiment may produce a current detection signal S531 reflecting a magnitude of current through LED module 630 and used for controlling or detecting current on the LED module 630.


In actual practice, the number of LEDs 731 included by an LED unit 732 is in some embodiments in the range of 15-25, and is may be preferably in the range of 18-22.



FIG. 11C is an exemplary plan view of a circuit layout of an LED module according to certain embodiments. Referring to FIG. 11C, in this embodiment LEDs 831 are connected in the same way as described in FIG. 11B, and three LED units are assumed in LED module 630 and described as follows for illustration. A positive conductive line 834 and a negative conductive line 835 are to receive a driving signal, for supplying power to the LEDs 831. For example, positive conductive line 834 may be coupled to the filtering output terminal 521 of the filtering circuit 520 described above, and negative conductive line 835 coupled to the filtering output terminal 522 of the filtering circuit 520, to receive a filtered signal. For the convenience of illustration, all three of the n-th LEDs 831 respectively of the three LED units are grouped as an LED set 833 in FIG. 11C.


Positive conductive line 834 connects the three first LEDs 831 respectively of the three LED units, at the anodes on the left sides of the three first LEDs 831 as shown in the leftmost LED set 833 of FIG. 11C. The three first LEDs 831 may be the leftmost LEDs for each LED unit respectively. Negative conductive line 835 connects the three last LEDs 831 respectively of the three LED units, at the cathodes on the right sides of the three last LEDs 831 as shown in the rightmost LED set 833 of FIG. 11C. The three last LEDs 831 may be the rightmost LEDs for each LED unit respectively. For the three LED units, the cathodes of the three first LEDs 831, the anodes of the three last LEDs 831, and the anodes and cathodes of all the remaining LEDs 831 are connected by conductive lines or parts 839, also referred to as internal conductive connectors.


For example, the anodes of the three LEDs 831 in the leftmost LED set 833 may be connected together by positive conductive line 834, and their cathodes may be connected together by a leftmost conductive part 839. The anodes of the three LEDs 831 in the second leftmost LED set 833 are also connected together by the leftmost conductive part 839, whereas their cathodes are connected together by a second, next-leftmost conductive part 839. Since the cathodes of the three LEDs 831 in the leftmost LED set 833 and the anodes of the three LEDs 831 in the second, next-leftmost LED set 833 are connected together by the same leftmost conductive part 839, in each of the three LED units the cathode of the first LED 831 is connected to the anode of the next or second LED 831, with the remaining LEDs 831 also being connected in the same way. Accordingly, all the LEDs 831 of the three LED units are connected to form the mesh as shown in FIG. 11B. The LED module shown in FIG. 11C may form an LED light strip 2 such as described above.


It's worth noting that in the embodiment shown in FIG. 11C, the length 836 (e.g., length along a first direction that is a length direction of the LED light strip 2 and lamp tube 1) of a portion of each conductive part 839 that immediately connects to the anode of an LED 831 is smaller than the length 837 of another portion of each conductive part 839 that immediately connects to the cathode of an LED 831, making the area of the latter portion immediately connecting to the cathode larger than that of the former portion immediately connecting to the anode. The length 837 may be smaller than a length 838 of a portion of each conductive part 839 that immediately connects the cathode of an LED 831 and the anode of the next LED 831, making the area of the portion of each conductive part 839 that immediately connects a cathode and an anode larger than the area of any other portion of each conductive part 839 that immediately connects to only a cathode or an anode of an LED 831. Due to the length differences and area differences, this layout structure improves heat dissipation of the LEDs 831.


In some embodiments, positive conductive line 834 includes a lengthwise portion 834a, and negative conductive line 835 includes a lengthwise portion 835a, which are conducive to making the LED module have a positive “+” connective portion and a negative “−” connective portion at each of the two ends of the LED module, as shown in FIG. 11C. Such a layout structure allows for coupling certain of the various circuits of the power supply module of the LED lamp, including e.g. filtering circuit 520 and rectifying circuits 510 and 540, to the LED module through the positive connective portion and/or the negative connective portion at each or both ends of the LED lamp. Thus the layout structure increases the flexibility in arranging actual circuits in the LED lamp.



FIG. 11D is a plan view of a circuit layout of an LED module according to another embodiment. Referring to FIG. 11D, in this embodiment LEDs 931 are connected in the same way as described in FIG. 11A, and three LED units each including 7 LEDs 931 are assumed in LED module 630 and described as follows for illustration. A positive conductive line 934 and a negative conductive line 935 are to receive a driving signal, for supplying power to the LEDs 931. For example, positive conductive line 934 may be coupled to the filtering output terminal 521 of the filtering circuit 520 described above, and negative conductive line 935 coupled to the filtering output terminal 522 of the filtering circuit 520, to receive a filtered signal. For the convenience of illustration, all seven LEDs 931 of each of the three LED units are grouped as an LED set 932 in FIG. 11D. Thus there are three LED sets 932 corresponding to the three LED units.


Positive conductive line 934 connects to the anode on the left side of the first or leftmost LED 931 of each of the three LED sets 932. Negative conductive line 935 connects to the cathode on the right side of the last or rightmost LED 931 of each of the three LED sets 932. In each LED set 932, of two consecutive LEDs 931 the LED 931 on the left has a cathode connected by a conductive part 939 to an anode of the LED 931 on the right. By such a layout, the LEDs 931 of each LED set 932 are connected in series.


In some embodiments the conductive part 939 may be used to connect an anode and a cathode respectively of two consecutive LEDs 931. Negative conductive line 935 connects to the cathode of the last or rightmost LED 931 of each of the three LED sets 932. And positive conductive line 934 connects to the anode of the first or leftmost LED 931 of each of the three LED sets 932. Therefore, as shown in FIG. 11D, the length (and thus area) of the conductive part 939 is larger than that of the portion of negative conductive line 935 immediately connecting to a cathode, which length (and thus area) is then larger than that of the portion of positive conductive line 934 immediately connecting to an anode. For example, the length 938 of the conductive part 939 may be larger than the length 937 of the portion of negative conductive line 935 immediately connecting to a cathode of an LED 931, which length 937 is then larger than the length 936 of the portion of positive conductive line 934 immediately connecting to an anode of an LED 931. Such a layout structure improves heat dissipation of the LEDs 931 in LED module 630.


Positive conductive line 934 may include a lengthwise portion 934a, and negative conductive line 935 may include a lengthwise portion 935a, which are conducive to making the LED module have a positive “+” connective portion and a negative “−” connective portion at each of the two ends of the LED module, as shown in FIG. 11D. Such a layout structure allows for coupling certain of the various circuits of the power supply module of the LED lamp, including e.g. filtering circuit 520 and rectifying circuits 510 and 540, to the LED module through the positive connective portion 934a and/or the negative connective portion 935a at each or both ends of the LED lamp.


The positive conductive lines (834 or 934) may be characterized as including two end terminals at opposite ends, a plurality of pads between the two end terminals and for contacting and/or supplying power to LEDs (e.g., anodes of LEDs), and a wire portion, which may be an elongated conducive line extending along a length of an LED light strip and electrically connecting the two end terminals to the plurality of pads. Similarly, the negative conductive lines (835 or 935) may be characterized as including two end terminals at opposite ends, a plurality of pads between the two end terminals and for contacting and/or supplying power to LEDs (e.g., cathodes of LEDs), and a wire portion, which may be an elongated conducive line extending along a length of an LED light strip and electrically connecting the two end terminals to the plurality of pads. Thus the layout structures shown above increase the flexibility in arranging actual circuits in the LED lamp.


Further, the circuit layouts as shown in FIGS. 11C and 11D may be implemented with a bendable circuit sheet or substrate, which may be a flexible circuit board. The circuit layouts may be implemented for one of the exemplary LED light strips described previously, for example, to serve as a circuit board or sheet for the LED light strip on which the LED light sources are disposed. For example, the bendable circuit sheet may comprise one conductive layer where positive conductive line 834, including positive lengthwise portion 834a, negative conductive line 835, including negative lengthwise portion 835a, and conductive parts 839 shown in FIG. 11C, and positive conductive line 934, including positive lengthwise portion 934a, negative conductive line 935, including negative lengthwise portion 935a, and conductive parts 939 shown in FIG. 11D are formed. For example, the different conductive patterns may be formed by an etching method.



FIG. 11E is a plan view of a circuit layout of an LED module according to another embodiment. The layout structures of the LED module in FIGS. 11E and 11C each correspond to the same way of connecting LEDs 831 as that shown in FIG. 11B, but the layout structure in FIG. 11E comprises two conductive layers, instead of only one conductive layer for forming the circuit layout as shown in FIG. 11C. Referring to FIG. 11E, the main difference from the layout in FIG. 11C is that positive conductive line 834 and negative conductive line 835 have a lengthwise portion 834a and a lengthwise portion 835a, respectively, that are formed in a second conductive layer instead. This type of structure may be used to implement the embodiments that include two conductive layers such as discussed previously (e.g., as described in connection with FIG. 6). The difference is elaborated as follows.


Referring to FIG. 11E, the bendable circuit sheet of the LED module comprises a first conductive layer 2a and a second conductive layer 2c electrically insulated from each other by a dielectric layer 2b (not shown). Of the two conductive layers, positive conductive line 834, negative conductive line 835, and conductive parts 839 in FIG. 11E are formed in first conductive layer 2a by the method of etching for electrically connecting the plurality of LED components 831 e.g. in a form of a mesh, whereas positive lengthwise portion 834a and negative lengthwise portion 835a are formed in second conductive layer 2c (e.g., by etching) for electrically connecting to (e.g., the filtering output terminal of) the filtering circuit. Further, positive conductive line 834 and negative conductive line 835 in first conductive layer 2a have via points 834b and via points 835b, respectively, for connecting to second conductive layer 2c. And positive lengthwise portion 834a and negative lengthwise portion 835a in second conductive layer 2c have via points 834c and via points 835c, respectively. Via points 834b are positioned corresponding to via points 834c, for connecting positive conductive line 834 and positive lengthwise portion 834a. Via points 835b are positioned corresponding to via points 835c, for connecting negative conductive line 835 and negative lengthwise portion 835a. One exemplary way of connecting the two conductive layers is to form a hole connecting each via point 834b and a corresponding via point 834c, and to form a hole connecting each via point 835b and a corresponding via point 835c, with the holes extending through the two conductive layers and the dielectric layer in-between. Positive conductive line 834 and positive lengthwise portion 834a can be electrically connected, for example, by welding metallic part(s) through the connecting hole(s), and negative conductive line 835 and negative lengthwise portion 835a can be electrically connected, for example, by welding metallic part(s) through the connecting hole(s).


Similarly, the layout structure of the LED module in FIG. 11D may alternatively have positive lengthwise portion 934a and negative lengthwise portion 935a disposed in a second conductive layer, to constitute a two-layer layout structure.


It's worth noting that the thickness of the second conductive layer of a two-layer bendable circuit sheet is in some embodiments larger than that of the first conductive layer, in order to reduce the voltage drop or loss along each of the positive lengthwise portion and the negative lengthwise portion disposed in the second conductive layer. Compared to a one-layer bendable circuit sheet, since a positive lengthwise portion and a negative lengthwise portion are disposed in a second conductive layer in a two-layer bendable circuit sheet, the width (between two lengthwise sides) of the two-layer bendable circuit sheet is or can be reduced. On the same fixture or plate in a production process, the maximum number of bendable circuit sheets each with a shorter width that can be laid together is larger than the maximum number of bendable circuit sheets each with a longer width that can be laid together. Thus adopting a bendable circuit sheet with a shorter width can increase the efficiency of production of the LED module. And reliability in the production process, such as the accuracy of welding position when welding (materials on) the LED components, can also be improved, because a two-layer bendable circuit sheet can better maintain its shape.


As a variant of the above embodiments, an exemplary LED tube lamp may have at least some of the electronic components of its power supply module disposed on an LED light strip of the LED tube lamp. For example, the technique of printed electronic circuit (PEC) can be used to print, insert, or embed at least some of the electronic components onto the LED light strip (e.g., as opposed to being on a separate circuit board connected to the LED light strip).


In one embodiment, all electronic components of the power supply module are disposed directly on the LED light strip. For example, the production process may include or proceed with the following steps: preparation of the circuit substrate (e.g. preparation of a flexible printed circuit board); ink jet printing of metallic nano-ink; ink jet printing of active and passive components (as of the power supply module); drying/sintering; ink jet printing of interlayer bumps; spraying of insulating ink; ink jet printing of metallic nano-ink; ink jet printing of active and passive components (to sequentially form the included layers); spraying of surface bond pad(s); and spraying of solder resist against LED components. The production process may be different, however, and still result in some or all electronic components of the power supply module being disposed directly on the LED light strip.


In certain embodiments, if all electronic components of the power supply module are disposed on the light strip, electrical connection between terminal pins of the LED tube lamp and the light strip may be achieved by connecting the pins to conductive lines which are welded with ends of the light strip. In this case, another substrate for supporting the power supply module is not required, thereby allowing of an improved design or arrangement in the end cap(s) of the LED tube lamp. In some embodiments, (components of) the power supply module are disposed at two ends of the light strip, in order to significantly reduce the impact of heat generated from the power supply module's operations on the LED components. Since no substrate other than the light strip is used to support the power supply module in this case, the total amount of welding or soldering can be significantly reduced, improving the general reliability of the power supply module. If no additional substrate is used, the electronic components of the power supply module disposed on the light strip may still be positioned in the end caps of the LED tube lamp, or they may be positioned partly or wholly inside the lamp tube but not in the end caps.


Another case is that some of all electronic components of the power supply module, such as some resistors and/or smaller size capacitors, are printed onto the light strip, and some bigger size components, such as some inductors and/or electrolytic capacitors, are disposed on another substrate, for example in the end cap(s). The production process of the light strip in this case may be the same as that described above. And in this case disposing some of all electronic components on the light strip is conducive to achieving a reasonable layout of the power supply module in the LED tube lamp, which may allow of an improved design in the end cap(s).


As a variant embodiment of the above, electronic components of the power supply module may be disposed on the light strip by a method of embedding or inserting, e.g. by embedding the components onto a bendable or flexible light strip. In some embodiments, this embedding may be realized by a method using copper-clad laminates (CCL) for forming a resistor or capacitor; a method using ink related to silkscreen printing; or a method of ink jet printing to embed passive components, wherein an ink jet printer is used to directly print inks to constitute passive components and related functionalities to intended positions on the light strip. Then through treatment by ultraviolet (UV) light or drying/sintering, the light strip is formed where passive components are embedded. The electronic components embedded onto the light strip include for example resistors, capacitors, and inductors. In other embodiments, active components also may be embedded. Through embedding some components onto the light strip, a reasonable layout of the power supply module can be achieved to allow of an improved design in the end cap(s), because the surface area on a printed circuit board used for carrying components of the power supply module is reduced or smaller, and as a result the size, weight, and thickness of the resulting printed circuit board for carrying components of the power supply module is also smaller or reduced. Also in this situation since welding points on the printed circuit board for welding resistors and/or capacitors if they were not to be disposed on the light strip are no longer used, the reliability of the power supply module is improved, in view of the fact that these welding points are very liable to (cause or incur) faults, malfunctions, or failures. Further, the length of conductive lines needed for connecting components on the printed circuit board is therefore also reduced, which allows of a more compact layout of components on the printed circuit board and thus improving the functionalities of these components.


In some embodiments, luminous efficacy of the LED or LED component is 80 lm/W or above, and in some embodiments, it may be preferably 120 lm/W or above. Certain more optimal embodiments may include a luminous efficacy of the LED or LED component of 160 lm/W or above. White light emitted by an LED component may be produced by mixing fluorescent powder with the monochromatic light emitted by a monochromatic LED chip. The white light in its spectrum has major wavelength ranges of 430-460 nm and 550-560 nm, or major wavelength ranges of 430-460 nm, 540-560 nm, and 620-640 nm.



FIG. 12A is a block diagram showing components of an LED lamp (e.g., an LED tube lamp) according to one embodiment. As shown in FIG. 12A, the power supply module of the LED lamp includes rectifying circuits 510 and 540, a filtering circuit 520, and an LED driving circuit 1530, wherein an LED lighting module 530 includes the driving circuit 1530 and an LED module 630. According to the above description in FIG. 7E, driving circuit 1530 in FIG. 12A comprises a DC-to-DC converter circuit, and is coupled to filtering output terminals 521 and 522 to receive a filtered signal and then perform power conversion for converting the filtered signal into a driving signal at driving output terminals 1521 and 1522. The LED module 630 is coupled to driving output terminals 1521 and 1522 to receive the driving signal for emitting light. In some embodiments, the current of LED module 630 is stabilized at an objective current value. Exemplary descriptions of this LED module 630 are the same as those provided above with reference to FIGS. 11A-11D.


It's worth noting that rectifying circuit 540 is an optional element and therefore can be omitted, so it is depicted in a dotted line in FIG. 12A. Therefore, the power supply module of the LED lamp in this embodiment can be used with a single-end power supply coupled to one end of the LED lamp, and can be used with a dual-end power supply coupled to two ends of the LED lamp. With a single-end power supply, examples of the LED lamp include an LED light bulb, a personal area light (PAL), etc.



FIG. 12B is a block diagram of an exemplary driving circuit according to one embodiment. Referring to FIG. 12B, the driving circuit includes a controller 1531, and a conversion circuit 1532 for power conversion based on a current source, for driving the LED module to emit light. Conversion circuit 1532 includes a switching circuit 1535 and an energy storage circuit 1538. Conversion circuit 1532 is coupled to filtering output terminals 521 and 522 to receive and then convert a filtered signal, under the control by controller 1531, into a driving signal at driving output terminals 1521 and 1522 for driving the LED module. Under the control by controller 1531, the driving signal output by conversion circuit 1532 comprises a steady current, making the LED module emitting steady light.



FIG. 12C is a schematic diagram of a driving circuit according to one embodiment. Referring to FIG. 12C, a driving circuit 1630 in this embodiment comprises a buck DC-to-DC converter circuit having a controller 1631 and a converter circuit. The converter circuit includes an inductor 1632, a diode 1633 for “freewheeling” of current, a capacitor 1634, and a switch 1635. Driving circuit 1630 is coupled to filtering output terminals 521 and 522 to receive and then convert a filtered signal into a driving signal for driving an LED module connected between driving output terminals 1521 and 1522.


In this embodiment, switch 1635 comprises a metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET) and has a first terminal coupled to the anode of freewheeling diode 1633, a second terminal coupled to filtering output terminal 522, and a control terminal coupled to controller 1631 used for controlling current conduction or cutoff between the first and second terminals of switch 1635. Driving output terminal 1521 is connected to filtering output terminal 521, and driving output terminal 1522 is connected to an end of inductor 1632, which has another end connected to the first terminal of switch 1635. Capacitor 1634 is coupled between driving output terminals 1521 and 1522, to stabilize the voltage between driving output terminals 1521 and 1522. Freewheeling diode 1633 has a cathode connected to driving output terminal 1521.


Next, a description follows as to an exemplary operation of driving circuit 1630.


Controller 1631 is configured for determining when to turn switch 1635 on (in a conducting state) or off (in a cutoff state), according to a current detection signal S535 and/or a current detection signal S531. For example, in some embodiments, controller 1631 is configured to control the duty cycle of switch 1635 being on and switch 1635 being off, in order to adjust the size or magnitude of the driving signal. Current detection signal S535 represents the magnitude of current through switch 1635. Current detection signal S531 represents the magnitude of current through the LED module coupled between driving output terminals 1521 and 1522. The controller 1631 may control the duty cycle of the switch 1635 being on and off, based on, for example, a magnitude of a current detected based on current detection signal S531 or S535. As such, when the magnitude is above a threshold, the switch may be off (cutoff state) for more time, and when magnitude goes below the threshold, the switch may be on (conducting state) for more time. According to any of current detection signal S535 and current detection signal S531, controller 1631 can obtain information on the magnitude of power converted by the converter circuit. When switch 1635 is switched on, a current of a filtered signal is input through filtering output terminal 521, and then flows through capacitor 1634, driving output terminal 1521, the LED module, inductor 1632, and switch 1635, and then flows out from filtering output terminal 522. During this flowing of current, capacitor 1634 and inductor 1632 are performing storing of energy. On the other hand, when switch 1635 is switched off, capacitor 1634 and inductor 1632 perform releasing of stored energy by a current flowing from freewheeling capacitor 1633 to driving output terminal 1521 to make the LED module continuing to emit light.


In some embodiments, capacitor 1634 is an optional element, so it can be omitted and is thus depicted in a dotted line in FIG. 12C. In some application environments, the natural characteristic of an inductor to oppose instantaneous change in electric current passing through the inductor may be used to achieve the effect of stabilizing the current through the LED module, thus omitting capacitor 1634.



FIG. 12D is a schematic diagram of an exemplary driving circuit according to one embodiment. Referring to FIG. 12D, a driving circuit 1730 in this embodiment comprises a boost DC-to-DC converter circuit having a controller 1731 and a converter circuit. The converter circuit includes an inductor 1732, a diode 1733 for “freewheeling” of current, a capacitor 1734, and a switch 1735. Driving circuit 1730 is configured to receive and then convert a filtered signal from filtering output terminals 521 and 522 into a driving signal for driving an LED module coupled between driving output terminals 1521 and 1522.


Inductor 1732 has an end connected to filtering output terminal 521, and another end connected to the anode of freewheeling diode 1733 and a first terminal of switch 1735, which has a second terminal connected to filtering output terminal 522 and driving output terminal 1522. Freewheeling diode 1733 has a cathode connected to driving output terminal 1521. And capacitor 1734 is coupled between driving output terminals 1521 and 1522.


Controller 1731 is coupled to a control terminal of switch 1735, and is configured for determining when to turn switch 1735 on (in a conducting state) or off (in a cutoff state), according to a current detection signal S535 and/or a current detection signal S531. When switch 1735 is switched on, a current of a filtered signal is input through filtering output terminal 521, and then flows through inductor 1732 and switch 1735, and then flows out from filtering output terminal 522. During this flowing of current, the current through inductor 1732 increases with time, with inductor 1732 being in a state of storing energy, while capacitor 1734 enters a state of releasing energy, making the LED module continuing to emit light. On the other hand, when switch 1735 is switched off, inductor 1732 enters a state of releasing energy as the current through inductor 1732 decreases with time. In this state, the current through inductor 1732 then flows through freewheeling diode 1733, capacitor 1734, and the LED module, while capacitor 1734 enters a state of storing energy.


In some embodiments, capacitor 1734 is an optional element, so it can be omitted and is thus depicted in a dotted line in FIG. 12D. When capacitor 1734 is omitted and switch 1735 is switched on, the current of inductor 1732 does not flow through the LED module, making the LED module not emit light; but when switch 1735 is switched off, the current of inductor 1732 flows through freewheeling diode 1733 to reach the LED module, making the LED module emit light. Therefore, by controlling the time that the LED module emits light, and the magnitude of current through the LED module, the average luminance of the LED module can be stabilized to be above a defined value, thus also achieving the effect of emitting a steady light.



FIG. 12E is a schematic diagram of an exemplary driving circuit according to another embodiment. Referring to FIG. 12E, a driving circuit 1830 in this embodiment comprises a buck DC-to-DC converter circuit having a controller 1831 and a converter circuit. The converter circuit includes an inductor 1832, a diode 1833 for “freewheeling” of current, a capacitor 1834, and a switch 1835. Driving circuit 1830 is coupled to filtering output terminals 521 and 522 to receive and then convert a filtered signal into a driving signal for driving an LED module connected between driving output terminals 1521 and 1522.


Switch 1835 has a first terminal coupled to filtering output terminal 521, a second terminal coupled to the cathode of freewheeling diode 1833, and a control terminal coupled to controller 1831 to receive a control signal from controller 1831 for controlling current conduction or cutoff between the first and second terminals of switch 1835. The anode of freewheeling diode 1833 is connected to filtering output terminal 522 and driving output terminal 1522. Inductor 1832 has an end connected to the second terminal of switch 1835, and another end connected to driving output terminal 1521. Capacitor 1834 is coupled between driving output terminals 1521 and 1522, to stabilize the voltage between driving output terminals 1521 and 1522.


Controller 1831 is configured for controlling when to turn switch 1835 on (in a conducting state) or off (in a cutoff state), according to a current detection signal S535 and/or a current detection signal S531. When switch 1835 is switched on, a current of a filtered signal is input through filtering output terminal 521, and then flows through switch 1835, inductor 1832, and driving output terminals 1521 and 1522, and then flows out from filtering output terminal 522. During this flowing of current, the current through inductor 1832 and the voltage of capacitor 1834 both increase with time, so inductor 1832 and capacitor 1834 are in a state of storing energy. On the other hand, when switch 1835 is switched off, inductor 1832 is in a state of releasing energy and thus the current through it decreases with time. In this case, the current through inductor 1832 circulates through driving output terminals 1521 and 1522, freewheeling diode 1833, and back to inductor 1832.


In some embodiments, capacitor 1834 is an optional element, so it can be omitted and is thus depicted in a dotted line in FIG. 12E. When capacitor 1834 is omitted, no matter whether switch 1835 is turned on or off, the current through inductor 1832 will flow through driving output terminals 1521 and 1522 to drive the LED module to continue emitting light.



FIG. 12F is a schematic diagram of an exemplary driving circuit according to another embodiment. Referring to FIG. 12F, a driving circuit 1930 in this embodiment comprises a buck DC-to-DC converter circuit having a controller 1931 and a converter circuit. The converter circuit includes an inductor 1932, a diode 1933 for “freewheeling” of current, a capacitor 1934, and a switch 1935. Driving circuit 1930 is coupled to filtering output terminals 521 and 522 to receive and then convert a filtered signal into a driving signal for driving an LED module connected between driving output terminals 1521 and 1522.


Inductor 1932 has an end connected to filtering output terminal 521 and driving output terminal 1522, and another end connected to a first end of switch 1935. Switch 1935 has a second end connected to filtering output terminal 522, and a control terminal connected to controller 1931 to receive a control signal from controller 1931 for controlling current conduction or cutoff of switch 1935. Freewheeling diode 1933 has an anode coupled to a node connecting inductor 1932 and switch 1935, and a cathode coupled to driving output terminal 1521. Capacitor 1934 is coupled to driving output terminals 1521 and 1522, to stabilize the driving of the LED module coupled between driving output terminals 1521 and 1522.


Controller 1931 is configured for controlling when to turn switch 1935 on (in a conducting state) or off (in a cutoff state), according to a current detection signal S531 and/or a current detection signal S535. When switch 1935 is turned on, a current is input through filtering output terminal 521, and then flows through inductor 1932 and switch 1935, and then flows out from filtering output terminal 522. During this flowing of current, the current through inductor 1932 increases with time, so inductor 1932 is in a state of storing energy; but the voltage of capacitor 1934 decreases with time, so capacitor 1934 is in a state of releasing energy to keep the LED module continuing to emit light. On the other hand, when switch 1935 is turned off, inductor 1932 is in a state of releasing energy and its current decreases with time. In this case, the current through inductor 1932 circulates through freewheeling diode 1933, driving output terminals 1521 and 1522, and back to inductor 1932. During this circulation, capacitor 1934 is in a state of storing energy and its voltage increases with time.


It's worth noting that capacitor 1934 is an optional element, so it can be omitted and is thus depicted in a dotted line in FIG. 12F. When capacitor 1934 is omitted and switch 1935 is turned on, the current through inductor 1932 doesn't flow through driving output terminals 1521 and 1522, thereby making the LED module not emit light. On the other hand, when switch 1935 is turned off, the current through inductor 1932 flows through freewheeling diode 1933 and then the LED module to make the LED module emit light. Therefore, by controlling the time that the LED module emits light, and the magnitude of current through the LED module, the average luminance of the LED module can be stabilized to be above a defined value, thus also achieving the effect of emitting a steady light.



FIG. 12G is a block diagram of an exemplary driving circuit according to one embodiment. Referring to FIG. 12G, the driving circuit includes a controller 2631, and a conversion circuit 2632 for power conversion based on an adjustable current source, for driving the LED module to emit light. Conversion circuit 2632 includes a switching circuit 2635 and an energy storage circuit 2638. And conversion circuit 2632 is coupled to filtering output terminals 521 and 522 to receive and then convert a filtered signal, under the control by controller 2631, into a driving signal at driving output terminals 1521 and 1522 for driving the LED module. Controller 2631 is configured to receive a current detection signal S535 and/or a current detection signal S539, for controlling or stabilizing the driving signal output by conversion circuit 2632 to be above an objective current value. Current detection signal S535 represents the magnitude of current through switching circuit 2635. Current detection signal S539 represents the magnitude of current through energy storage circuit 2638, which current may be e.g. an inductor current in energy storage circuit 2638 or a current output at driving output terminal 1521. Any of current detection signal S535 and current detection signal S539 can represent the magnitude of current Iout provided by the driving circuit from driving output terminals 1521 and 1522 to the LED module. Controller 2631 is coupled to filtering output terminal 521 for setting the objective current value according to the voltage Vin at filtering output terminal 521. Therefore, the current Iout provided by the driving circuit or the objective current value can be adjusted corresponding to the magnitude of the voltage Vin of a filtered signal output by a filtering circuit.


In some embodiments, current detection signals S535 and S539 can be generated by measuring current through a resistor or induced by an inductor. For example, a current can be measured according to a voltage drop across a resistor in conversion circuit 2632 the current flows through, or which arises from a mutual induction between an inductor in conversion circuit 2632 and another inductor in its energy storage circuit 2638.


The above driving circuit structures are especially suitable for an application environment in which the external driving circuit for the LED tube lamp includes electronic ballast. An electronic ballast is equivalent to a current source whose output power is not constant. In an internal driving circuit as shown in each of FIGS. 12C-12F, power consumed by the internal driving circuit relates to or depends on the number of LEDs in the LED module, and could be regarded as constant. When the output power of the electronic ballast is higher than power consumed by the LED module driven by the driving circuit, the output voltage of the ballast will increase continually, causing the level of an AC driving signal received by the power supply module of the LED lamp to continually increase, so as to risk damaging the ballast and/or components of the power supply module due to their voltage ratings being exceeded. On the other hand, when the output power of the electronic ballast is lower than power consumed by the LED module driven by the driving circuit, the output voltage of the ballast and the level of the AC driving signal will decrease continually so that the LED tube lamp fails to normally operate.


In general, the power needed for an LED lamp to work is typically already lower than that needed for a fluorescent lamp to work. If a conventional control mechanism of e.g. using a backlight module to control the LED luminance is used with a conventional driving system of e.g. a ballast, a problem will probably arise of mismatch or incompatibility between the output power of the external driving system and the power needed by the LED lamp. This problem may even cause damaging of the driving system and/or the LED lamp. To prevent and/or protect against this problem, using e.g. the power/current adjustment method described above in FIG. 12G enables the LED (tube) lamp to be better compatible with traditional fluorescent lighting systems.



FIG. 12H is a graph illustrating the relationship between the voltage Vin and the objective current value Iout according to an embodiment. In FIG. 12H, the variable Vin is on the horizontal axis, and the variable Iout is on the vertical axis. In some cases, when the level of the voltage Vin of a filtered signal is between the upper voltage limit VH and the lower voltage limit VL, the objective current value Iout will be approximately an initial objective current value. The upper voltage limit VH is higher than the lower voltage limit VL. When the voltage Vin increases to be higher than the upper voltage limit VH, the objective current value Iout will increase with the increasing of the voltage Vin. During this stage, a situation that may be preferable is that the slope of the relationship curve increases with the increasing of the voltage Vin. When the voltage Vin of a filtered signal decreases to be below the lower voltage limit VL, the objective current value Iout will decrease with the decreasing of the voltage Vin. During this stage, a situation that may be preferable is that the slope of the relationship curve decreases with the decreasing of the voltage Vin. For example, during the stage when the voltage Vin is higher than the upper voltage limit VH or lower than the lower voltage limit VL, the objective current value Iout is in some embodiments a function of the voltage Vin to the power of 2 or above, in order to make the rate of increase/decrease of the consumed power higher than the rate of increase/decrease of the output power of the external driving system. Thus, adjustment of the objective current value Iout is in some embodiments a function of the filtered voltage Vin to the power of 2 or above.


In another case, when the voltage Vin of a filtered signal is between the upper voltage limit VH and the lower voltage limit VL, the objective current value Iout of the LED lamp will vary, increase or decrease, linearly with the voltage Vin. During this stage, when the voltage Vin is at the upper voltage limit VH, the objective current value Iout will be at the upper current limit IH. When the voltage Vin is at the lower voltage limit VL, the objective current value Iout will be at the lower current limit IL. The upper current limit IH is larger than the lower current limit IL. And when the voltage Vin is between the upper voltage limit VH and the lower voltage limit VL, the objective current value Iout will be a function of the voltage Vin to the power of 1.


With the designed relationship in FIG. 12H, when the output power of the ballast is higher than the power consumed by the LED module driven by the driving circuit, the voltage Vin will increase with time to exceed the upper voltage limit VH. When the voltage Vin is higher than the upper voltage limit VH, the rate of increase of the consumed power of the LED module is higher than that of the output power of the electronic ballast, and the output power and the consumed power will be balanced or equal when the voltage Vin is at a high balance voltage value VH+ and the current Iout is at a high balance current value IH+. In this case, the high balance voltage value VH+ is larger than the upper voltage limit VH, and the high balance current value IH+ is larger than the upper current limit IH. On the other hand, when the output power of the ballast is lower than the power consumed by the LED module driven by the driving circuit, the voltage Vin will decrease to be below the lower voltage limit VL. When the voltage Vin is lower than the lower voltage limit VL, the rate of decrease of the consumed power of the LED module is higher than that of the output power of the electronic ballast, and the output power and the consumed power will be balanced or equal when the voltage Vin is at a low balance voltage value VL− and the objective current value Iout is at a low balance current value IL−. In this case, the low balance voltage value VL− is smaller than the lower voltage limit VL, and the low balance current value IL− is smaller than the lower current limit IL.


In some embodiments, the lower voltage limit VL is defined to be around 90% of the lowest output power of the electronic ballast, and the upper voltage limit VH is defined to be around 110% of its highest output power. Taking a common AC powerline with a voltage range of 100-277 volts and a frequency of 60 Hz as an example, the lower voltage limit VL may be set at 90 volts (=100*90%), and the upper voltage limit VH may be set at 305 volts (=277*110%).


With reference back to FIGS. 4 and 5, a short circuit board 253 includes a first short circuit substrate and a second short circuit substrate respectively connected to two terminal portions of a long circuit sheet 251, and electronic components of the power supply module are respectively disposed on the first short circuit substrate and the second short circuit substrate. The first short circuit substrate may be referred to as a first power supply substrate, or first end cap substrate. The second short circuit substrate may be referred to as a second power supply substrate, or second end cap substrate. The first power supply substrate and second power substrate may be separate substrates at different ends of an LED tube lamp.


The first short circuit substrate and the second short circuit substrate may have roughly the same length, or different lengths. In some embodiments, a first short circuit substrate (e.g. the right circuit substrate of short circuit board 253 in FIG. 4 and the left circuit substrate of short circuit board 253 in FIG. 5) has a length that is about 30%-80% of the length of the second short circuit substrate (i.e. the left circuit substrate of short circuit board 253 in FIG. 4 and the right circuit substrate of short circuit board 253 in FIG. 5). In some embodiments the length of the first short circuit substrate is about ⅓˜⅔ of the length of the second short circuit substrate. For example, in one embodiment, the length of the first short circuit substrate may be about half the length of the second short circuit substrate. The length of the second short circuit substrate may be, for example in the range of about 15 mm to about 65 mm, depending on actual application occasions. In certain embodiments, the first short circuit substrate is disposed in an end cap at an end of the LED tube lamp, and the second short circuit substrate is disposed in another end cap at the opposite end of the LED tube lamp.


In some embodiments, capacitors of the driving circuit, such as capacitors 1634, 1734, 1834, and 1934 in FIGS. 12C˜12F, in practical use may include two or more capacitors connected in parallel. Some or all capacitors of the driving circuit in the power supply module may be arranged on the first short circuit substrate of short circuit board 253, while other components such as the rectifying circuit, filtering circuit, inductor(s) of the driving circuit, controller(s), switch(es), diodes, etc. are arranged on the second short circuit substrate of short circuit board 253. Since inductors, controllers, switches, etc. are electronic components with higher temperature, arranging some or all capacitors on a circuit substrate separate or away from the circuit substrate(s) of high-temperature components helps prevent the working life of capacitors (especially electrolytic capacitors) from being negatively affected by the high-temperature components, thus improving the reliability of the capacitors. Further, the physical separation between the capacitors and both the rectifying circuit and filtering circuit also contributes to reducing the problem of EMI.


In some embodiments, the driving circuit has power conversion efficiency of 80% or above, which may in some embodiments be 90% or above, and may in some embodiments be 92% or above. Therefore, without the driving circuit, luminous efficacy of the LED lamp according to some embodiments may preferably be 120 lm/W or above, and may even more preferably be 160 lm/W or above. On the other hand, with the driving circuit in combination with the LED component(s), luminous efficacy of the LED lamp may preferably be, in some embodiments, 120 lm/W*90%=108 lm/W or above, and may even more preferably be, in some embodiments 160 lm/W*92%=147.2 lm/W or above.


In view of the fact that the diffusion film or layer in an LED tube lamp generally has light transmittance of 85% or above, luminous efficacy of the LED tube lamp in some embodiments is 108 lm/W*85%=91.8 lm/W or above, and may be, in some more effective embodiments, 147.2 lm/W*85%=125.12 lm/W.



FIG. 13A is a block diagram of an LED lamp according to one embodiment. Compared to FIG. 7E, the embodiment of FIG. 13A includes rectifying circuits 510 and 540, and a filtering circuit 520, and further includes a ballast-compatible circuit 1510; wherein the power supply module may also include some components of an LED lighting module 530. The ballast-compatible circuit 1510 is coupled to (the first) rectifying circuit 510, and may be coupled between pin 501 and/or pin 502 and rectifying circuit 510. This embodiment is explained assuming the ballast-compatible circuit 1510 to be coupled between pin 501 and rectifying circuit 510. With reference to FIGS. 7A and 7D in addition to FIG. 13A, in one embodiment, lamp driving circuit 505 comprises a ballast configured to provide an AC driving signal to drive the LED lamp.


In an initial stage upon the activation of the driving system of lamp driving circuit 505, lamp driving circuit 505's ability to output relevant signal(s) initially takes time to rise to a standard state, and at first has not risen to that state. However, in the initial stage the power supply module of the LED lamp instantly or rapidly receives or conducts the AC driving signal provided by lamp driving circuit 505, which initial conduction is likely to fail the starting of the LED lamp by lamp driving circuit 505 as lamp driving circuit 505 is initially loaded by the LED lamp in this stage. For example, internal components of lamp driving circuit 505 may retrieve power from a transformed output in lamp driving circuit 505, in order to maintain their operation upon the activation. In this case, the activation of lamp driving circuit 505 may end up failing as its output voltage could not normally rise to a required level in this initial stage; or the quality factor (Q) of a resonant circuit in lamp driving circuit 505 may vary as a result of the initial loading from the LED lamp, so as to cause the failure of the activation.


In one embodiment, in the initial stage upon activation, ballast-compatible circuit 1510 will be in an open-circuit state, preventing the energy of the AC driving signal from reaching the LED module. After a defined delay, which may be a specific delay period, after the AC driving signal as an external driving signal is first input to the LED tube lamp, ballast-compatible circuit 1510 switches, or changes, from a cutoff state during the delay to a conducting state, allowing the energy of the AC driving signal to start to reach the LED module. By means of the delayed conduction of ballast-compatible circuit 1510, operation of the LED lamp simulates the lamp-starting characteristics of a fluorescent lamp. For example, during lamp starting of a fluorescent lamp, internal gases of the fluorescent lamp will normally discharge for light emission after a delay upon activation of a driving power supply. Therefore, ballast-compatible circuit 1510 further improves the compatibility of the LED lamp with lamp driving circuits 505 such as an electronic ballast. In this manner, ballast-compatible circuit 1510, which may be described as a delay circuit, or an external signal control circuit, is configured to control and controls the timing for receiving an AC driving signal at a power supply module of an LED lamp (e.g., at a rectifier circuit and/or filter circuit of a power supply module).


In this embodiment, rectifying circuit 540 may be omitted and is therefore depicted by a dotted line in FIG. 13A.


It's noted that in the embodiments using the ballast-compatible circuit described with reference to FIGS. 13A-H in this disclosure, upon the external driving signal being initially input at the first pin and second pin (e.g., upon inserting or plugging an LED lamp into a socket), the ballast-compatible circuit will not enter a conduction state until a period of delay passes. In some embodiments, the period may be between about 10 milliseconds (ms) and about 1 second. More specifically, in some embodiments, the period may be between about 10 ms and about 300 ms.



FIG. 13B is a block diagram of an LED lamp according to one embodiment. Compared to FIG. 13A, ballast-compatible circuit 1510 in the embodiment of FIG. 13B is coupled between pin 503 and/or pin 504 and rectifying circuit 540. As explained regarding ballast-compatible circuit 1510 in FIG. 13A, ballast-compatible circuit 1510 in FIG. 13B performs the function of delaying the starting of the LED lamp, or causing the input of the AC driving signal to be delayed for a predefined time, in order to prevent the failure of starting by lamp driving circuits 505 such as an electronic ballast.


Apart from coupling ballast-compatible circuit 1510 between terminal pin(s) and rectifying circuit in the above embodiments, ballast-compatible circuit 1510 may alternatively be included within a rectifying circuit with a different structure. FIG. 13C illustrates an arrangement with a ballast-compatible circuit in an LED lamp according to an exemplary embodiment. Referring to FIG. 13C, the rectifying circuit has the circuit structure of rectifying circuit 810 in FIG. 8C. Rectifying circuit 810 includes rectifying unit 815 and terminal adapter circuit 541. Rectifying unit 815 is coupled to pins 501 and 502, terminal adapter circuit 541 is coupled to filtering output terminals 511 and 512, and the ballast-compatible circuit 1510 in FIG. 13C is coupled between rectifying unit 815 and terminal adapter circuit 541. In this case, in the initial stage upon activation of the ballast, an AC driving signal as an external driving signal is input to the LED tube lamp, where the AC driving signal can only reach rectifying unit 815, but cannot reach other circuits such as terminal adapter circuit 541, other internal filter circuitry, and the LED lighting module. Moreover, parasitic capacitors associated with rectifying diodes 811 and 812 within rectifying unit 815 are quite small in capacitance and may be ignored. Accordingly, lamp driving circuit 505 in the initial stage isn't loaded with or effectively connected to the equivalent capacitor or inductor of the power supply module of the LED lamp, and the quality factor (Q) of lamp driving circuit 505 is therefore not adversely affected in this stage, resulting in a successful starting of the LED lamp by lamp driving circuit 505. For example, the first rectifying circuit 510 may comprise a rectifying unit 815 and a terminal adapter circuit 541, and the rectifying unit is coupled to the terminal adapter circuit and is capable of performing half-wave rectification. In this example, the terminal adapter circuit is configured to transmit the external driving signal received via at least one of the first pin and the second pin.


It's worth noting that in one embodiment, under the condition that terminal adapter circuit 541 doesn't include components such as capacitors or inductors, interchanging rectifying unit 815 and terminal adapter circuit 541 in position, meaning rectifying unit 815 is connected to filtering output terminals 511 and 512 and terminal adapter circuit 541 is connected to pins 501 and 502, doesn't affect or alter the function of ballast-compatible circuit 1510.


Further, as explained in FIGS. 8A˜8D, when a rectifying circuit is connected to pins 503 and 504 instead of pins 501 and 502, this rectifying circuit may constitute the rectifying circuit 540. For example, the circuit arrangement with a ballast-compatible circuit 1510 in FIG. 13C may be alternatively included in rectifying circuit 540 instead of rectifying circuit 810, without affecting the function of ballast-compatible circuit 1510.


In some embodiments, as described above terminal adapter circuit 541 doesn't include components such as capacitors or inductors. Or when rectifying circuit 610 in FIG. 8A constitutes the rectifying circuit 510 or 540, parasitic capacitances in the rectifying circuit 510 or 540 are quite small and may be ignored. These conditions contribute to not affecting the quality factor of lamp driving circuit 505.



FIG. 13D is a block diagram of an LED lamp according to an embodiment. Compared to the embodiment of FIG. 13A, ballast-compatible circuit 1510 in the embodiment of FIG. 13D is coupled between rectifying circuit 540 and filtering circuit 520. Since rectifying circuit 540 also doesn't include components such as capacitors or inductors, the function of ballast-compatible circuit 1510 in the embodiment of FIG. 13D will not be affected.



FIG. 13E is a block diagram of an LED lamp according to an embodiment. Compared to the embodiment of FIG. 13A, ballast-compatible circuit 1510 in the embodiment of FIG. 13E is coupled between rectifying circuit 510 and filtering circuit 520. Similarly, since rectifying circuit 510 doesn't include components such as capacitors or inductors, the function of ballast-compatible circuit 1510 in the embodiment of FIG. 13E will not be affected. Still, under the configuration shown in FIG. 13E, the reception of a driving signal for driving an LED lamp (in this case a rectified driving signal) can be delayed. For example, in FIG. 13E, the reception of a driving signal at a filter circuit 520 may be delayed after the LED lamp is plugged in. The delay may be controlled by a ballast-compatible circuit.



FIG. 13F is a schematic diagram of a ballast-compatible circuit according to an exemplary embodiment. Ballast-compatible circuit may also be referred to herein as a ballast interface circuit, as it serves as an interface between an electronic ballast and an LED lighting module of an LED lamp. Referring to FIG. 13F, a ballast-compatible circuit 1610 has an initial state in which an equivalent open-circuit is obtained at ballast-compatible circuit input and output terminals 1611 and 1621. Upon receiving an input signal at ballast-compatible circuit input terminal 1611, a delay will pass until a current conduction occurs through and between ballast-compatible circuit input and output terminals 1611 and 1621, transmitting the input signal to ballast-compatible circuit output terminal 1621.


Ballast-compatible circuit 1610 includes a diode 1612, first through fifth resistors 1613, 1615, 1618, 1620, and 1622, a second electronic switch (such as a bidirectional triode thyristor (TRIAC) 1614), a first electronic switch (such as a DIAC or symmetrical trigger diode 1617), a capacitor 1619, and ballast-compatible circuit input and output terminals 1611 and 1621. It's noted that the resistance of first resistor 1613 should be quite large so that when bidirectional triode thyristor 1614 is cutoff in an open-circuit state, an equivalent open-circuit is obtained at ballast-compatible circuit input and output terminals 1611 and 1621. Typical values of the resistance of first resistor 1613 may be in the range of about 330 kΩ to about 820 kΩ, and the resistance could take a value in a broad range of about 47 kΩ to about 1.5MΩ. And in one embodiment, the actual value is 330KΩ.


Bidirectional triode thyristor 1614 is coupled between ballast-compatible circuit input and output terminals 1611 and 1621, and first resistor 1613 is also coupled between ballast-compatible circuit input and output terminals 1611 and 1621 and in parallel to bidirectional triode thyristor 1614. Diode 1612, fourth and fifth resistors 1620 and 1622, and capacitor 1619 are series-connected in sequence between ballast-compatible circuit input and output terminals 1611 and 1621, and are connected in parallel with bidirectional triode thyristor 1614. Diode 1612 has an anode connected to bidirectional triode thyristor 1614, and has a cathode connected to an end of fourth resistor 1620. Bidirectional triode thyristor 1614 has a control terminal connected to a terminal of symmetrical trigger diode 1617, which has another terminal connected to an end of third resistor 1618, which has another end connected to a node connecting capacitor 1619 and fifth resistor 1622. Second resistor 1615 is connected between the control terminal of bidirectional triode thyristor 1614 and a node connecting first resistor 1613 and capacitor 1619. It's also noted that resistors 1615, 1618, and 1620 may be omitted. The different resistors and switches are referred to using labels first through fifth (or first and second), but may be referred to using other labels. For example, if only the fourth resistor 1620 and fifth resistor 1622 are being discussed, they may be referred to as a first and second resistor respectfully. Similarly, the first switch 1617 may be referred to as a second switch, and the second switch 1614 may be referred to as a first switch. Also, the opposite ends or terminals of certain devices, such as the different resistors the capacitor 1619, switch 1617, or diode 1612, may be referred to as first and second ends, or first and second terminals, and may be described as opposite each other.


When an AC driving signal (such as a high-frequency high-voltage AC signal output by an electronic ballast) is initially input to ballast-compatible circuit input terminal 1611, bidirectional triode thyristor 1614 will be in an open-circuit state, preventing the AC driving signal from passing through, and the LED lamp is therefore also in an open-circuit state. In this state, the AC driving signal is charging capacitor 1619 through diode 1612 and resistors 1620 and 1622, gradually increasing the voltage of capacitor 1619. Upon continually charging for a period of time, the voltage of capacitor 1619 increases to be above the trigger voltage value of symmetrical trigger diode 1617 so that symmetrical trigger diode 1617 is turned on in a conducting state. Then the conducting symmetrical trigger diode 1617 will in turn trigger bidirectional triode thyristor 1614 on in a conducting state. In this situation, the conducting bidirectional triode thyristor 1614 electrically connects ballast-compatible circuit input and output terminals 1611 and 1621, allowing the AC driving signal to flow through ballast-compatible circuit input and output terminals 1611 and 1621, and starting the operation of the power supply module of the LED lamp. In this case the energy stored by capacitor 1619 will maintain the conducting state of bidirectional triode thyristor 1614, to prevent the AC variation of the AC driving signal from causing bidirectional triode thyristor 1614 and therefore ballast-compatible circuit 1610 to be cutoff again, or to prevent the situation of bidirectional triode thyristor 1614 alternating or switching between its conducting and cutoff states. Therefore, when the external driving signal is initially input at the first pin and second pin, the second electronic switch will be in an open-circuit state, and the first capacitor will be charged so as to cause the first electronic switch to enter a conducting state to an extent that in turn triggers the second electronic switch into a conducting state, making the ballast-compatible circuit enter the conduction state.


When ballast-compatible circuit 1610 of this embodiment is applied to the circuit system in FIGS. 13C and 13D, since ballast-compatible circuit 1610 in operation receives a signal that has been rectified through the rectifying unit or the rectifying circuit, diode 1612 can be omitted. And in various embodiments, bidirectional triode thyristor 1614 may be replaced by, for example, a silicon controlled rectifier (SCR), which can reduce voltage drop in a conducting line, and the first electronic switch may comprise a symmetrical trigger diode 1617 or constitute e.g. a thyristor surge suppressor. In general, in hundreds of milliseconds upon activation of a lamp driving circuit 505 such as an electronic ballast, the output voltage of the ballast has risen above a certain voltage value as the output voltage hasn't been adversely affected by the sudden initial loading from the LED lamp. In particular, upon activation of each of some instant-start electronic ballasts, the output AC voltage of the ballast will be roughly maintained at a constant value below about 300 volts for a small period such as 0.01 seconds, and then rises. During this period if any load(s) is introduced in the lamp and then coupled to the output end of the ballast, this load addition will prevent the output AC voltage of the instant-start electronic ballast from smoothly rising to a sufficient level. This problem is especially likely to happen if the input voltage to the ballast is from the AC powerline of a voltage substantially equal to or below 120 volts. Besides, a detection mechanism to detect whether lighting of a fluorescent lamp is achieved may be disposed in lamp driving circuits 505 such as an electronic ballast. In this detection mechanism, if a fluorescent lamp fails to be lit up for a defined period of time, an abnormal state of the fluorescent lamp is detected, causing the fluorescent lamp to enter a protection state. In certain embodiments, the delay provided by ballast-compatible circuit 1610 until conduction of ballast-compatible circuit 1610 and then the LED lamp may be larger than 0.01 seconds, and may be even in the range of about 0.1˜3 seconds. For example, upon the external driving signal being initially input at the first pin and second pin, the ballast-compatible circuit will not enter a conduction state until a period of delay passes, wherein the period of delay is between about 10 milliseconds (ms) and 1 second. And preferably in some embodiments the period is between about 10 milliseconds (ms) and 300 ms.


It's worth noting that an additional or another capacitor 1623 may be coupled in parallel to resistor 1622. Capacitor 1623 has an end coupled to a coupling node between an input/output terminal of the ballast-compatible circuit and the second electronic switch; has another end coupled to a coupling node between the first electronic switch and the first capacitor 1619; and is configured to reflect or bear instantaneous change in the voltage between an input terminal and an output terminal of the ballast-compatible circuit. For example, capacitor 1623 operates to reflect or support instantaneous change in the voltage between ballast-compatible circuit input and output terminals 1611 and 1621, and will not affect the function of delayed conduction performed by ballast-compatible circuit 1610.


As disclosed herein, the LED tube lamp may comprise a light strip attached to an inner surface of the lamp tube and which comprises a bendable circuit sheet. And the LED lighting module may comprise an LED module, which comprises an LED component (e.g., an LED or group of LEDs) and is disposed on the bendable circuit sheet. The ballast-compatible circuit 1610 may be between a ballast of an external power supply and the LED lighting module and/or LED module of the LED tube lamp. The ballast-compatible circuit 1610 may be configured to receive a signal derived from the external driving signal. For example, the signal may be a filtered signal passed through a rectifying circuit and a filtering circuit.



FIG. 13G is a block diagram of a power supply module in an LED lamp according to an exemplary embodiment. Compared to the embodiment of FIG. 7D, lamp driving circuit 505 in the embodiment of FIG. 13G drives a plurality of LED tube lamps 500 connected in series, wherein a ballast-compatible circuit 1610 is disposed in each of the LED tube lamps 500. For the convenience of illustration, two series-connected LED tube lamps 500 are assumed for example and explained as follows.


Because the two ballast-compatible circuits 1610 respectively of the two LED tube lamps 500 can actually have different delays until conduction of the LED tube lamps 500, due to various factors such as errors occurring in production processes of some components, in some embodiments, the actual timing of conduction of each of the ballast-compatible circuits 1610 is different. Upon activation of a lamp driving circuit 505, the voltage of the AC driving signal provided by lamp driving circuit 505 will be shared by the two LED tube lamps 500 roughly equally. Subsequently when only one of the two LED tube lamps 500 first enters a conducting state, the voltage of the AC driving signal then will be borne mostly or entirely by the other LED tube lamp 500. This situation will cause the voltage across the ballast-compatible circuits 1610 in the other LED tube lamp 500 that's not conducting to suddenly increase or be doubled, meaning the voltage between ballast-compatible circuit input and output terminals 1611 and 1621 might even be suddenly doubled. In view of this, if capacitor 1623 is included, the voltage division effect between capacitors 1619 and 1623 will instantaneously increase the voltage of capacitor 1619, making symmetrical trigger diode 1617 triggering bidirectional triode thyristor 1614 into a conducting state, and causing the two ballast-compatible circuits 1610 respectively of the two LED tube lamps 500 to become conducting almost at the same time. Therefore, by introducing capacitor 1623, the situation where one of the two ballast-compatible circuits 1610 respectively of the two series-connected LED tube lamps 500 that is first conducting has its bidirectional triode thyristor 1614 then suddenly cutoff as having insufficient current passing through due to the discrepancy between the delays provided by the two ballast-compatible circuits 1610 until their respective conductions, can be avoided. Therefore, using each ballast-compatible circuit 1610 with capacitor 1623 further improves the compatibility of the series-connected LED tube lamps with each of lamp driving circuits 505 such as an electronic ballast.


It's noted that the value of total resistance of both resistors 1620 and 1622 may typically be in the range of about 330 kΩ to about 820 kΩ, and the total resistance could take a value in a broad range of about 47 kΩ to about 1.5MΩ. And in one embodiment, the actual total value is 330KΩ).


An exemplary range of the capacitance of capacitor 1623 may be about 10 pF to about 1 nF. In some embodiments, the range of the capacitance of capacitor 1623 may be about 10 pF to about 100 pF. For example, the capacitance of capacitor 1623 may be about 47 pF.


Typical values of the capacitance of capacitor 1619 may be in the range of about 100 nF to about 470 nF, and the capacitance could take a value in a broad range of about 47 nF to about 1.5 pF. And in one embodiment, the actual value is 470 nF. As such, in some embodiments, a first capacitor 1619 and second capacitor 1623 are arranged in series between ballast-compatible circuit input and output terminals 1611 and 1621. In this case the capacitance of the first capacitor 1619 and the second capacitor 1623 may respectively be about 220 nF and about 50 pF (or 47 pF). And the capacitance ratio between the first capacitor 1619 and the second capacitor 1623 may be in some embodiments between about 47 and about 150000.


According to some embodiments, diode 1612 is used or configured to rectify the signal for charging capacitor 1619. Therefore, with reference to FIGS. 13C, 13D, and 13E, in the case when ballast-compatible circuit 1610 is arranged following a rectifying unit or circuit, diode 1612 may be omitted. Diode 1612 is depicted by a dotted line in FIG. 13F.



FIG. 13H is a schematic diagram of a ballast-compatible circuit according to another embodiment. Referring to FIG. 13H, a ballast-compatible circuit 1710 has an initial state in which an equivalent open-circuit is obtained at ballast-compatible circuit input and output terminals 1711 and 1721. Upon receiving an input signal at ballast-compatible circuit input terminal 1711, ballast-compatible circuit 1710 will be in a cutoff state when the level of the input external driving signal is below a defined value corresponding to a conduction delay of ballast-compatible circuit 1710; and ballast-compatible circuit 1710 will enter a conducting state upon the level of the input external driving signal reaching the defined value, thus transmitting the input signal to ballast-compatible circuit output terminal 1721. In some embodiments, the defined value is set to be larger than or equal to 400 volts.


Ballast-compatible circuit 1710 includes a second electronic switch (such as a bidirectional triode thyristor (TRIAC) 1712), a first electronic switch (such as a DIAC or symmetrical trigger diode 1713), first through third resistors 1714, 1716, and 1717, and a capacitor 1715. Bidirectional triode thyristor 1712 has a first terminal connected to ballast-compatible circuit input terminal 1711; a control terminal connected to a terminal of symmetrical trigger diode 1713 and an end of first resistor 1714; and a second terminal connected to another end of first resistor 1714. Capacitor 1715 has an end connected to another terminal of symmetrical trigger diode 1713, and has another end connected to the second terminal of bidirectional triode thyristor 1712. Third resistor 1717 is in parallel connection with capacitor 1715, and is therefore also connected to said another terminal of symmetrical trigger diode 1713 and the second terminal of bidirectional triode thyristor 1712. And second resistor 1716 has an end connected to the node connecting capacitor 1715 and symmetrical trigger diode 1713, and has another end connected to ballast-compatible circuit output terminal 1721. As mentioned above, the different ends and terminals of each component may be referred to as first and second ends or terminals, and the various labels, such as first, second, and third, are merely labels, and maybe interchanged based on the components being described.


When an AC driving signal (such as a high-frequency high-voltage AC signal output by an electronic ballast) is initially input to ballast-compatible circuit input terminal 1711, bidirectional triode thyristor 1712 will be in an open-circuit state, preventing the AC driving signal from passing through, and the LED lamp is therefore also in an open-circuit state. The input of the AC driving signal causes a potential difference between ballast-compatible circuit input terminal 1711 and ballast-compatible circuit output terminal 1721. When the AC driving signal increases with time to eventually reach a sufficient amplitude (which may be a pre-defined level) after a period of time, the signal level at ballast-compatible circuit output terminal 1721 has a reflected voltage at the control terminal of bidirectional triode thyristor 1712 after passing through second resistor 1716, parallel-connected capacitor 1715 and third resistor 1717, and first resistor 1714, wherein the reflected voltage then triggers bidirectional triode thyristor 1712 into a conducting state. This conducting state makes ballast-compatible circuit 1710 entering a conducting state, which causes the LED lamp to operate normally. Upon bidirectional triode thyristor 1712 conducting, a current flows through resistor 1716 and then charges capacitor 1715 to store a specific voltage on capacitor 1715. In this case, the energy stored by capacitor 1715 will maintain the conducting state of bidirectional triode thyristor 1712, to prevent the AC variation of the AC driving signal from causing bidirectional triode thyristor 1712 and therefore ballast-compatible circuit 1710 to be cutoff again, or to prevent the situation of bidirectional triode thyristor 1712 alternating or switching between its conducting and cutoff states.


In certain embodiments, bidirectional triode thyristor 1712 may have a triggering current magnitude of about 5 mA, symmetrical trigger diode 1713 may have a turn-on threshold voltage in the range of about 30 volts±6 volts, and the resistance of resistors 1716 and 1717 may be respectively about 100 kΩ and about 13 or 37.5 kΩ.


Therefore, an exemplary ballast-compatible circuit such as described herein may be coupled between any pin and any rectifying circuit described above, wherein the ballast-compatible circuit will be in a cutoff state in a defined delay upon an external driving signal being input to the LED tube lamp, and will enter a conducting state after the delay. As such, the ballast-compatible circuit will be in a cutoff state when the level of the input external driving signal is below a defined value corresponding to a conduction delay of the ballast-compatible circuit; and ballast-compatible circuit will enter a conducting state upon the level of the input external driving signal reaching the defined value. Accordingly, the compatibility of the LED tube lamp described herein with lamp driving circuits 505 such as an electronic ballast is further improved by using such a ballast-compatible circuit.


In various embodiments, when the external driving signal is initially input at the first pin and second pin, the second electronic switch 1712 will be in an open-circuit state, and then the external driving signal passes through a diode or the first rectifying circuit to produce a DC signal (or a pulsating DC signal), with the open-circuit state continuing until the DC signal reaches an amplitude causing the first electronic switch 1713 to enter a conducting state to an extent that in turn triggers the second electronic switch into a conducting state, making the ballast-compatible circuit enter the conduction state. Specifically, the diode may be in the first rectifying circuit, may be in the ballast-compatible circuit, or may be separate from these two circuits, and the diode even may not belong to the LED tube lamp. It's also noted that the rectified signal may comprise the DC signal.


And as shown in FIG. 13H, the DC signal may be produced after the external driving signal passes through the diode or the first rectifying circuit and then through a voltage division circuit (e.g. comprising resistors 1716 and 1717). Various embodiments may also include different voltage division circuits within the knowledge of one of ordinary skill in the art, for producing the DC signal.


Further, in different embodiments, the first electronic switch in FIGS. 13F and 13H may comprise a symmetrical trigger diode or constitute a thyristor surge suppressor. And the second electronic switch in FIGS. 13F and 13H may comprise a bidirectional triode thyristor or a silicon controlled rectifier.


The LED tube lamps according to various different embodiments of the present invention are described as above. With respect to an entire LED tube lamp, the features including for example “adopting the bendable circuit sheet as the LED light strip” and “utilizing the circuit board assembly to connect the LED light strip and the power supply” may be applied in practice singly or integrally such that only one of the features is practiced or a number of the features are simultaneously practiced.


As an example, the feature “adopting the bendable circuit sheet as the LED light strip” may include “the connection between the bendable circuit sheet and the power supply is by way of wire bonding or soldering bonding; the bendable circuit sheet includes a wiring layer and a dielectric layer arranged in a stacked manner; the bendable circuit sheet has a circuit protective layer made of ink to reflect light and has widened part along the circumferential direction of the lamp tube to function as a reflective film.”


As an example, the feature “utilizing the circuit board assembly to connect the LED light strip and the power supply” may include “the circuit board assembly has a long circuit sheet and a short circuit board that are adhered to each other with the short circuit board being adjacent to the side edge of the long circuit sheet; the short circuit board is provided with a power supply module to form the power supply; the short circuit board is stiffer than the long circuit sheet.”


According to examples of the power supply module, the external driving signal may be low frequency AC signal (e.g., commercial power), high frequency AC signal (e.g., that provided by a ballast), or a DC signal (e.g., that provided by a battery), input into the LED tube lamp through a drive architecture of single-end power supply or dual-end power supply. For the drive architecture of dual-end power supply, the external driving signal may be input by using only one end thereof as single-end power supply.


The LED tube lamp may omit the rectifying circuit when the external driving signal is a DC signal.


According examples of the rectifying circuit in the power supply module, in certain embodiments, there may be a single rectifying circuit, or dual rectifying circuits. First and second rectifying circuits of the dual rectifying circuit may be respectively coupled to the two end caps disposed on two ends of the LED tube lamp. The single rectifying circuit is applicable to the drive architecture of signal-end power supply, and the dual rectifying circuit is applicable to the drive architecture of dual-end power supply. Furthermore, the LED tube lamp having at least one rectifying circuit is applicable to the drive architecture of low frequency AC signal, high frequency AC signal or DC signal.


The single rectifying circuit may be a half-wave rectifier circuit or full-wave bridge rectifying circuit. The dual rectifying circuit may comprise two half-wave rectifier circuits, two full-wave bridge rectifying circuits or one half-wave rectifier circuit and one full-wave bridge rectifying circuit.


According to examples of the pin in the power supply module, in certain embodiments, there may be two pins in a single end (the other end has no pin), two pins in corresponding ends of two ends, or four pins in corresponding ends of two ends. The designs of two pins in single end two pins in corresponding ends of two ends are applicable to signal rectifying circuit design of the of the rectifying circuit. The design of four pins in corresponding ends of two ends is applicable to dual rectifying circuit design of the of the rectifying circuit, and the external driving signal can be received by two pins in only one end or in two ends.


According to the design of the LED lighting module according to some embodiments, the LED lighting module may comprise the LED module and a driving circuit or only the LED module.


If there is only the LED module in the LED lighting module and the external driving signal is a high frequency AC signal, a capacitive circuit may be in at least one rectifying circuit and the capacitive circuit may be connected in series with a half-wave rectifier circuit or a full-wave bridge rectifying circuit of the rectifying circuit and may serve as a current modulation circuit to modulate the current of the LED module since the capacitor acts as a resistor for a high frequency signal. Thereby, even when different ballasts provide high frequency signals with different voltage levels, the current of the LED module can be modulated into a defined current range for preventing overcurrent. In addition, an energy-releasing circuit may be connected in parallel with the LED module. When the external driving signal is no longer supplied, the energy-releasing circuit releases the energy stored in the filtering circuit to lower a resonance effect of the filtering circuit and other circuits for restraining the flicker of the LED module.


In some embodiments, if there are the LED module and the driving circuit in the LED lighting module, the driving circuit may be a buck converter, a boost converter, or a buck-boost converter. The driving circuit stabilizes the current of the LED module at a defined current value, and the defined current value may be modulated based on the external driving signal. For example, the defined current value may be increased with the increasing of the level of the external driving signal and reduced with the reducing of the level of the external driving signal. Moreover, a mode switching circuit may be added between the LED module and the driving circuit for switching the current from the filtering circuit directly or through the driving circuit inputting into the LED module.


According to some embodiments, the LED module comprises plural strings of LEDs connected in parallel with each other, wherein each LED may have a single LED chip or plural LED chips emitting different spectrums. Each LEDs in different LED strings may be connected with each other to form a mesh connection.


According to the design of the ballast-compatible circuit of the power supply module in some embodiments, the ballast-compatible circuit can be connected in series with the rectifying circuit. Under the design of being connected in series with the rectifying circuit, the ballast-compatible circuit is initially in a cutoff state and then changes to a conducting state in or after an objective delay. The ballast-compatible circuit makes the electronic ballast activate during the starting stage and enhances the compatibility for instant-start ballast. Furthermore, the ballast-compatible circuit maintains the compatibilities with other ballasts, e.g., program-start and rapid-start ballasts.


The above-mentioned features can be accomplished in any combination to improve the LED tube lamp, and the above embodiments are described by way of example only. The present invention is not herein limited, and many variations are possible without departing from the spirit of the present invention and the scope as defined in the appended claims.

Claims
  • 1. A light emitting diode (LED) tube lamp, comprising: a lamp tube;a first external connection terminal and a second external connection terminal coupled to the lamp tube and for receiving an external driving signal;a first rectifying circuit coupled to the first external connection terminal and the second external connection terminal and configured to rectify the external driving signal to produce a rectified signal;a filtering circuit coupled to the first rectifying circuit and configured to filter the rectified signal to produce a filtered signal;an LED lighting module coupled to the filtering circuit and configured to receive the filtered signal for emitting light; anda ballast interface circuit coupled to the first rectifying circuit,wherein the ballast interface circuit is configured such that when the external driving signal is initially input at the first external connection terminal and second external connection terminal, the ballast interface circuit will initially be in an open-circuit state, which prevents the LED tube lamp from emitting light, until the ballast interface circuit enters a conduction state, which conduction state allows a current input at the first external connection terminal/second external connection terminal to flow through the LED lighting module and thereby allows the LED tube lamp to emit light.
  • 2. The LED tube lamp according to claim 1, wherein the ballast interface circuit is coupled between the first external connection terminal and the first rectifying circuit or between the second external connection terminal and the first rectifying circuit.
  • 3. The LED tube lamp according to claim 1, wherein the ballast interface circuit is coupled between the filtering circuit and the first rectifying circuit.
  • 4. The LED tube lamp according to claim 1, wherein the lamp tube further has a third external connection terminal and a fourth external connection terminal for receiving an external driving signal, and the LED tube lamp further includes: a second rectifying circuit coupled to the third and fourth external connection terminals, for rectifying the external driving signal.
  • 5. The LED tube lamp according to claim 4, wherein the ballast interface circuit is coupled between the filtering circuit and the second rectifying circuit.
  • 6. The LED tube lamp according to claim 1, wherein the ballast interface circuit comprises: a first electronic switch configured to change from a first open state to a second closed state after a delay period of time after the external driving signal is initially input at the first external connection terminal and the second external connection terminal; anda first capacitor connected between the first switch and an output terminal of the ballast interface circuit.
  • 7. The LED tube lamp according to claim 6, further comprising: a second capacitor connected in series with the first capacitor, such that the second capacitor is connected between the first capacitor and an input terminal of the ballast interface circuit, and the first capacitor is connected between the second capacitor and the output terminal of the ballast interface circuit.
  • 8. The LED tube lamp according to claim 1, wherein the ballast interface circuit comprises a first electronic switch, a second electronic switch, and a first capacitor; and the first electronic switch has a first terminal coupled to the second electronic switch, and has a second terminal coupled to the first capacitor; wherein the ballast interface circuit is configured such that when the external driving signal is initially input at the first external connection terminal and second external connection terminal, the second electronic switch will be in an open-circuit state, and the first capacitor will be charged so as to cause the first electronic switch to enter a conducting state to an extent that in turn triggers the second electronic switch into a conducting state, making the ballast interface circuit enter the conduction state.
  • 9. The LED tube lamp according to claim 8, wherein the ballast interface circuit comprises a second capacitor, having a first end coupled to a coupling node between an input/output terminal of the ballast interface circuit and the second electronic switch, and having a second end coupled to a coupling node between the first electronic switch and the first capacitor, and which is configured to reflect instantaneous change in the voltage between an input terminal and an output terminal of the ballast interface circuit.
  • 10. The LED tube lamp according to claim 8, wherein the first electronic switch comprises a symmetrical trigger diode or constitutes a thyristor surge suppressor, and the second electronic switch comprises a bidirectional triode thyristor or a silicon controlled rectifier.
  • 11. The LED tube lamp according to claim 1, further comprising a light strip attached to an inner surface of the lamp tube and which comprises a bendable circuit sheet; wherein the LED lighting module comprises an LED module, which comprises an LED component and is disposed on the bendable circuit sheet.
  • 12. The LED tube lamp according to claim 1, wherein the ballast interface circuit comprises a first electronic switch and a second electronic switch; the first electronic switch has a terminal coupled to the second electronic switch; wherein the ballast interface circuit is configured such that when the external driving signal is initially input at the first external connection terminal and second external connection terminal, the second electronic switch will be in an open-circuit state, and then the external driving signal passes through a diode or the first rectifying circuit to produce a DC signal, with the open-circuit state continuing until the DC signal reaches an amplitude causing the first electronic switch to enter a conducting state to an extent that in turn triggers the second electronic switch into a conducting state, making the ballast-compatible circuit enter the conduction state.
  • 13. The LED tube lamp according to claim 12, wherein the DC signal is produced after the external driving signal passes through the diode or the first rectifying circuit and then through a voltage division circuit.
  • 14. The LED tube lamp according to claim 12, wherein the first electronic switch comprises a symmetrical trigger diode or constitutes a thyristor surge suppressor, and the second electronic switch comprises a bidirectional triode thyristor or a silicon controlled rectifier.
  • 15. The LED tube lamp according to claim 1, wherein the ballast interface circuit is configured such that upon the external driving signal being initially input at the first external connection terminal and second external connection terminal, the ballast interface circuit will not enter a conduction state until a period of delay passes, wherein the period of delay is between 10 milliseconds (ms) and 1 second.
  • 16. The LED tube lamp according to claim 15, wherein the period is between about 10 milliseconds (ms) and 300 ms.
  • 17. The LED tube lamp according to claim 1, wherein: the first rectifying circuit comprises a rectifying unit and a terminal adapter circuit, and the rectifying unit is coupled to the terminal adapter circuit and is configured to perform half-wave rectification, and the terminal adapter circuit is configured to transmit the external driving signal received via at least one of the first pin and the second pin; andthe ballast interface circuit is coupled between the rectifying unit and the terminal adapter circuit.
  • 18. The LED tube lamp according to claim 17, wherein the rectifying unit comprises two diodes, one of which has an anode connected to a cathode of the other diode, which connection forms a half-wave node, and the ballast interface circuit is coupled to the half-wave node.
  • 19. An LED tube lamp comprising: a lamp tube;a first external connection terminal and a second external connection terminal coupled to the lamp tube and for receiving an external driving signal;an LED lighting module coupled to the first external connection terminal and configured to receive a signal for emitting light, the signal derived from the first external driving signal; anda ballast interface circuit coupled between the first external connection terminal and the LED lighting module,wherein the ballast interface circuit is configured such that when the external driving signal is initially input at the first external connection terminal and second external connection terminal, the ballast interface circuit will initially be in an open-circuit state, which prevents the LED tube lamp from emitting light, until the ballast interface circuit enters a conduction state, which conduction state allows a current input at the first external connection terminal/second external connection terminal to flow through the LED lighting module and thereby allows the LED tube lamp to emit light.
  • 20. The LED tube lamp of claim 19, wherein the ballast interface circuit is configured to delay the LED lighting module from emitting light for between 10 milliseconds and 300 milliseconds.
  • 21. The LED tube lamp of claim 19, further comprising: a first rectifying circuit coupled to the first external connection terminal and the second external connection terminal and configured to rectify the external driving signal to produce a rectified signal;a filtering circuit coupled to the first rectifying circuit and configured to filter the rectified signal to produce a filtered signal, the filtered signal being the signal received by the LED lighting module.
  • 22. The LED tube lamp according to claim 19, wherein the ballast interface circuit comprises: a first electronic switch configured to change from a first open state to a second closed state after a delay period of time after the external driving signal is initially input at the first external connection terminal and the second external connection terminal; anda first capacitor connected between the first switch and an output terminal of the ballast interface circuit.
  • 23. The LED tube lamp according to claim 22, further comprising: a second capacitor connected in series with the first capacitor, such that the second capacitor is connected between the first capacitor and an input terminal of the ballast interface circuit, and the first capacitor is connected between the second capacitor and the output terminal of the ballast interface circuit.
  • 24. The LED tube lamp according to claim 19, further comprising a light strip attached to an inner surface of the lamp tube and which comprises a bendable circuit sheet; wherein the LED lighting module comprises an LED module, which comprises an LED component and is disposed on the bendable circuit sheet.
Priority Claims (31)
Number Date Country Kind
201410507660.9 Sep 2014 CN national
201410508899.8 Sep 2014 CN national
201420602526.2 Oct 2014 CN national
201410623355.6 Nov 2014 CN national
201410734425.5 Dec 2014 CN national
201510075925.7 Feb 2015 CN national
201510104823.3 Mar 2015 CN national
201510133689.X Mar 2015 CN national
201510134586.5 Mar 2015 CN national
201510136796.8 Mar 2015 CN national
201510155807.7 Apr 2015 CN national
201510173861.4 Apr 2015 CN national
201510193980.6 Apr 2015 CN national
201510259151.3 May 2015 CN national
201510268927.8 May 2015 CN national
201510284720.X May 2015 CN national
201510315636.X Jun 2015 CN national
201510338027.6 Jun 2015 CN national
201510364735.7 Jun 2015 CN national
201510372375.5 Jun 2015 CN national
201510373492.3 Jun 2015 CN national
201510378322.4 Jun 2015 CN national
201510391910.1 Jul 2015 CN national
201510406595.5 Jul 2015 CN national
201510428680.1 Jul 2015 CN national
201510482944.1 Aug 2015 CN national
201510483475.5 Aug 2015 CN national
201510486115.0 Aug 2015 CN national
201510555543.4 Sep 2015 CN national
201510557717.0 Sep 2015 CN national
201510595173.7 Sep 2015 CN national
Parent Case Info

This application is a continuation-in-part application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/865,387, filed Sep. 25, 2015, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety, and which claims priority to Chinese Patent Applications No. CN 201410507660.9 filed on 2014 Sep. 28; CN 201410508899.8 filed on 2014 Sep. 28; CN 201410623355.6 filed on 2014 Nov. 6; CN 201410734425.5 filed on 2014 Dec. 5; CN 201510075925.7 filed on 2015 Feb. 12; CN 201510104823.3 filed on 2015 Mar. 10; CN 201510134586.5 filed on 2015 Mar. 26; CN 201510133689.x filed on 2015 Mar. 25; CN 201510136796.8 filed on 2015 Mar. 27; CN 201510173861.4 filed on 2015 Apr. 14; CN 201510155807.7 filed on 2015 Apr. 3; CN 201510193980.6 filed on 2015 Apr. 22; CN 201510372375.5 filed on 2015 Jun. 26; CN 201510259151.3 filed on 2015 May 19; CN 201510268927.8 filed on 2015 May 22; CN 201510284720.x filed on 2015 May 29; CN 201510338027.6 filed on 2015 Jun. 17; CN 201510315636.x filed on 2015 Jun. 10; CN 201510373492.3 filed on 2015 Jun. 26; CN 201510364735.7 filed on 2015 Jun. 26; CN 201510378322.4 filed on 2015 Jun. 29; CN 201510391910.1 filed on 2015 Jul. 2; CN 201510406595.5 filed on 2015 Jul. 10; CN 201510482944.1 filed on 2015 Aug. 7; CN 201510486115.0 filed on 2015 Aug. 8; CN 201510428680.1 filed on 2015 Jul. 20; CN 201510483475.5 filed on 2015 Aug. 8; CN 201510555543.4 filed on 2015 Sep. 2; CN 201510557717.0 filed on 2015 Sep. 6; and CN 201510595173.7 filed on 2015 Sep. 18, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety. If any terms in this application conflict with terms used in any of the applications from which this application claims priority, a construction based on the terms as used in this application should be applied.

Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20160255699 A1 Sep 2016 US
Continuation in Parts (2)
Number Date Country
Parent 14865387 Sep 2015 US
Child 15150458 US
Parent 14699138 Apr 2015 US
Child 14865387 US