This application claims the benefit of Chinese Patent Application No. 201010124502.7, filed Mar. 16, 2010, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present technology generally relates to power supplies to light emitting diodes (“LEDs”), and more particularly, relates to LED power supply control and LED dimming control.
White LED strings are widely used as backlight of liquid crystal displays (“LCDs”) in computers, televisions, and other electronic devices. Currently LED backlight power supplies typically use a three-stage driver system. As shown in
The LED step-up driver stage 13 comprises one or more non-isolated boost converters to receive the output voltage/voltages from the isolated DC-DC voltage converter stage 12. Via the boost converter, a constant current is supplied to an LED string 14. The isolated DC-DC voltage converter stage 12 further transforms the line voltage to a lower DC voltage, for example 18V, which is further converted by system power converters 15 to multi-rail output DC voltages such as 12V and 5V for the system power supply of the controller devices.
The conventional LED driver system in
Various embodiments of switching regulators, circuits, and methods of control are described below. Many of the details, dimensions, angles, shapes, and other features shown in the figures are merely illustrative of particular embodiments of the technology. A person skilled in the relevant art will also understand that the technology may have additional embodiments, and that the technology may be practiced without several of the details of the embodiments described below with reference to
Certain embodiments of the present technology are directed to a two-stage LED driver system that comprises a power factor correction stage and an isolated voltage converter driver stage. The isolated voltage converter driver stage comprises an isolated voltage converter and a controller. The isolated voltage converter provides electrical power to the LED strings. The controller is responsive to the external dimming signal and operable to dim the LED strings so that a constant output current of the isolated voltage converter may be maintained.
In one embodiment, the isolated voltage converter is a fly-back voltage converter, and the controller is positioned at the secondary side of the isolated voltage converters. The primary side of the isolated voltage converter may include a current limit circuit to restrict the peak current flowing through the primary side winding. The current limit circuit comprises a resistor and a bipolar junction transistor (“BJT”). One end of the resistor is coupled to the output end of the primary side switch while the other end is coupled to the ground end of the primary side. The base of the BJT is coupled to the output end of the primary side switch. The collector of the BJT is coupled to the gate electrode of the primary side switch, and the emitter is coupled to the ground end of the primary side through another resistor.
The PFC stage 21 has an input and an output, and the PFC stage 21 rectifies the AC (alternating current) voltage at the input to DC (direct current) line voltage at the output. For example, the PFC stage 21 converts an AC main voltage of 220V (or 110V) to a DC line voltage of approximate 400V (or 200V). The isolated voltage converter driver stage 22 has an input coupled to the output of the PFC stage 21.
The isolated voltage converter driver stage 22 converts the line voltage into another DC voltage. In one embodiment, the isolated voltage converter driver stage 22 comprises a plurality of isolated voltage converters, each driving one LED string. Thus the isolated voltage converter driver stage 22 may comprise a plurality of outputs. In other embodiments, the isolated voltage converter driver stage 22 may comprise a single or a group of isolated voltage converters to drive the LED strings.
The LED backlight 23 includes one or more LED strings, wherein each LED string comprises one or more LED diodes connected in series. An output of the isolated voltage converter driver stage 22 is directly coupled to the LED string to provide power to the LED string. The term “directly coupled” generally refers to the electric contact through conductive material such as through metal wire. The isolated voltage converter driver stage 22 also comprises one or more controllers for controlling the multiple isolated voltage converters.
Moreover, the two-stage driver system 200 further comprises system power supply converters 24 to transform the line voltage into several lower DC voltages, providing operational power for the isolated voltage converter driver stage 22. The system power converter 24 may be an isolated voltage converter or other suitable types of converter.
Each of Module 1 or Module 2 comprises an isolated voltage converter and a controller. Each module may further comprise a dimming switch K coupled in series with the corresponding LED string. Module 1 is described in detail below. Module 2 and other modules (not shown) may have a similar configuration to Module 1, and thus are not described below for clarity.
Module 1 comprises an isolated voltage converter 321 and a controller 322. In one embodiment, Module 1 further comprises a dimming switch coupled in series with the LED string 331. As shown in
Receiving external dimming signals, the controller 322 further is coupled to the LED string 33 to provide a dimming signal for dimming the LED string 33. The isolated voltage converter driver stage 32 has a primary side and a secondary side as indicated by the isolation line illustrated in dash-and-dot line. Above the isolation line is the primary side while below the isolation line is the secondary side.
In the embodiment as shown, the controller 322 is positioned at the secondary side of the isolated voltage converter 321. As a result, the controller 322 delivers the control signals to the primary side of the isolated voltage converter 321 through an isolated transformer T1. In other embodiments, the controller 322 may transport the control signals across the isolation line through an optical coupler.
The two-stage driver system 300 may further comprise a system power converter 34. The system power converter 34 supplies power (for example, delivers 12VDC and 5VDC in
In one embodiment, the two-stage driver system 300 may have only one module, and thus only one isolated voltage converter 321 and one controller 322 is included to drive one LED string. In other embodiments, the two-stage driver system 300 may have other desired number of modules and corresponding number of isolated voltage converters and controllers.
The primary side of the fly-back voltage converter 41 comprises a primary side winding L1 and a primary side switch Q. The output power of the fly-back voltage converter 41 is regulated by varying the operational duty cycle of the primary side switch Q. In the illustrated embodiment, the primary side switch Q is a MOSFET device. In other embodiments, the primary side switch Q can also be a junction field effect transistor and/or other suitable types of switching device.
The secondary side of the fly-back voltage converter 41 comprises a secondary winding L2, a rectifier D, and a filter capacity C. The LED string 43 is powered by the output of the fly-back voltage converter 41. The dimming switch K is connected in serial with the LED string 43 for dimming the brightness of the LED string 43. In the illustrated embodiment, the dimming switch K is a MOSFET. In other embodiments, the dimming switch K can also be a junction field effect transistor and/or other suitable types of switching device. The controller 42 is responsive to an external dimming signal and operable to generate a PWM dimming signal to control the gate of the switch K. As a result, by varying the duty cycle of the PWM dimming signal, the brightness of the LED string 43 is regulated.
The secondary side of the fly-back voltage converter 41 further comprises an LED current feedback circuit, which includes a current sense resistor R1 in the illustrated embodiment. One end of the resistor R1 is coupled to the source of the switch K. The other end of the resistor R1 is coupled to the ground of the secondary side.
The output feedback signal FB from the resistor R1 is provided to the controller 42. Specifically, in the illustrated embodiment, the feedback circuit transmits FB signals through another resistor R2. Voltage VFB as the FB signal reflects the current flowing through the LED string 43 when the dimming switch K is on, therefore VFB=ILED*R1. The controller 42 is responsive to the FB signal and accordingly operable to generate the PWM drive signal to the switch Q. As shown in
As shown in
In the illustrated embodiment, the over-current protection module comprises a resistor R3. The first end of the resistor R3 is coupled to the secondary side winding L2, and the other end of the resistor R3 is connected with the second side ground. Thus a voltage V3 across the resistor R3 is proportional to the secondary side current flowing through the secondary side winding L2. Voltage V3 corresponding to the resistor R3 is sent into the controller 42. When the secondary side current or V3 surpasses a reference threshold, the duty cycle of the PWM drive signal generated from the controller 42 falls to zero in order to turn off the primary side switch Q.
The controller 42 may further comprise a no-load protection module. The no-load protection module is responsive to the output voltage of the isolated voltage converter and selectively turns off the primary side switch when the output voltage is larger than an over-voltage reference threshold. Specifically, the voltage on the secondary side filter capacity C, in other words the output voltage Vout of the fly-back voltage converter 41, is sampled by a resistance divider of R4 and R5, thus producing voltage V4 to the controller 42. When the Vout rises over a reference value under no-load (the LED load is cut off) and/or other situations, the duty cycle of the PWM drive signal generated from the controller 42 falls to zero. Consequently the primary side switch Q is turned off.
A dimming control module 512 is responsive to an external dimming signal and operable to generate a PWM dimming signal to the gate of the dimming switch K. Controlled by the PWM dimming signal, the brightness of the LED string is in proportion to its duty cycle. The external dimming signals provided to the controller 51 may be a PWM signal, a DC analog signal or a signal mixed with a DC analog signal, and a frequency signal. If the external dimming signal is a PWM signal, the dimming control module 512 generates a PWM dimming signal with the same wave form (consistent duty cycle and frequency). If the dimming signal is a DC analog signal, in one embodiment, the dimming control module 512 includes a triangular wave generator and comparator. The DC analog signal is compared with an internal triangular wave to generate the PWM dimming signal, of which the duty cycle is in proportion to the amplitude of the DC analog signal while the frequency is identical with the triangular wave. If the dimming signal is a signal mixed with a DC analog signal and a frequency signal, the dimming control module 512 generates a PWM dimming signal, the duty cycle of which is equal to the amplitude of the DC analog signal and the frequency of which is identical with the frequency signal.
The current ILED flowing through the LED string 53 is sensed by the feedback circuit 54 comprising a sampling resistor R1. The sampling resistor R1 has a first end and a second end. The first end is coupled to the dimming switch K, and the second end is connected to secondary side ground. Therefore, a current feedback signal FB is generated, which is the sensed voltage between the first end and the second end of the sampling resistor R1, i.e., VFB=ILED*R1. The error amplifier 510 compares the feedback voltage VFB with a reference voltage Vref, and hence provides an error signal COMP.
The controller may further comprise a hold-on module 513 to generate voltage V1. The first and second inputs of the module 513 are coupled to the feedback circuit 54 and the output of the dimming control module 512, respectively. The output end of the module 513 is coupled to the first input end of the error amplifier 510. The error amplifier 510 is responsive to the current feedback signal from the feedback circuit 54 and the voltage V1 and is operable to produce an amplified error signal COMP by amplifying the difference between the voltage V1 and the reference voltage Vref.
The PWM generator 511 is responsive to the COMP signal and operable to generate a PWM drive signal coupled to the gate of the primary side switch. In certain embodiments, the COMP signal is compared with a constant frequency triangular wave produced inside the PWM generator to generate the PWM signal. A trigger method such as double edge trigger, rising edge trigger, or falling edge trigger may be applied. Driven by the PWM drive signal, the primary side switch functions such that the isolated voltage converter 52 provides a constant current IOUT in order to light the LED string 53.
Despite the fact that the isolated voltage converter shown in
The controller described above is positioned at the secondary side of the isolated voltage converter, so there is no peak current control as in a conventional primary side circuit. In certain embodiments, a current limit circuit may further be included in the controller to prevent the transformer from reaching saturation states.
From the foregoing, it will be appreciated that specific embodiments of the technology have been described herein for purposes of illustration, but that various modifications may be made without deviating from the disclosed technology. Elements of one embodiment may be combined with other embodiments in addition to or in lieu of the elements of the other embodiments. Accordingly, the technology is not limited except as by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2010 1 0124502 | Mar 2010 | CN | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
8054008 | Kimura | Nov 2011 | B2 |
20110068700 | Fan | Mar 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20110227493 A1 | Sep 2011 | US |