1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is related to an LED lighting device having multiple driving stages, and more particularly, to an LED lighting device having multiple driving stages for providing wide operational voltage range and high reliability.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Compared to traditional incandescent bulbs, light-emitting diodes (LEDs) are advantageous in low power consumption, long lifetime, small size, no warm-up time, fast reaction speed, and the ability to be manufactured as small or array devices. In addition to outdoor displays, traffic signs, and liquid crystal display (LCD) backlight for various electronic devices such as mobile phones, notebook computers or personal digital assistants (PDAs), LEDs are also widely used as indoor/outdoor lighting devices in place of fluorescent of incandescent lamps.
An LED lighting device directly driven by a rectified alternative-current (AC) voltage usually adopts a plurality of LEDs coupled in series in order to provide required luminance. As the number of the LEDs increases, a higher forward-bias voltage is required for turning on the LED lighting device, thereby reducing the effective operational voltage range of the LED lighting device. As the number of the LEDs decreases, the large driving current when the rectified voltage is at its maximum level may impact the reliability of the LEDs. Therefore, there is a need for an LED lighting device capable of improving the effective operational voltage range and the reliability.
The present invention provides an LED lighting device having a first driving stage and a second driving stage. The first driving stage includes a first luminescent device for providing light according to a first current; and a first current controller coupled in parallel with the first luminescent device and configured to conduct a second current according to a voltage established across the first current controller and regulate the second current so that a sum of the first current and the second current does not exceed a first value. The second driving stage includes a second luminescent device coupled in series to the first luminescent device for providing light according to a third current; and a second current controller coupled in series to the second luminescent device and configured to regulate the third current so that the third current does not exceed a second current setting which is larger than the first value, wherein each of the first and second luminescent devices includes one LED or multiple LEDs.
These and other objectives of the present invention will no doubt become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment that is illustrated in the various figures and drawings.
Each driving stage includes a luminescent device and a current controller. Each current controller includes an adjustable current source and a current sensor. A1˜AN+1 represent the luminescent devices in the corresponding driving stages ST1˜STN+1, respectively. CC1˜CCN+1 represent the current controllers in the corresponding driving stages ST1˜STN+1, respectively. IS1˜ISN+1 represent the adjustable current sources in the corresponding current controllers CC1˜CCN+1, respectively. CS1˜CSN+1 represent the current sensors in the corresponding current controllers CC1˜CCN+1, respectively. VAK1˜VAK(N+1) represent the voltages established across the adjustable current sources IS1˜ISN+1, respectively. IAK1˜IAKN represent the currents flowing through the adjustable current sources IS1˜ISN, respectively. ILED1˜ILEDN represent the currents flowing through the luminescent devices A1˜AN, respectively. ISUM1˜ISUMN represent the currents flowing through the corresponding driving stages ST1˜STN, respectively. ILED represents the current flowing through the driving stage STN+1, which is also the overall current flowing through the LED lighting device 100.
In the 1st to Nth driving stages ST1˜STN, the current sensors CS1˜CSN are configured to provide feedback voltages VFB1˜VFBN which are associated with the total currents ISUM1˜ISUMN flowing through the corresponding driving stages ST1˜STN, respectively. The adjustable current sources IS1˜ISN, coupled in parallel with the corresponding luminescent devices A1˜AN, are configured to regulate the currents IAK1˜IAKN according to the corresponding feedback voltages VFB1˜VFBN, respectively. In other words, the maximum current settings ISET1˜ISETN of the 1st to Nth driving stages ST1˜STN are determined by the corresponding adjustable current sources IS1˜ISN and the corresponding current sensors CS1˜CSN, respectively.
In the (N+1)th driving stage STN+1, the current sensor CSN+1, coupled in series to the corresponding luminescent device AN+1 is configured to provide a feedback voltage VFB(N+1) which is associated with the total current ILED flowing through the (N+1)th driving stage STN+1. The adjustable current source ISN+1, coupled in series to the corresponding luminescent device AN+1 is configured to regulate the current ILED according to the feedback voltage VFB(N+1). In other words, the maximum current setting ISET(N+1) of the (N+1)th driving stage, which is also the maximum current setting of the LED lighting device 100, is determined by the adjustable current source ISN+1 and the current sensor CSN+1.
In the embodiment of the present invention, each of the luminescent devices A1˜AN+1 may adopt a single LED or multiple LEDs coupled in series.
When VAK1>VDROP, the current ISUM1 reaches the maximum current setting ISET1 of the 1st driving stage ST1, and the current controller CC1 switches to a constant-current mode and functions as a current limiter. The current detector CS1 is configured to monitor the value of the current ISUM1 whose variation is reflected by the feedback voltage VFB1. For example, when VDROP<VAK1<VCUT, the luminescent device A1 remains off and the current controller CC1 is configured to clamp the current IAK1 flowing through the current source IS1 to the constant value ISET1. When VAK1>VCUT, the luminescent device A1 is turned on and the current ILED1 starts to increase. Therefore, the current controller CC1 may decrease the current IAK1 flowing through the current source IS1 according to the feedback voltage VFB1, so that the total current ISUM1 flowing through the 1st driving stage may be maintained at the constant value ISET1 instead of changing with the voltage VAK1.
When the voltage VAK1 reaches a turn-off voltage VOFF, the current IAK1 drops to zero and the current controller CC1 switches to a cut-off mode. In other words, the current controller CC1 functions as an open-circuited device, allowing the current ILED1 and the current ISUM1 to increase with the voltage VAK1.
Before t0, the rectified AC voltage VAC is small and the voltages VAK1˜VAK3 are insufficient to turn on the luminescent devices A1˜A3 or the current controllers CC1˜CC3. Therefore, all the current controllers CC1˜CC3 in the 3 driving stages ST1˜ST3 operate in the cut-off mode, and the overall current ILED of the LED lighting device 100 is zero.
As previously stated, the turn-on voltages of the current controllers CC1˜CC3 are smaller than those of the corresponding luminescent devices A1˜A3 in the present invention. At t0, the rectified AC voltage VAC becomes large enough so that the voltage VAK1˜VAK3 are sufficient to turn on the current controllers CC1˜CC3 and the luminescent device A3, but still insufficient to turn on the luminescent devices A1˜A2, thereby allowing the current ILED to flow through the current controllers CC1˜CC3 and the luminescent device A3. Between t0˜t1, all 3 current controllers CC1˜CC3 operate in the linear mode in which the overall current ILED of the LED lighting device 100 increases with the rectified AC voltage VAC in a specific manner.
At t1 as the current ILED reaches ISET1, the current controller CC1 in the first driving stage ST1 switches to the constant-current mode, while the current controllers CC2˜CC3 in the second and third driving stages ST2˜ST3 remain operating in the linear mode. Between t1˜t2 after the rectified AC voltage VAC becomes large enough so that the voltage VAK1 is sufficient to turn on the luminescent device A1, the current ILED1 starts to increase with the rectified AC voltage VAC. In response to the increase in the current ILED1 which is monitored by current detector CS1, the current controller CC1 operating in the constant-current mode may decrease the current IAK1 accordingly so that the overall current ILED of the LED lighting device 100 is maintained at a constant value (ILED=ISET1) regardless of the level of the rectified AC voltage VAC.
At t2 as the current IAK1 drops to zero, the current controller CC1 in the first driving stage ST1 switches to the cut-off mode, while the current controllers CC2˜CC3 in the second and third driving stages ST2˜ST3 remain operating in the linear mode. Between t2˜t3, the current ILED flows through the luminescent devices A1 and A3 and the current controllers CC2˜CC3, and increases with the rectified AC voltage VAC.
At t3 as the current ILED reaches ISET2, the current controller CC2 in the second driving stage ST2 switches to the constant-current mode, while the current controller CC1 in the first driving stage ST1 remains operating in the cut-off mode and the current controller CC3 in the third driving stage ST3 remains operating in the linear mode. Between t3˜t4 after the rectified AC voltage VAC becomes large enough so that the voltage VAK2 is sufficient to turn on the luminescent device A2, the current ILED2 starts to increase with the rectified AC voltage VAC. In response to the increase in the current ILED2 which is monitored by current detector CS2, the current controller CC2 operating in the constant-current mode may decrease the current IAK2 accordingly so that the overall current ILED of the LED lighting device 100 is maintained at a constant value (ILED=ISET2) regardless of the level of the rectified AC voltage VAC.
At t4 as the current IAK2 drops to zero, the current controller CC2 in the second driving stage ST2 switches to the cut-off mode, while the current controller CC1 in the first driving stage ST1 remains operating in the cut-off mode and the current controller CC3 in the third driving stage ST3 remains operating in the linear mode. Between t4˜t5, the current ILED flows through the luminescent devices A1˜A3 and the current controller CC3, and increases with the rectified AC voltage VAC.
At t5 as the current ILED reaches ISET3, the current controller CC3 in the third driving stage ST3 switches to the constant-current mode, while the current controllers CC1˜CC2 in the first and second driving stages ST1˜ST2 remain operating in the cut-off mode. Between t5˜t6, the current ILED is maintained at a constant value (ILED=ISET3) regardless of the level of the rectified AC voltage VAC. At t6 as the current ILED becomes smaller than ISET3 the current controller CC3 switches back to the linear mode, allowing the current ILED to decrease with the rectified AC voltage VAC. The intervals t0˜t1, t1˜t2, t2˜t3, t3˜t4 and t4˜t5 during the rising period correspond to the intervals t10˜t11, t9˜t10, t8˜t9, t7˜t8 and t6˜t7 during the falling period, respectively. Therefore, the operation of the LED lighting device 100 during t6-t11 is similar to that during t0˜t5, as detailed in previous paragraphs.
The following table summarizes the operational modes of the current controllers CC1˜CC3, wherein mode 1 represents the linear mode, mode 2 represents the constant-current mode, and mode 3 represents the cut-off mode.
The current setting ISET of the current controller CC is equal to (VREF/RSENSE). When ISUM<ISET, the operational amplifier 30 is configured to raise its output voltage for increasing the current flowing through the transistor 20 until the feedback voltage VFB reaches the reference voltage VREF. When ISUM>ISET, the operational amplifier 30 is configured to decrease its output voltage for reducing the current flowing through the transistor 20 until the feedback voltage VFB reaches the reference voltage VREF.
When applying the embodiment of
In an embodiment of the present invention, the sensing resistors RSENSE1˜RSENSE(N+1) may be implemented as a programmable resistor array so that the turn-on/off sequence of the current controllers CC1˜CCN+1 may be flexibly adjusted. In other words, the current setting ISET(N+1) is set to be the largest, and the current settings ISET1˜ISETN may have different relationships depending on the desired turn-on/off sequences. In the embodiment when N=2 as depicted in
With the above-mentioned multi-stage driving scheme, the present invention may turn on multiple luminescent devices flexibly using multiple current controllers. The LED lighting device of the present invention may adopt different amount and various types of luminescent devices since the overall LED current is regulated according to the current of each driving stage instead of the cut-in voltage of the LEDs.
Those skilled in the art will readily observe that numerous modifications and alterations of the device and method may be made while retaining the teachings of the invention. Accordingly, the above disclosure should be construed as limited only by the metes and bounds of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application No. 61/823,409 filed on May 15, 2013.
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