The present invention relates generally to lighting control, and more particularly to a lighting apparatus with microwave induction.
Proper lighting plays an important role in homes, workplaces, schools, and other locations. Insufficient lighting can create an unsafe environment, and can be unhealthy for people, causing additional eye strain. Automatically activated lights can help to mitigate these issues. Automatically activated lights are used in a variety of applications, both outdoors and indoors. These lights activate (turn on) based on detecting presence and/or motion of a person. This provides both safety and convenience, while also serving to conserve energy by deactivating (turning off) lights when not needed. As automatically activated lights are used with increasing popularity, it is desirable to have improved lighting apparatuses for automatic light activation.
In one embodiment, there is provided a lighting apparatus comprising: a lighting device; a microwave transceiver; a microwave antenna coupled to the microwave transceiver; a microcontroller; and a computer memory coupled to the microcontroller, wherein the computer memory includes instructions, that when executed by the microcontroller, cause the lighting apparatus to activate the lighting device for a predetermined period upon detecting a signal from the microwave antenna.
In another embodiment, there is provided a lighting apparatus comprising: an enclosure comprising an opaque portion and a translucent portion; a microwave transceiver disposed with in the enclosure; a microwave antenna disposed within the enclosure and coupled to the microwave transceiver; a lighting device disposed within the enclosure and configured and disposed such that light from the lighting device passes through the translucent portion of the enclosure; a microcontroller disposed within the enclosure; and a computer memory coupled to the microcontroller, wherein the computer memory includes instructions, that when executed by the microcontroller, cause the lighting apparatus to activate the lighting device for a predetermined period upon detecting a signal from the microwave antenna.
In another embodiment, there is provided a lighting system comprising: a plurality of lighting apparatuses, wherein each lighting apparatus comprises: a lighting device; a microwave transceiver; a microwave antenna coupled to the microwave transceiver; a microcontroller; a wireless communication interface coupled to the microcontroller; and a computer memory coupled to the microcontroller, wherein the computer memory includes instructions, that when executed by the microcontroller, activate the lighting device for a predetermined period upon detecting a signal from the microwave antenna, and broadcast a light activation message upon detecting the signal from the microwave antenna.
The structure, operation, and advantages of the present invention will become further apparent upon consideration of the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying figures (FIGs). The figures are intended to be illustrative, not limiting.
Certain elements in some of the figures may be omitted, or illustrated not-to-scale, for illustrative clarity. The cross-sectional views may be in the form of “slices”, or “near-sighted” cross-sectional views, omitting certain background lines which would otherwise be visible in a “true” cross-sectional view, for illustrative clarity.
Often, similar elements may be referred to by similar numbers in various figures (FIGs) of the drawing, in which case typically the last two significant digits may be the same, the most significant digit being the number of the drawing figure (FIG). Furthermore, for clarity, some reference numbers may be omitted in certain drawings.
Disclosed embodiments provide a lighting apparatus with microwave induction. The microwave induction lamp emits electromagnetic waves through an antenna, such as a planar antenna. When a moving object enters the electromagnetic wave environment, the waveform is reflected and folded back and received by a microwave transceiver via the antenna and serves as a trigger signal. When the antenna receives the feedback waveform, a microcontroller-operated circuit activates a lighting device (e.g., a bank of light emitting diodes (LEDs)) in response to detecting the trigger signal. Disclosed embodiments use the trigger signal to turn the lighting device (lamps) on and off and further include a delay function, via a timer, to keep the lighting device activated for a predetermined period after detecting the trigger signal. In this way, a safe and efficient automatically activated lighting apparatus is provided.
Disclosed embodiments provide numerous advantages over other mechanisms for light activation such as infrared induction. Infrared induction is easily interfered with by various heat sources, light sources, radio frequency radiation, and hot air flow. Furthermore, passive infrared penetration is poor, and the infrared radiation of the human body is easily blocked. When the ambient temperature is close to the human body temperature, the detection and sensitivity are significantly reduced, sometimes causing the lights to not operate in an expected manner.
The microwave technique of disclosed embodiments has a longer sensing distance than an infrared sensor module, a wider angle of detection, and no dead zones. Furthermore, disclosed embodiments are not affected by lens condition, lens aging, ambient temperature, humidity, airflow, dust, noise, or other environmental factors, and has strong anti-interference ability. Disclosed embodiments can be used with a translucent portion (lens) comprised of; acrylic, glass, and/or thin non-metallic materials. In embodiments, an integrated microcontroller implements multiple digital filter algorithms for detecting microwave signals, providing higher accuracy and reduced false activations.
Lighting apparatus 100 further includes a microcontroller 106. The microcontroller 106 includes an internal memory 108 that contains instructions which are executed by the microcontroller 106 in order to perform various functions in accordance with embodiments of the present invention.
A microwave transceiver 110 is coupled to the microcontroller 106. A microwave antenna 112 is coupled to the microwave transceiver 110. In some embodiments, the microwave antenna 112 is a planar antenna. A light sensor 105 is coupled to the microcontroller 106. In some embodiments, the light sensor 105 is configured to detect an ambient light condition. In some embodiments, the light sensor 105 may include a photoresistor or other suitable device. In embodiments, the microcontroller 106 only activates the lighting device 102 during conditions of ambient light below a predetermined level, where the ambient light level is determined by the light sensor 105. In other embodiments, the microcontroller 106 may activate the lighting device 102 independent of the ambient light level.
The lighting apparatus 100 may further include a wireless communication interface 114. In embodiments, the communication interface 114 may include Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and/or Zigbee transceivers. The communication interface 114 may be used to communicate with a remote computing device 150. In embodiments, the remote computing device 150 may be a smartphone, tablet computer, laptop computer, wearable computer, or other suitable computing device.
Remote computing device 150 may execute an application (“app”) that provides a user interface for controlling the lighting apparatus 100. The user interface may include an ON button 152 and OFF button 154 for turning the lighting device 102 on or off, respectively. The remote computing device 150 may further provide a timer control 163. In embodiments, the timer control 163 is a slider or virtual slider implemented on a touchscreen that can be moved between a minimum time setting 162 and a maximum time setting 164. In embodiments, the minimum time setting is one minute and the maximum time setting is ten minutes. Other range limits are possible in disclosed embodiments. The control 163 may be set to an intermediate position, such as shown in
The remote computing device 150 may further provide a dimmer control 173. In embodiments, the dimmer control 173 is a slider or virtual slider implemented on a touchscreen that can be moved between a minimum dimmer setting (minimum brightness) 172 and a maximum dimmer setting (maximum brightness) 174. Other lighting parameters such as correlated color temperature (CCT) may also be controlled by the remote computing device 150 in some embodiments.
In embodiments, the lighting apparatus 100 is powered by an alternating current (AC) power source 115. In some embodiments, a master switch 117 may be configured to enable or disable AC power to the lighting apparatus 100.
When the controls of the user interface on remote computing device 150 are invoked, data may be communicated from the remote computing device 150 to the microcontroller 106 via a wireless communication protocol such as Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Zigbee, or other suitable protocol. The microcontroller, upon receiving the data, may adjust the functioning of the lighting device 102. In embodiments, the microcontroller implements a delay timer that starts counting down from a predetermined value (e.g., 300 seconds), each time a signal is received from microwave antenna that is indicative of motion/presence within a predetermined distance from the lighting device. The lighting apparatus 100 may be built into a lightbulb form factor, such as a BR-type lightbulb, an A-type lightbulb, and/or a PAR-type lightbulb. Thus, embodiments can include a lighting apparatus comprising: a lighting device; a microwave transceiver; a microwave antenna coupled to the microwave transceiver; a microcontroller; and a computer memory coupled to the microcontroller, wherein the computer memory includes instructions, that when executed by the microcontroller, cause the lighting apparatus to activate the lighting device for a predetermined period upon detecting a signal from the microwave antenna. In embodiments, the computer memory is a non-transitory computer-readable medium. The computer memory can include, but is not limited to, static random-access memory (SRAM), flash memory, read-only memory (ROM), and/or other suitable memory type.
Lightbulb 200 further comprises light sensor 205 which may be used to detect ambient light levels. In some embodiments and/or modes of operation, the LED array 202 may only be activated when the ambient light is below a predetermined level. In embodiments, the microcontroller 206 reads a signal level that is modified based on a resistance that varies as a function of the light received by light sensor 205.
Lightbulb 200 may further comprise a screw terminal 234 on one end of the enclosure such that the lightbulb 200 may be installed in a standard lamp or light socket to utilize the function of microwave induction in order to automatically activate lights based on the presence and/or motion of a person, vehicle, animal, or other moving object.
Lightbulb 200 further includes wireless communication interface 214. In embodiments, the communication interface 214 may include Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and/or Zigbee transceivers. The communication interface 214 may be used to communicate with a remote computing device such as a smartphone or tablet computer in order to configure and/or control operation of the lightbulb 200.
Embodiments can include a lighting apparatus comprising: an enclosure comprising an opaque portion and a translucent portion; a microwave transceiver disposed with in the enclosure; a microwave antenna disposed within the enclosure and coupled to the microwave transceiver; a lighting device disposed within the enclosure and configured and disposed such that light from the lighting device passes through the translucent portion of the enclosure; a microcontroller disposed within the enclosure; and a computer memory coupled to the microcontroller, wherein the computer memory includes instructions, that when executed by the microcontroller, cause the lighting apparatus to activate the lighting device for a predetermined period upon detecting a signal from the microwave antenna. Embodiments can further include a screw terminal on one end of the enclosure.
Referring now to
Thus, disclosed embodiments include a microwave motion sensor. A microwave motion sensor uses electro-magnetic radiation. It emits waves which are then reflected back to the microwave transceiver. The transceiver analyzes the waves that are bounced back. If there is an object or person moving in the detection region, these received microwaves are altered. The microwave transceiver is able to identify these changes and assert a trigger signal in response.
At 420, a trigger signal state is shown. The trigger signal 420 may be generated by the microwave transceiver 110 in response to receiving a signal from microwave antenna 112. The signal can be generated when a person or object enters the detection region of a lighting apparatus (such as 331 of
Time t2 represents an assertion of the trigger signal, which can be caused by a person entering the detection region of a lighting apparatus, such as depicted in
In the embodiment of
In embodiments, the lighting apparatus is configured to activate the lighting device for a predetermined period upon detecting a signal from the microwave antenna, and broadcast a light activation message upon detecting the signal from the microwave antenna. In other embodiments, the lighting apparatus is configured to receive a light activation message from another lighting apparatus from the plurality of lighting apparatuses and, in response to receiving the light activation message, activate the lighting device for the predetermined period
Referring now to
As can now be appreciated, disclosed embodiments provide improvements in automatically activated lighting. In embodiments, the activation of lighting devices (lamps, LEDs, etc.) is controlled by the microwave induction of moving objects, and the microwave induction function can be controlled (turned on or off) by Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Zigbee, or other suitable communication protocol. In embodiments, the delay time to disable (turn off) the lighting devices is controllable via a remote computing device such as a smartphone via wireless communication. Thus, disclosed embodiments provide a lighting apparatus utilizing microwave induction lighting that provides improvement over infrared induction lighting and ordinary lighting lamps, as the microwave induction can sense a longer distance and a wider range, thereby providing improved safety, convenience, and efficiency.
Although the invention has been shown and described with respect to a certain preferred embodiment or embodiments, certain equivalent alterations and modifications will occur to others skilled in the art upon the reading and understanding of this specification and the annexed drawings. In particular regard to the various functions performed by the above described components (assemblies, devices, circuits, etc.) the terms (including a reference to a “means”) used to describe such components are intended to correspond, unless otherwise indicated, to any component which performs the specified function of the described component (i.e., that is functionally equivalent), even though not structurally equivalent to the disclosed structure which performs the function in the herein illustrated exemplary embodiments of the invention. In addition, while a particular feature of the invention may have been disclosed with respect to only one of several embodiments, such feature may be combined with one or more features of the other embodiments as may be desired and advantageous for any given or particular application.