This application is a national stage entry according to 35 U.S.C. §371 of PCT application No.: PCT/EP2012/053437 filed on Feb. 29, 2012, which claims priority from German application No.: 10 2011 005 047.7 filed on Mar. 3, 2011.
Various embodiments relate to a lighting device.
A lighting device of this type has a plurality of semiconductor light sources, which can be embodied for example by an LED or a multichip LED module. Said semiconductor light source is usually arranged on a carrier material—called substrate hereinafter—which consists of ceramic. The arrangement including substrate and semiconductor light source is brought into contact thermally with a heat sink, such that the heat that arises during the operation of a semiconductor light source can be dissipated in order to prevent the LEDs from overheating. The use of ceramic as substrate material has the advantage, inter alia, that the electronics of the luminaire are electrically isolated from the heat sink, thereby satisfying the requirements of the respective protection classes. In accordance with these requirements, the LED lighting devices have to be electrically insulated from the heat sink and air clearances and creepage paths between LED luminaire and heat sink have to be taken into account for this purpose. What is problematic here is that as a result of these measures the thermal linking of the semiconductor light source is impaired and the service life thereof is thus reduced.
Semiconductor light sources are often also used for achieving standard-conforming electrical insulation with complex SELV operating devices, which require a very large amount of space in order to comply with the necessary air clearances and creepage paths.
Lamps or luminaires can be subsumed under the term “lighting device”. In this regard, by way of example, OSRAM GmbH sells so-called LED retrofit tubes under the designation SubstiTUBE, which can be used as a replacement for conventional fluorescent lamps in luminaires, without necessitating a conversion of the luminaire. In the case of tubes of this type, a multiplicity of semiconductor light sources are arranged on the large-area substrate, which is very long in accordance with the tube shape. Both during production and in the installed state, these ceramic substrates can break in the event of slight bending of the luminaire. Furthermore, the ceramic materials required for producing such substrates are relatively expensive, and so the lamp price is determined not inconsiderably by the proportion of ceramic.
In conventional luminaires, too, such as are described for example in document DE 10 2008 039 364 A1, the semiconductor light sources are arranged on a ceramic substrate which is configured likewise with a large area or in very complex forms, depending on the geometry of the luminaire, with the result that the same problems as with the tubes occur.
Against this background, the disclosure addresses the problem of providing a lighting device for which operating safety is improved with minimal outlay in respect of device technology.
Various embodiments provide a lighting device.
According to the various embodiments, the lighting device has a multiplicity of semiconductor light sources arranged on a substrate which, for its part, is indirectly or directly brought into contact thermally with a heat sink. The substrate consists of a multiplicity of modules which each carry at least one of the semiconductor light sources and which are interconnected with one another.
Various embodiments thus depart from the conventional solutions having a large-area substrate common to all the semiconductor light sources and uses small modules which are respectively assigned to at least one semiconductor light source and which are brought into contact electrically and/or thermally with one another and are held by a carrier. These comparatively small modules which carry the semiconductor light source significantly reduce any risk of damage to the substrate during production or during use of the lighting device in comparison with the background outlined in the introduction. Furthermore, cost-effective production of the lighting device is also possible since the material outlay is reduced on account of the use of a few small modules.
In one preferred embodiment, the substrate modules are attached to a reflector embodied as a carrier. The individual modules, consisting of ceramic, for example, are thus carried by the reflector, thereby further minimizing the material outlay for the cost-intensive ceramic substrate. Through suitable design of the reflector, the substrate construction can then be embodied with a stiffness and/or flexibility optimized for the respective application.
The modules are preferably substantially formed from ceramic. It goes without saying that other electrically insulating materials can also be used.
It is preferred if the reflector is assigned to a multiplicity of modules, such that a single reflector is used for a plurality of modules.
A reflector of this type can have a multiplicity of cutouts on the rear side, one of the modules respectively being inserted into each of said cutouts.
In one particularly preferred embodiment of the disclosure, each substrate module is embodied with at least two conductor tracks for making contact with the semiconductor light sources. Such conductor tracks can run approximately parallel, wherein one or a plurality of semiconductor light sources are arranged along one conductor track and the other conductor track runs approximately parallel thereto.
Preferably, the two conductor tracks are connected to one another at a substrate module arranged at the end side, in order to close the electric circuit.
In one embodiment of the disclosure, provision is made for joining together a plurality of semiconductor light sources to form a multichip LED module.
The individual substrate modules can be brought into contact via bridges which extend between the modules or between the conductor tracks of the modules.
Such bridges can be attached or integrated into a reflector or some other component of the lighting device.
According to the disclosure, it is preferred if the bridges provided for electrical contact-making are inserted into a reflector in a force-locking or positively locking manner.
In one embodiment of the disclosure, the modules are arranged, in a manner lying one behind another, in a tube formed by a cover and the heat sink.
Alternatively, however, the modules can also be embodied on arbitrarily shaped reflector bodies. In this regard, in one embodiment, provision is made for embodying the reflector body three-dimensionally in a pot-shaped fashion.
In order to improve the thermal contact-making and the breakdown strength, a correspondingly designed layer, for example composed of TIM (thermal interface material), can be embodied between substrate and heat sink. It goes without saying that the lighting device can also be embodied without such a TIM.
In the drawings, like reference characters generally refer to the same parts throughout the different views. The drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead generally being placed upon illustrating the principles of the disclosed embodiments. In the following description, various embodiments described with reference to the following drawings, in which:
The following detailed description refers to the accompanying drawing that show, by way of illustration, specific details and embodiments in which the disclosure may be practiced.
Such a retrofit LED lamp 1 has a multiplicity of semiconductor light sources which, in the embodiment illustrated, are each embodied by an LED chip, hereinafter called LED 2 for short.
These are held by a reflector 4, on which a heat sink 6 is arranged at the rear side. With a planar section 8, said heat sink is indirectly or directly brought into contact thermally with the LEDs 2. The planar section 8 is adjoined by a lateral surface section 10 in the shape of a segment of a circle, which is supplemented together with an approximately semicircular transparent cover 12 to form a cylindrical tube, the diameter of which corresponds approximately to the external diameter of a conventional fluorescent lamp.
A base is formed in each case at the two end sections (not illustrated in
As can be gathered from
Two supporting pedestals 34, 36 are formed on the top side (as viewed in the light emission direction) of the reflector 4, said supporting pedestals either being placed onto the reflector 4 or being formed integrally with the latter and each supporting the bridge limbs visible in
Further details become apparent from the sectional view along the line A-A in
In the embodiment illustrated, the actual stabilization of the construction is effected by fixing the reflector 4 on the heat sink 6 in the shape of a segment of a circle. This fixing is formed in such a way that the reflector 4 and thus also the modules 16 carrying the LEDs 2 and the TIM layer 44 are pressed against the heat sink 6. The prestress pressure of the bridges 28, 30 with their metal spring contacts is also maintained by means of this fixing.
The substrate module 16 remote from the base 46 illustrated in
For the rest, the embodiment in accordance with
With reference to
In the embodiment in accordance with
In the embodiments described above, the construction according to the disclosure was realized with a multiplicity of substrate modules 16 held by a reflector 4 or a plurality of reflector parts, in the case of a tubular lamp. In principle, however, the disclosure may also be used in the case of arbitrary luminaires having more complex, three-dimensional structures.
Contact is made with the substrate modules 16 equipped with the multichip LEDs 66 or the conventional LEDs 2 once again via attached or embedded bridges, which are not illustrated, however, in the embodiment in accordance with
In this way, it is possible to equip extremely complex geometries with semiconductor light sources, without necessitating a flexible configuration or a complex shaping of the substrate.
The above-described safe-to-touch construction of lamps and luminaires by virtue of the use according to the disclosure of ceramic substrate modules 16 has the advantage over the variants with SELV voltage that comparatively high voltage can be employed and a higher efficiency can thus be achieved. Furthermore, the use of the concept according to the disclosure does not require a cost-intensive SELV transformer. Moreover, the need for an additional substrate as carrier material for the LEDs, as described in DE 10 2008 039 364 A1, for example, is obviated with the use of multichip LEDs. The disclosure also does not require the use of metal-core circuit boards required in conventional solutions (likewise see the prior art cited above), such that the lighting device can be made significantly lighter than conventional solutions.
What is disclosed is a lighting device including a plurality of semiconductor light sources arranged on a substrate. According to the disclosure, said substrate consists of a multiplicity of substrate modules provided with conductor tracks for making contact with the respective semiconductor light source.
While the disclosed embodiments has been particularly shown and described with reference to specific embodiments, it should be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosed embodiments as defined by the appended claims. The scope of the disclosed embodiments is thus indicated by the appended claims and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are therefore intended to be embraced.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2011 005 047 | Mar 2011 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/053437 | 2/29/2012 | WO | 00 | 9/3/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2012/117018 | 9/7/2012 | WO | A |
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