The present invention relates to the provision of color lighting with a triad of red, green and blue light emitting diodes (LEDs), and more particularly to a low-cost drive system for controlling the hue and intensity of the emitted light.
LEDs have been utilized in many monochrome lighting applications, and various manufacturers are now co-packaging triads of red, blue and green LEDs for applications where color control is desired. With such an LED triad, the hue of the emitted light is changed by varying the proportion of drive current among the red, green and blue LEDs, and the intensity of the emitted light is changed by varying the overall drive current while maintaining the proportionality of the individual red, green and blue drive currents.
While color control is often deemed to be desirable, the cost of introducing color controllable LEDs in traditionally monochrome applications can be cost prohibitive due to the increase in the number of wires required to address the individual LED devices. Instead of the traditional two wires needed for a monochrome lamp (incandescent or LED), four wires are ordinarily needed for an LED triad. This can be a particular disincentive in applications that require many lighting locations, such as in automotive interior lighting. Accordingly, what is needed is a drive system that reduces the wiring complexity required to control LED triads so that color controllable LEDs can be used more cost-effectively in a variety of applications.
The present invention is directed to an improved drive system for powering LED triads, including a controller for supplying power to one or more LED triad modules with integral encoding of the desired hue and intensity information. The LED triad modules each include an LED triad and decoding circuitry for activating the individual LED elements of the triad according to the encoded hue and intensity information. In the illustrated embodiment, the controller supplies power to the LED triad modules over a pair of conductors, and the supplied power is modulated using a four-phase encoding sequence that is decoded by the decoding circuitry of each LED triad module so that each LED triad module produces light of the desired hue and intensity.
Referring to the drawings, and particularly to
In general, the processor 20 and switching circuit 26 of controller 12 constitute an encoder for modulating the power supplied to the LED triad modules 14 based on the hue and intensity inputs, and decoding circuitry in each LED triad module 14 decodes the hue and intensity information and correspondingly activates the individual LEDs. While a particularly cost-effective encoding arrangement is described herein, it should be understood that the present invention is not limited to the disclosed arrangement, and that other suitable encoding/decoding arrangements and circuits can be devised by those skilled in the art. For example, it is possible to encode the hue and intensity information so that one of the two conductors 16a, 16b can be referenced to same ground potential as controller 12; in that case, the ground conductor may be eliminated by referencing the controller 12 and each of the LED triad modules 14 to a common ground potential, such as a conductive frame on which the controller 12 and LED triad modules 14 are mounted.
FIGS. 2 and 3A-3B depict circuitry for implementing a preferred encoding/decoding scheme for the LED triad drive system 10 of
The H-bridge outputs at terminals 34 and 36, designated as VPOS and VNEG, are respectively connected to the conductors 16a and 16b so that the POS_CNTL and NEG_CNTL inputs control their relative polarity. When POS_CNTL is active (high), conductor 16a is coupled to the V+ terminal of power supply 18 via the VPOS output terminal 34 of switching circuit 26, and conductor 16b is coupled to the controller ground via the VNEG output terminal 36 of switching circuit 26. When NEG_CNTL is active (high), conductor 16b is coupled to the V+ terminal of power supply 18 via the VNEG output terminal 36, and conductor 16a is coupled to the controller ground via the VPOS output terminal 34.
The positive leg of switching circuit 26 includes an n-channel control transistor 38 gated on and off by the POS_CNTL input, a pull-up resistor 40, a p-channel transistor 42 coupling the output terminal 34 to V+ via resistor 44, and an n-channel transistor 46 coupling the output terminal 34 to controller ground. When the POS_CNTL input is low, transistor 46 conducts to couple output terminal 34 (and conductor 16a) to controller ground; and when POS_CNTL input is high, transistors 38 and 42 conduct to couple output terminal 34 (and conductor 16a) to V+.
The negative leg of switching circuit 26 includes an n-channel control transistor 48 gated on and off by the NEG_CNTL input, a pull-up resistor 50, a p-channel transistor 52 coupling the output terminal 36 to V+ via resistor 54, and an n-channel transistor 56 coupling the output terminal 36 to controller ground. When the NEG_CNTL input is low, transistor 56 conducts to couple output terminal 36 (and conductor 16b) to controller ground; and when NEG_CNTL input is high, transistors 48 and 52 conduct to couple output terminal 36 (and conductor 16b) to V+.
The variable negative pulse for activating the red LEDs is triggered by a high interval of NEG_CNTL, the first variable positive pulse for activating the green LEDs is triggered by a first high interval of POS_CNTL, the second variable positive pulse for activating the blue LEDs is triggered by a second high interval of POS_CNTL, and the variable off interval is corresponds to an interval where both POS_CNTL and NEG_CNTL are low. Obviously, the POS_CNTL and NEG_CNTL inputs cannot be high at the same time, and in fact, dead time intervals (22 microseconds, for example) are imposed between the red, green and blue control pulses to ensure there is no overlap.
The above-described pulse sequence of POS_CNTL and NEG_CNTL for one cycle of the 120 Hz control pulse waveform is graphically illustrated in the timing diagrams of
Returning to
In summary, the drive system of the present invention provides a novel and cost-effective way of driving one or more LED triads with a single controller and reduced wiring complexity. When the drive system is used to drive a plurality of LED triad modules 14 as shown in
While the present invention has been described with respect to the illustrated embodiment, it is recognized that numerous modifications and variations in addition to those mentioned herein will occur to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the disclosed embodiment, but that it have the full scope permitted by the language of the following claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6016038 | Mueller et al. | Jan 2000 | A |
6575607 | Klemish et al. | Jun 2003 | B1 |
6717376 | Lys et al. | Apr 2004 | B2 |
7327337 | Callahan | Feb 2008 | B2 |
20040178751 | Mueller et al. | Sep 2004 | A1 |
20090261750 | Hsueh et al. | Oct 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20100045207 A1 | Feb 2010 | US |