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1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to lighting control systems. More specifically, the present invention relates to a technique for preventing incorrect lighting adjustments in a daylight-harvesting system.
2. Related Art
Most commercial spaces with windows receive enough daylight to at least partially reduce the need for electric lighting. Daylight-harvesting systems take advantage of this fact by reducing the amount of electric lighting used when there is sufficient daylight present. For instance, a daylight-harvesting system can dim or switch electric lights to complement the amount of available daylight. Reducing electric lighting in this way can provide significant energy savings and can reduce peak energy demand.
However, installing and maintaining daylight-harvesting systems can involve substantial expense and effort, and such systems can suffer from reliability issues. For instance, the sensors used in daylight-harvesting systems can be affected by factors other than variations in daylight. Such factors can cause over-dimming or annoying light-level fluctuations that can lead to occupant frustration and result in the eventual disablement of the system.
Hence, what is needed is a method and an apparatus for improving daylight-harvesting systems.
One embodiment of the present invention provides a system for preventing incorrect lighting changes in a daylight-harvesting system, which controls the output of a lighting system based on the presence of daylight and/or other light sources to reduce energy usage. During operation, the system measures a first light level using a first sensor. Next, the system measures a second light level for a different field-of-view using a second sensor. When the system detects through the first sensor a change in the first light level, the system determines from the second sensor whether the second light level has also changed. If the first sensor and the second sensor both detect a change (in the same direction) in the measured light levels, the system adjusts the light output of the lighting system to maintain target light levels for the area.
In a variation on this embodiment, the system uses the first sensor and the second sensor together to prevent incorrect lighting changes due to factors other than the variation of daylight in the area. Factors that can cause improper behavior of a daylight-harvesting system can include: changes in the occupancy and/or reflectance in an area; and daylight variations that do not affect the light levels in an area monitored by a sensor.
In a further variation, the first sensor is a closed-loop sensor, which measures a light level that includes both the light output of the lighting system as well as other light sources.
In a further variation, the system uses two or more closed-loop sensors with different fields-of-view to prevent incorrect lighting changes.
In a further variation, the second sensor is an open-loop sensor that measures a light level that is not affected by light emanating from the controlled light system.
In a further variation, the light level measured by the second sensor relates to present daylight levels. For instance, the second sensor can measure an outdoor light level.
In a variation on this embodiment, the system monitors the relationship between the light levels measured by the first sensor and the second sensor over time to improve the lighting control for the area.
In a variation on this embodiment, other light sources can include natural and/or artificial light entering the area from one or more of the following: a skylight; a window; a direct-beam daylighting system; an atrium; a clear-story window; and an electric-lighting source.
In a further variation, the system uses an open-loop sensor to improve the operation and reliability of two or more closed-loop sensors that are used to manage the light levels for different areas.
In a further variation, a controller for the lighting system communicates with an open-loop sensor and/or one or more closed-loop sensors using a wired and/or wireless network.
In a variation on this embodiment, the lighting system can be an on-off lighting system and/or a dimming lighting system. A dimming lighting system can involve stepped and/or continuous dimming.
In a variation on this embodiment, either or both of the two sensors can be integrated into a light fixture.
In a variation on this embodiment, one or both of the sensors can be a photosensor.
In a further variation, one or both of the sensors can be a camera.
The following description is presented to enable any person skilled in the art to make and use the invention, and is provided in the context of a particular application and its requirements. Various modifications to the disclosed embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the general principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments and applications without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Thus, the present invention is not limited to the embodiments shown, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the claims.
Daylight-Harvesting Systems
Daylight-harvesting techniques can be very effective in areas next to windows and skylights, and can provide adequate daylight even on foggy, overcast winter days. Such daylight-harvesting systems can use dimming, switching, and other techniques to provide multiple light levels and thereby save energy when adequate daylight is available. Dimming techniques can use dimming ballasts to adjust the light output of the lighting system. In switching systems, a number of individually-switchable lighting elements in the lighting system allow the output of the lighting system to achieve a wide range of light-output levels.
In one embodiment of the present invention, a daylight harvesting system includes one or more of the following:
Daylight-harvesting systems typically use a photosensor to measure light levels in the area of interest, and then adjust one or more light sources to ensure that a target level of light is available in the area. Note that the target level can be identified in one or more ways. For instance, the target level can be defined as a range specified by an on set-point, which indicates the light level at which the light output of the lighting system will be increased, and an off set-point, which indicates the light level at which the light output of the lighting system will be reduced.
The photosensor can be used in either a closed-loop feedback approach or an open-loop feedback approach. In an open-loop daylight-harvesting system, the light level measured by the photosensor does not include the output of the lighting system. For instance, an open-loop photosensor may be an outdoor sensor positioned on the outside of a building, or an interior sensor positioned to look outside through a window or skylight.
In a closed-loop daylight-harvesting system, the photosensor measures both daylight and the output of the lighting system being controlled. A closed-loop daylight-harvesting system can use the light level measured for an area of interest 110 as direct feedback for the lighting system. For instance, a closed-loop photosensor may be mounted on an interior ceiling or lighting fixture.
Both open- and closed-loop daylight harvesting systems typically require significant “commissioning,” which involves: adjusting for the local environment; calibrating the system; and verifying that the system is (and remains) calibrated and functional. However, despite such commissioning, both the open-loop system and the closed-loop system can individually be fooled. In the open-loop system, the open-loop photosensor may sense daylight variations that do not necessarily affect the area of interest 110, such as outdoor changes in parts of the sky that do not affect the controlled space (e.g. morning hours on a west-facing space that does not face any surface that can reflect the direct sunlight coming from the east, or skylights that receive incoming light that is directional and does not affect the entire controlled space). In such situations, the system may dim the output of the lighting system based on the input from open-loop photosensor 108, leading to insufficient lighting.
In a closed-loop system, a change in reflectance in the area of interest 110 may cause the system to behave improperly. For instance, furniture shifting and/or occupants moving in a room may cause a change in the output measured by the closed-loop photosensor 208. This can lead to the system falsely determining that the level of daylight entering the area of interest has changed. In such a situation, the system may adjust the output of the lighting system to account for the supposed change in daylight, resulting in incorrect lighting changes. Incorrect lighting changes can cause occupants to disable daylight-harvesting systems, which eliminates potential energy savings.
Preventing Incorrect Lighting Adjustments
In one embodiment of the present invention, the system uses two photosensors to prevent incorrect lighting changes due to factors other than the variation of daylight in an area. It also includes a controller, which controls the light sources based on correlations between the two photosensors' signals. For example, the system may adjust the light output when both photosensors agree on a variation in the measured light level.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the system uses two or more closed-loop sensors with different fields-of-view to prevent incorrect lighting adjustments. The system can use the additional sensors to detect whether a change is localized to the area sensed by one of the sensors, with a simultaneous change in the output of all of the sensors being more likely to correspond to a change in the daylight entering the area.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the system uses a combination of open- and closed-loop sensors to prevent incorrect lighting adjustments. For instance, an open-loop sensor can be used to directly measure daylight light levels, e.g. by measuring an outdoor light level.
Note that the angular response of a photosensor can be configured to correlate to the candlepower distribution of a lighting fixture, and that the components of the daylight-harvesting system can be configured in a number of possible embodiments. For instance, all of the daylight-harvesting components may be integrated into a single luminaire and/or light fixture (the terms luminaire, light fixture, and fixture are used interchangeably in the following document), with the open-loop photosensor positioned to point out of a window or skylight. Alternatively, the daylight-harvesting components may be included in a retrofit kit that is used to integrate daylight-harvesting functionality into an existing fixture. Another variation integrates daylight-harvesting components into one or more bi-level wall switches. The functionality of the daylight-harvesting system may vary depending on the location and choice of the daylight-harvesting components. The daylight-harvesting components for an integrated system can be optimized at the factory so that the angular acceptance, angular sensitivity, and spectral sensitivity of the photosensor match the characteristics of the fixture. For instance, a closed-loop photosensor may be adjusted to primarily (or only) monitor the area illuminated by an associated luminaire.
Note also that the daylight-harvesting system is a multi-level lighting system that can include an on-off lighting system and/or a dimming lighting system. The daylight-harvesting system can also include an occupancy sensor 500 and/or a user control 502, such as a fixture-mounted user control, a wall-mounted user control, and/or a wireless remote control. A user can use the user control 502 to customize system behavior and functionality.
In one embodiment of the present invention, light sources that affect the light level in the area illuminated by the daylight-harvesting system can include natural and/or artificial light entering the area from one or more of the following: a skylight; a window; a direct-beam daylighting system; an atrium; a clear-story window; and an electric-lighting source.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the daylight-harvesting system monitors the light levels measured by the photosensors over time. By monitoring the relationship between the light levels for the sensors, the system can customize operation based on characteristics of the local environment and improve the lighting control for the area. The system may adapt its response depending on correlations between the signals from the photosensors, for instance to adjust the length of a time delay used during light level adjustments to ensure that a change in the measured lighting level of the area is not due to a transient effect. In some situations, such time delays can interfere with the operation of the system when true daylight changes occur. When true daylight changes have been indicated by correlated changes confirmed by multiple sensors, such a time delay may be unneeded.
Sensor Variations
In one embodiment of the present invention, a number of sensors can be organized into a distributed sensor network to improve the lighting for multiple different areas while reducing system cost. For instance, a single open-loop sensor may be set up to work in conjunction with a number of closed-loop sensors, thereby improving system reliability.
In one embodiment of the present invention, a charge-coupled device (CCD) camera can be used as a photosensor and/or as a motion-detecting occupancy sensor. Note that one camera can be considered to be an array of sensors, e.g. as multiple photosensors. The multiple sensing pixels of the CCD can provide fine-tuned daylight and occupancy sensing by automatically measuring regions of the camera's field-of-view. Note that some regions of the CCD may be filtered to remove undesirable data. For instance, the system may look at only a portion of the darkest pixels or average across pixels to filter out non-representative effects such as glare or light from task lamps.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the sensitivity of the photosensor is adjusted to measure customized weights of light levels for an area. For instance, the sensitivity of the photosensor may be reduced for areas directly under the lighting sensor, which are closer to the photosensor than other areas with a different distance and/or angle of incidence. Adjusting the sensitivity of the photosensor allows the control system to measure substantially the same sensitivity from all incoming directions. Techniques that facilitate adjusting the sensitivity of the photosensor and measuring customized weights of light levels for the area can include one or more of the following:
In summary, daylight levels in areas next to windows typically have enough daylight to eliminate the need for electric lighting for a significant portion of most days of the year. Daylight-harvesting systems can take advantage of this daylight to provide significant energy savings, but daylight-harvesting approaches that use a single photosensor are prone to several reliability issues. One embodiment of the present invention uses multiple photosensors to prevent incorrect lighting changes due to factors other than the variation of daylight in an area. Techniques that use multiple closed-loop photosensors or a mix of open- and closed-loop photosensors can improve the functionality and reliability of daylight-harvesting systems in commercial, residential, and other environments.
The foregoing descriptions of embodiments of the present invention have been presented only for purposes of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the present invention to the forms disclosed. Accordingly, many modifications and variations will be apparent to practitioners skilled in the art. Additionally, the above disclosure is not intended to limit the present invention. The scope of the present invention is defined by the appended claims.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. section 119(e) to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/771,770, entitled “Dual Photo-Sensor Dimming Daylight Controls,” by inventors Konstantinos Papamichael and Keith Graeber, filed on 8 Feb. 2006, the contents of which are herein incorporated by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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7049575 | Hotelling | May 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070189000 A1 | Aug 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60771770 | Feb 2006 | US |