The present invention relates to the driving of fluorescent lamps, and more particularly, to methods and protection schemes for driving cold cathode fluorescent lamps (CCFL), external electrode fluorescent lamps (EEFL), and flat fluorescent lamps (FFL).
In large panel displays (e.g., LCD televisions), many lamps are used in parallel to provide the bright backlight required for a high quality picture. The total current at full brightness can easily exceed the current limitations determined by governmental regulations. For example, the current limit as stated in Underwriters Laboratory (UL) standard UL60950 must not exceed 70 mA when the power inverter is shorted by a 2000 ohm impedance. However, the secondary side current in a typical 20-lamp backlight system may exceed that amount of current.
Traditional protection schemes measure the lamp currents, transformer primary current, or transformer current in general. Then, these currents are limited to below the maximum safe currents. However, this approach still has drawbacks.
The present invention relates to an apparatus and method for driving discharge lamps in large panel applications with overcurrent protection. The present invention can offer, among other advantages, a nearly symmetrical voltage waveform to drive discharge lamps, accurate control of lamp current to ensure good reliability, and protection schemes that limit circuit current under short circuit conditions.
Turning to
The circuit of
As noted above, the control and gate drive 107 generates the gate drive waveforms with appropriate duty cycle to regulate the lamp current to its reference current limit. The control section 107 also receives feedback on the lamp current (the current on the secondary side of the transformer 105). Capacitors C2 and C3 are also used as a voltage divider when sensing the transformer or lamp voltage. Resistor R1 is typically a very large resistor forcing a zero DC bias on a voltage feedback node.
Note that if the peak of the transformer voltage (the AC sine wave) on the secondary side (or load side) on node VL does not exceed a preset threshold VTH (for example, 40% of the normal operating voltage on node VL), this indicates a possible short circuit condition. A safety current threshold ISAFE is used as a current limit when there is a possible short circuit condition. The preset threshold VTH may also, for example, be set between 25 to 55 percent of the normal operating voltage.
In one embodiment, ISAFE is the RMS value IRMS of the normal operating current or the average rectified value IRECT,AVG (IREC,AVG=IRMS*2*sqrt(2)/π). Thus, an under-voltage detection block (such as a comparator) 109, which can be implemented using a myriad of circuits, is used to compare the voltage on node VL to VTH. If VL is less than VTH for at least one switching cycle, the under-voltage detection block 109 will indicate the short circuit condition to a current limit selection block 111 and then choose the safety current ISAFE as the current limit. Otherwise, the under voltage detection block 109 will indicate to the current limit selection block 111 to choose the “normal” current limit, which in one embodiment is determined by an external brightness command level, IBRT. However, it should be appreciated that the normal current limit in some embodiments is not limited to IBRT, and instead may be set by other controllable parameters.
Note that if the negative AC amplitude of the transformer voltage never decreases below the preset threshold VTH (for example, 40% of the normal operating voltage), the short circuit protection current, preferably, RMS value IRMS or the average rectified value IRECT,AVG, is smaller than the safety current ISAFE.
A variant implementation of
In UL60950, the standard short circuit impedance of 2 kohm is much smaller than the lamp impedance for a CCFL, EEFL, or FFL. Therefore, the secondary or lamp current in a lamp application will be smaller than the current flowing through a 2 kohm load for the UL60950 test.
As long as (1+C3/C2)*VTH/IRMS>=1.4*2 Kohm, the circuit will guarantee that the short circuit current is always smaller than the safety current and the inverter operates properly with large lamp current which is greater than the safety current.
Note also that the short circuit current can be measured by a single resistor or capacitor in a fixed frequency inverter, and by the parallel combination of the resistor and capacitor in a variable frequency inverter.
The examples shown previously sense the voltage on the secondary side with a grounded sense. In other embodiments, the voltage and/or current may be sensed on the primary side. Still alternative, a differential sense scheme for floating drive inverters may be used. Furthermore, the teachings of the present invention may be used with other inverter topologies, including push-pull, half-bridge, etc.
From the foregoing, it will be appreciated that specific embodiments of the invention have been described herein for purposes of illustration, but that various modifications may be made without deviating from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is not limited except as by the appended claims.
The present invention claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/618,640 filed Oct. 13, 2004.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6118415 | Olson | Sep 2000 | A |
6396722 | Lin | May 2002 | B2 |
6501234 | Lin et al. | Dec 2002 | B2 |
6707264 | Lin et al. | Mar 2004 | B2 |
6804129 | Lin | Oct 2004 | B2 |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060076900 A1 | Apr 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60618640 | Oct 2004 | US |