The present disclosure relates to an LC-parallel AC-direct-type light emitting diode (LED) lighting device, and more particularly, to an LC-parallel AC-direct-type LED lighting device configured to provide a control for enhancing characteristics such as output and power factor by using an LED lighting device including a compensation circuit for driving an LED array for LED lighting.
The statements in this section merely provide background information related to the present disclosure and do not necessarily constitute prior art.
An LED has many merits including less power consumption, semipermanently long lifetime, brightness characteristic comparable to that of a conventional fluorescent light, and the like, and hence it is a growing trend that a considerable research is performed on the LED around the globe and the LED is steadily and widely used as a lighting source, i.e., an LED light, which is likely to replace the fluorescent light.
The fluorescent light is generally a sort of mercury discharge tube having a negative resistance characteristic, which necessitates a stabilizer as a device for stably maintaining a turn-on state after turning it on by inducing a discharge start of the fluorescent light. The stabilizer serves to apply a high voltage for starting the discharge initially required to turn on the fluorescent light and supply stable voltage and current to the fluorescent light after turning it on.
Unlike the fluorescent light, the lighting using the LED is promptly operable by constant voltage and current without such a component as the stabilizer, and has an advantage that a power required for the LED light to generate a level of illumination equivalent to that of the fluorescent light is as low as a half of that of the fluorescent light. In order to replace the conventional fluorescent light with the LED light, it is sufficient to simply remove the stabilizer and the fluorescent light and to install the LED light.
Although one can only replace a fluorescent light with a resistance-connected LED light, leaving a conventional rapid start stabilizer as installed, as shown in
Therefore, the present disclosure in some embodiments provides enhanced features such as output and power factor by using an LED lighting device including a compensation circuit for driving an LED array for LED lighting.
According to some embodiments of the present disclosure, an AC-direct-type LED lighting device includes a compensation circuit including a compensation inductor and a first compensation capacitor parallely connected to one terminal of an alternating current (AC) input and a second compensation capacitor connected in series to the parallely-connected compensation inductor and first compensation capacitor, and configured to compensate the AC input, a rectifying unit configured to rectify an output from terminals of the second compensation capacitor to obtain a direct current, and an LED array configured to be driven by an output of the rectifying unit. Capacities of the first compensation capacitor, the second compensation capacitor, and the compensation inductor and an output voltage of the LED array have values that allow a cosine value of a phase, with respect to a voltage of the AC input, of a result (current) obtained by dividing the voltage of the AC input by a sum of (i) a parallel value of an equivalent impedance Re for the rectifying unit and the LED array and an impedance of the second compensation capacitor and (ii) a parallel value of an impedance of the compensation inductor and an impedance of the first compensation capacitor, to be equal to or larger than 0.9. The capacities of the first compensation capacitor, the second compensation capacitor, and the compensation inductor are set to render the phase of the current to have a power factor of a leading phase with respect to the voltage.
According to another embodiment of the present disclosure, an AC-direct-type LED lighting device includes a compensation circuit, a rectifying unit and an LED array. The compensation circuit includes a third compensation capacitor parallelly connected to an AC input, a compensation inductor and a first compensation capacitor parallelly connected to one terminal of the AC input, and a second compensation capacitor connected in series to the parallelly-connected compensation inductor and first compensation capacitor, and it is configured to compensate the AC input. The rectifying unit is configured to rectify an output from terminals of the second compensation capacitor to obtain a direct current. The LED array is configured to be driven by an output of the rectifying unit. The capacities of the first compensation capacitor, the second compensation capacitor, the third compensation capacitor and the compensation inductor, and an output voltage of the LED array are determined to cause 0.9 or larger cosine value of a phase, with respect to a voltage of the AC input, of a resulting current I1+I2 obtained by adding (i) a first result I1 obtained by dividing the voltage of the AC input by a sum of a parallel value of the equivalent impedance Re of the rectifying unit and the LED array and an impedance of the second compensation capacitor and a parallel value of an impedance of the compensation inductor and an impedance of the first compensation capacitor and (ii) a second result I2 obtained by dividing the voltage of the AC input by an impedance (1/jωsC3) of the third compensation capacitor. The capacities of the first compensation capacitor, the second compensation capacitor, the third compensation capacitor and the compensation inductor may be set up to cause the phase of the resulting current to have a power factor of a leading phase with respect to the voltage.
The equivalent impedance Re may be proportional to the output voltage of the LED array and inversely proportional to an output power of the LED array. When the value of the compensation inductor has a preset value, the value of the first compensation capacitor may have a value that allows
to be equal to or larger than 3*fs and equal to or smaller than 4*fs, where fs is a frequency of the AC input.
The output voltage of the LED array may have a value corresponding to the state that the change of an output power of the LED elements constituting the LED array is least, the change depending on the number of the LED elements. The value of the second compensation capacitor may allow the output power to have a preset output power value.
According to yet another embodiment of the present disclosure, an AC-direct-type LED lighting device includes a compensation circuit, a rectifying unit and an LED array. The compensation circuit includes a compensation inductor and a first compensation capacitor parallelly connected to one terminal of an AC input and a second compensation capacitor connected in series to the parallelly-connected compensation inductor and first compensation capacitor, and it is configured to compensate the AC input. The rectifying unit is configured to rectify an output from terminals of the second compensation capacitor to obtain a direct current. The LED array is configured to be driven by an output of the rectifying unit. The capacities of the first compensation capacitor, the second compensation capacitor and the compensation inductor, and an output voltage of the LED array are determined to cause a leading phase, with respect to a voltage of the AC input, of a resulting current obtained by dividing the voltage of the AC input by a sum of (i) a parallel value of an equivalent impedance Re of the rectifying unit and the LED array and an impedance of the second compensation capacitor and (ii) a parallel value of an impedance of the compensation inductor and an impedance of the first compensation capacitor
According to yet another embodiment of the present disclosure, an AC-direct-type LED lighting device includes a compensation circuit, a rectifying unit and an LED array. The compensation circuit includes a third compensation capacitor parallelly connected to an AC input, a compensation inductor and a first compensation capacitor parallelly connected to one terminal of the AC input, and a second compensation capacitor connected in series to the parallelly-connected compensation inductor and first compensation capacitor, and it is configured to compensate the AC input. The rectifying unit is configured to rectify an output from terminals of the second compensation capacitor to obtain a direct current. The LED array is configured to be driven by an output of the rectifying unit. The capacities of the first compensation capacitor, the second compensation capacitor, the third compensation capacitor and the compensation inductor, and an output voltage of the LED array are determined to cause a leading phase, with respect to a voltage of the AC input, of a resulting current I1+I2 obtained by adding (i) a first result I1 obtained by dividing the voltage of the AC input by a sum of a parallel value of the equivalent impedance Re of the rectifying unit and the LED array and an impedance of the second compensation capacitor and a parallel value of an impedance of the compensation inductor and an impedance of the first compensation capacitor and (ii) a second result I2 obtained by dividing the voltage of the AC input by an impedance (1/jωsC3) of the third compensation capacitor.
As described above, according to some embodiments of the present disclosure, there is an effect of enhancing characteristics such as output and power factor by using an LED lighting device including a compensation circuit for driving an LED array for LED lighting.
There are further effects that the THD can be reduced by adding a compensation inductor having an appropriate capacity, the power factor can be enhanced by adding a compensation capacitor having an appropriated capacity, and when a compensation capacitor is connected in parallel to an input stage of a rectifying unit, a harmonic inflowing from an LED array can be reduced.
In particular, according to some embodiments of the present disclosure, the power factor of a whole power system can be enhanced by providing a leading-phase load to the power system, so that a required amount of power supply can be reduced for a constant power demand, and hence it provides a considerable effect on a national level.
Hereinafter, at least one embodiment of the present disclosure will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings. In the following description, like reference numerals designate like elements, although the elements are shown in different drawings. Further, in the following description of the at least one embodiment, a detailed description of known functions and configurations incorporated herein will be omitted for the purpose of clarity and for brevity.
Further, terms including first, second, A, B, (a), (b), and the like can be used to describe various constituent elements; however, such terms are merely used to distinguish one constituent element from the other, and one of ordinary skill in the pertinent art would understand the terms are not to imply or suggest the substances, the order or sequence of the constituent elements. If a constituent element is described as ‘connected’, ‘coupled’, or ‘linked’ to another constituent element, one of ordinary skill in the pertinent art would understand the constituent elements are not only necessarily directly ‘connected’, ‘coupled’, or ‘linked’ but also indirectly ‘connected’, ‘coupled’, or ‘linked’ via a third constituent element.
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
Considering a generalized case in which the LED array 340 includes a plurality of LED elements serially and parallely connected with various connection combinations, rather than the n serially-connected LEDs, the equivalent impedance Re is proportional to the output voltage Vo of the LED array and inversely proportional to the output power Po of the LED array.
R
e=α2Ro=α2Vo2/Po=α2n2V12/Po Equation 1
In Equation 1, a is a preset transform equivalent coefficient represented by an equivalence of the rectifying unit. That is, with Ve=αVo in
Accordingly, Equation 3 is satisfied.
The number of LEDs, ‘n’ can be determined by using Equations 1 and 3 for a given Po. This will be described in detail later.
The capacities of the compensation inductor 321, the first compensation capacitor 322 and the second compensation capacitor 323 shown in
In other words, when the phase of the current Is with respect to the voltage Vs is φ, the capacities of the compensation inductor 321, the first compensation capacitor 322 and the second compensation capacitor 323, and the output voltage of the LED array 340 are determined, such that the value of cos φ is equal to or larger than 0.9. Further, the capacities of the compensation inductor 321, the first compensation capacitor 322 and the second compensation capacitor 323, and the output voltage of the LED array 340 are determined such that the power factor ensures that the phase of the current Is is a leading phase with respect to the voltage Vs. Further, according to Equation 1, the voltage drop V1 per each of the serially-connected LEDs constituting the LED array 340 is virtually constant, and hence a factor for determining the output voltage Vo=nV1 of the LED array 340 is the number ‘n’ of elements. Consequently, according to Equation 4, the current Is is influenced by Re, and Re depends on the value of n, and hence the value of n is one of the key factors of the current Is. In the following descriptions, a fact that a certain element is changed depending on the value of Re means that the certain element is changed depending on the number ‘n’ of serially-connected LEDs constituting the LED array 340.
The capacities of the compensation inductor 321, the first compensation capacitor 322 and the second compensation capacitor 323 are set to minimize the THD (e.g., equal to or smaller than 30%).
In
In order to zero the value of a 3rd-order harmonic current flowing into the AC input 311, values of L and C1 need to be set such that a harmonic frequency f3 satisfies Equation 7, and in order to set the value of the 3rd-order harmonic current Is3 flowing into the input, to 25% of a 1st-order harmonic current Is1, the values of L and C1 need to be set to satisfy Equation 8.
Therefore, when the values of L and C1 are set such that the value of 1/[(2π(LC1)1/2] is equal to or smaller than 4*fs and equal to or larger than 3*fs in Equations 7 and 8, the value of the 3rd-order harmonic current Is3 flowing into the AC input 311 becomes equal to or smaller than 25% of the magnitude generated in the LED array 340, and in this case, the total THD becomes equal to or smaller than 30%, where fs is a frequency at the AC input stage.
The AC-direct-type LED lighting device 300 is operable in DCM ((a) of
As shown in
As shown in
Further, as Ve=αVo in
Therefore, by using a simultaneous equation of Equations 1 and 3, the number of LEDs, n can be determined with respect to a given Po.
The capacities of the compensation inductor 621, the first compensation capacitor 622, the second compensation capacitor 623 and the third compensation capacitor 624, and the output voltage of the LED array 640 shown in
Therefore, when the phase of the current Is with respect to the voltage Vs is φ, the capacities of the compensation inductor 621, the first compensation capacitor 622, the second compensation capacitor 623 and the third compensation capacitor 624, and the output voltage of the LED array 640 are determined, such that the value of cos φ (i.e., power factor) is equal to or larger than 0.9. Similarly, the output voltage of the LED array 640 depends on the number of LEDs connected in series constituting the LED array 640. In other words, an adjustment of n is a factor for adjusting the phase of the current Is with respect to the voltage Vs.
The capacities of the compensation inductor 621, the first compensation capacitor 622, the second compensation capacitor 623 and the third compensation capacitor 624 are set to minimize the THD (e.g., equal to or smaller than 30%).
As the value of the third compensation capacitor 624 (C3) is set to a value even smaller than that of the first compensation capacitor 622 (C1), an impedance by C3 has a considerably large value. Therefore, in
In order to zero the value of a 3rd-order harmonic current flowing into the AC input 611 to zero, values of L and C1 need to be set such that the 3rd-order harmonic frequency satisfies Equation 7, and in order to set the value of the 3rd-order harmonic current Is3 flowing into the AC input 611, to 25% of a 1st-order harmonic current Is1, the values of L and C1 need to be set to satisfy Equation 8.
Therefore, when the values of L and C1 are set such that the value of 1/[(2π(LC1)1/2] is equal to or smaller than 4*fs and equal to or larger than 3*fs in Equations 7 and 8, the value of the 3rd-order harmonic current Is3 flowing into the input becomes equal to or smaller than 25% of the magnitude generated in the LED array 640, and in this case, the total THD becomes equal to or smaller than 30%.
The AC-direct-type LED lighting device 600 is operable in DCM ((a) of
Firstly, the value of the compensation inductor (L) is set to the minimum value in a range of PF equal to or larger than 0.9 and in a range of THD equal to or smaller than 30%. The value of the compensation inductor L has a predetermined specific value, for example, 0.2 H. Although the PF and THD characteristics are enhanced as the capacity of the compensation inductor L is increased, it also increases in size, and hence the economic feasibility is degraded. Therefore, the capacity of the compensation inductor L is set to a value in a range from 0.1 H to 1.5 H (for example, 0.2 H), considering a tradeoff between the above-mentioned factors.
Upon determining the capacity of the compensation inductor L, the capacity of the first compensation capacitor 622 is determined. The capacity of the first compensation capacitor 622 is determined based on Equation 7 or 8, or determined to have a value in a range between the value obtained from Equation 7 and the value obtained from Equation 8. In other words, a resonant frequency by the compensation inductor L and the first compensation capacitor 622 can be set to a value between 3*fs and 4*fs.
The values of the second compensation capacitor 623 and n (the number of serially-connected LEDs in the LED array 340 or 640) is set to zero the result from applying a partial differential equation with respect to Re to Equation 3, as represented by Equation 10. In other words, a certain number of the LEDs may be found where the power of the LED array 340 or 640 becomes the strongest and the LED array 340 or 640 may be arranged to operate with that number of the LED elements, if the LED array 340 or 640 includes n serially-connected LED elements.
Further, with Equation 1, solutions for C2 and ‘n’ can be found by setting Po to 20 W and solving a simultaneous Equation of Equation 1 and Equation 10.
Such a solution can be obtained from a graph. Po varies with changes of the values of L, C1, and C2 and depending on Re. For example, in
Although the above description assumes the LED array 340 or 640 includes a plurality of serially-connected LED elements, the present disclosure also applies to the LED array 340 or 640 including a plurality of LED elements serially and parallelly connected with various connection combinations, for obtaining a combination of LED elements serially and parallelly connected, wherein the change of the output power of the LED array 340 or 640 is least as the change depends on adding more of the LED elements.
A method of finding C3 in the case shown in
As shown in
In other words, the change of the system power for when the conventional lighting is replaced with the LED lighting not only exhibits a reduced power consumption with the LED lighting itself due to the characteristics of the LED lighting inherently generating the comparable lighting effect to the fluorescent light with less power consumption, but also provides an increased efficiency of the whole power system by reducing a reactive power of the whole power system that has a reactive power of the lagging phase by providing the power factor having the leading phase.
In the description above, although all of the components of the embodiments of the present disclosure may have been explained as assembled or operatively connected as a unit, one of ordinary skill would understand the present disclosure is not limited to such embodiments. Rather, within some embodiments of the present disclosure, the respective components are selectively and operatively combined in any number of ways.
Although exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure have been described for illustrative purposes, those skilled in the art will appreciate that various modifications, additions and substitutions are possible, without departing from the essential characteristics of the disclosure. Therefore, exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure have been described for the sake of brevity and clarity. Accordingly, one of ordinary skill would understand the scope of the disclosure is not limited by the explicitly described above embodiments but by the claims and equivalents thereof.
As described above, the present disclosure is highly useful as it has effects of enhancing characteristics such as output and power factor by using an LED lighting device including a compensation circuit for driving an LED array for LED lighting.
If applicable, this application claims priority under 35 U.S.C §119(a) of Patent Application No. 10-2012-0094892, filed on Aug. 29, 2012 in Korea, the entire content of which is incorporated herein by reference. In addition, this non-provisional application claims priority in countries, other than the U.S., with the same reason based on the Korean patent application, the entire content of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10-2012-0094892 | Aug 2012 | KP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/KR2013/007784 | 8/29/2013 | WO | 00 |