The present invention relates to a power control circuit for providing a substantially constant intensity light source and a corresponding method using this control circuit.
By way of background, traffic signal lamps typically use either incandescent or LED (light-emitting diode) lamps. LED traffic signals are more reliable, more mechanically stable, safer, more energy efficient and more environmentally friendly than incandescent lamps. Thus, LED traffic signals are gaining in popularity.
The voltage and current characteristics of an LED lamp are sensitive to temperature. The LEDs used will have a forward voltage specified at an intended operating current. In particular, the forward voltage changes with the temperature, and, consequently, the current follows the variation. Thus, if the forward voltage increases, then the forward current will decrease. Likewise, if the forward voltage decreases, then the forward current increases.
For example, for a given type of LED widely used in the fabrication of traffic lights and signals, rail signals, signage, commercial refrigeration lighting, general Illumination, vehicle lighting, variable message and many other applications, a constant voltage of 1.8 volts will produce in the LED a current of about 7.5 mA at a temperature of −25° C., a current of about 20.5 mA at a temperature of +25° C., and a current of about 30 mA at a temperature of +60° C. The magnitude of the current through the light-emitting diode at a temperature of +60° C. is therefore, for a constant voltage of 1.8 volt, about 1.6 times higher than the magnitude of the current at a temperature of +25° C.
A constant voltage may be maintained such that the voltage across the LEDs is constant for all environments (e.g., −40 to 74° C.). It is known that at high temperatures the forward voltage of the LEDs decreases, and because the driver or the power supply maintains the voltage across the LEDs constant, the LED current will increase exponentially and stress the LEDs (bright LEDs).
At low temperatures the forward voltage of the LEDs increases, and because the driver of the power supply maintains the voltage across the LEDs constant, the LED current will decrease exponentially and the light will be dim (dim LEDs). Therefore, voltage feedback control may be detrimental to the service life of such an LED.
Also, a fixed LED output current presents the following drawbacks: at higher temperature the LED forward voltage decreases and then the output LED power decreases, which means light out decreases; and at lower temperatures the LED forward voltage increases and then the output LED power increases, which means light out increases.
Thus, there is a need for a device and method that eliminates the above-discussed drawbacks of the prior art by regulating the output power, and hence the light intensity, of non-linear light emitting loads such as light-emitting diodes.
The following patents, the disclosures of each being totally incorporated herein by reference, are mentioned:
U.S. Pat. No. 6,091,614 to Malenfant, entitled “VOLTAGE BOOSTER FOR ENABLING THE POWER FACTOR CONTROLLER OF A LED LAMP UPON LOW AC OR DC SUPPLY;”
U.S. Pat. No. 6,285,139 to Ghanem, entitled “NON-LINEAR LIGHT-EMITTING LOAD CURRENT CONTROL;” and
U.S. Pat. No. 6,400,102 to Ghanem, entitled “NON-LINEAR LIGHT-EMITTING LOAD CURRENT CONTROL.”
In accordance with an aspect of the present invention a light source is provided. The light source includes a controllable power source for supplying power to a non-linear light-emitting load; a current sensing circuit connected to the non-linear light-emitting load that generates a current signal representing the current flowing through the non-linear light-emitting load; a voltage sensing circuit connected to the non-linear light-emitting load that generates a voltage signal representing the voltage across the non-linear light-emitting load; a power sensing circuit connected to the current and voltage sensing circuits that receives the current and voltage signals and measures the power consumption of the light-emitting load and generates a variable power-representative signal; and a power feedback control circuit connected between the power sensing circuit and the controllable power source through which the power source is controlled in relation to the variable power-representative signal to maintain the power consumption of the light source substantially constant.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention a method of maintaining the intensity and power consumption of a light source substantially constant is provided. The method includes supplying a controllable dc voltage and current to a non-linear light-emitting load; multiplying an output forward voltage and a variable current-representative signal from the light-emitting load to generate a variable power-representative signal; and feedback controlling the controllable dc voltage and current in relation to the variable power-representative signal to keep the light intensity produced by the light source substantially constant.
In accordance with yet another aspect of the present invention a substantially constant intensity LED lamp is provided. The lamp includes a controllable dc voltage and current source for supplying an LED load with dc voltage and current; a current sensing circuit connected with the LED load that generates a current signal representing the current flowing through the LED load; a voltage sensing circuit connected with the LED load that generates a voltage signal representing the voltage across the LED load; a multiplier circuit that receives the current signal and the voltage signal and generates a variable-power representative signal; and a voltage and current control feedback circuit connected between the power sense circuit and the controllable dc voltage and current source that receives the variable-power representative signal and controls the dc voltage and current source in relation to the variable power-representative signal to thereby adjust the dc voltage and current to keep the light intensity and power consumption produced by the LED load substantially constant.
The present invention exists in the construction, arrangement, and combination of the various parts of the device, and steps of the method, whereby the objects contemplated are attained as hereinafter more fully set forth, specifically pointed out in the claims, and illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which:
Although the exemplary embodiments of the present invention will be described hereinafter with reference to a light source such as a light-emitting diode (LED) traffic signal lamp, it may be used in other LED lighting applications such as rail signals, signage, commercial refrigeration, general Illumination, vehicle lighting, variable message and many other applications, and it should be understood that this example is not intended to limit the range of applications of the present invention.
Referring now to the drawings wherein the showings are for purposes of illustrating the exemplary embodiments only and not for purposes of limiting the claimed subject matter,
The light source 2 is supplied by an ac input line 6. The voltage and current from the ac input line 6 is rectified by a full wave rectifier bridge 8 and is supplied to the LED load 4 through a power converter (or power supply) 10 and an output filter 12.
The power converter 10 takes the ac voltage from the ac input line 6 and transforms it into dc voltage, with a regulated current, to power the LED load 4. A switching power supply may be used.
To smooth out the ac current waveform and withdraw the switching high frequencies therefrom, an electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) input filter 14 may be added between the ac source 6 and the full wave rectifier bridge 8. The EMC input filter 14 typically contains an arrangement of capacitors, inductors and common mode chokes to reduce conducted electromagnetic emissions. Filtering is necessary due to the noisy nature of a switching power supply. The current flowing through the EMC input filter 14 is proportional to the full-wave rectified voltage at the output of the rectifier bridge 8. The current waveform is sinusoidal and in phase with the voltage waveform so that the power factor is, if not equal to, close to unity.
The LED load 4 is connected to an LED current sensing circuit 16 that can be employed to verify that the current drawn by the LED load 4 is within acceptable operating parameters. Also, the LED load 4 is connected to an LED voltage sensing circuit 18. The outputs of the LED current sensing circuit 16 and the LED voltage sensing circuit 18, respectively, are connected to a power sensing (or multiplier) circuit 20.
The fixed output power reference signal PREF for each subset of LEDs is represented in
A function of the power factor controller 24 is to ensure that the input current follows the input voltage in time and amplitude proportionally. This means that, for steady-state constant output power conditions, the input current amplitude will follow the input voltage amplitude in the same proportion at any instant in time. The power factor controller 24 requires on its input at least two parameters: (1) the power representative feedback signal PMEAS (generated by the power sensing circuit 20) that varies with the LED load variation and (2) the output power reference PREF.
The output power control loop, which comprises at least three circuits (in this case, the LED current sensing circuit 16, the LED voltage sensing circuit 18 and the power sensing circuit 20), is forced to have a slow response to allow the input current to follow the input voltage. Because of this slow power loop response, it is necessary to optimize the power factor controller 24 with respect to its action on the power converter 10 as a function of the temperature and forward voltage variation.
As noted earlier, to obtain the power-representative feedback signal PMEAS, the power sensing circuit 22 multiplies the output current and the output voltage. The power-representative feedback signal PMEAS is then compared to PREF in a comparator within the power factor controller 24.
Although not shown in
It is to be appreciated that LED manufacturers typically bin or separate LEDs subsequent to a production run. Due to typical variations during manufacturing, each LED may possess and exhibit a unique set of characteristics. LED manufactures normally bin according to three primary characteristics. The intensity bins segregate components in accordance with luminous output. Color bins provide separation for variations in optical wavelength or color temperature. Voltage bins divide components according to variations of their forward voltage rating.
Referring now to
Turning now to
PMEAS1>PMEAS2>PMEAS3 (2)
Accordingly, in order to avoid variations in the LED output power PMEAS with temperature θ1, aging and VF binning at a fixed current, the power sensing circuit 20 has been introduced. The LED power-representative voltage signal PMEAS is given by the product of LED current ILED (from the LED current sensing circuit 16) and LED Forward Voltage VLED (from the LED voltage sensing circuit 18).
The LED power-representative voltage signal PMEAS has an amplitude that is proportional to the magnitude of the current flowing through the LEDs 14 and the voltage across the LEDs 14. The power sensing circuit 20 enables regulation of the dc power supplied to the LEDs as a function of temperature θ, VF binning and aging. When the temperature θ is constant, PMEAS as generated by the power sensing circuit 20 will depend only on VF binning and aging.
We refer now to
PMEAS=VLED(θ)×ILED(θ)=constant=PREF (3)
and the current on the LEDs is:
ILED(θ)=PREF/VLED(θ) (4)
where PREF is the fixed LED power reference.
As a result, the LED voltage VLED diminishes, and the difference E between the fixed reference power PREF and the filtered LED load power measurement PMEAS increases, so that the LED current is increased by the power converter 10 until the difference E is equal to zero:
E=PREF−PMEAS (5)
The power drawn by the LED load 4 is therefore limited by the choice of PREF This, in turn, maintains a roughly constant power output from the LED load 4.
Conversely, if the temperature θ drops, the LED voltage VLED increases, and the power factor controller 24 increases the LED current by sending a signal to the power converter 10 to increase the current to maintain the power constant and equal to PREF. As a result, PMEAS increases, and the difference E decreases so that the power converter 10 decreases the current in the LED load 4 until the difference E is again equal to zero.
The LED lamp power output regulation is based on the variation of forward voltage measurement with temperature and aging as shown in
Thus, in accordance with aspects of the present invention, the power of the LEDs may be adjusted so that if any of the LED electrical characteristics changes, the LED power consumption stays constant. If the LED forward voltage varies, for example, with (a) temperature, (b) a manufacturer batch to batch, (c) manufacturer VF binning, or (d) age, the LED current may be adjusted to maintain the same power consumption. The LED power consumption can also be changed in function of the line input voltage resulting in LED efficiency having a low variation in terms of lumen per watt but having a high variation in terms of voltage for a specific current.
The output power reference can be adjusted by the customer as a dimming option. An input reference current sensor is generally proportional to the output power PMEAS, so by fixing the reference current, the output power reference can be fixed proportionally and then the dimming option can be executed with the same power consumption in all temperature environments, binning VF variations and age variations (time).
An exemplary method of maintaining the intensity and power consumption of a light source substantially constant, in accordance with the exemplary embodiment shown in
The above description merely provides a disclosure of particular embodiments of the invention and is not intended for the purposes of limiting the same thereto. As such, the invention is not limited to only the above-described embodiments. Rather, it is recognized that one of ordinary skill in the art could conceive alternative embodiments that fall within the scope of the invention.
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6091614 | Malenfant | Jul 2000 | A |
6153985 | Grossman | Nov 2000 | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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WO 2006096638 | Sep 2006 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100259191 A1 | Oct 2010 | US |