The present invention generally relates to electronic ballast of fluorescent lamps, and more specifically to a power factor correction circuit for the electronic ballast of the fluorescent lamp.
Electronic ballasts, due to its small form factor, light weight, less power consumption, and stable light beams, have become the mainstream of fluorescent lamp ballast. Basically the electronic ballast is a combination of circuits that converts alternating current (AC) into direct current (DC) and then from DC back to AC. More specifically, one of the conventional electronic ballasts converts the AC voltage from the mains into a DC voltage, and then converts the DC voltage, through high frequency oscillation, into a high frequency, high level AC voltage to excite the fluorescent lamp. As shown in
The bridge rectifier circuit 10 rectifies an input AC voltage to charge and discharge the filtering capacitor C1 and a DC voltage with a ripple is thereby developed across the filtering capacitor C1. Because the AC voltage Vs can charge the filtering capacitor C1 only around the crest and trough of its waveform where it has a large enough voltage, the input AC current Is therefore has an impulse waveform. Moreover, in order to reduce the ripple of the DC voltage (i.e. to enhance the filtering effect), usually a capacitor with a large capacitance is used as the filtering capacitor C1. This, however, causes the impulse waveform of the input AC current Is to become even acuter.
A reduction in the capacitance of the filtering capacitor C1 could indeed abate the distortion of the input AC current Is, reduce the amount of harmonics, and improve the power factor. The DC voltage developed across the filtering capacitor C1, however, would have a more fluctuant ripple. This in turn causes the crest factor of the current of the lamp tube 17 (the peak value divided by the effective value of the lamp current) to exceed the normal rating and thereby reduce the lifespan of the lamp tube 17. In summary, for the conventional electronic ballasts, reducing input AC current harmonics/increasing power factor and reducing lamp current crest factor are contradictory to each other.
Most, if not all, of the commercially available electronic ballasts, even though usually branded as “high efficiency,” commonly have a total harmonic distortion≧10%, power factor≈0.5, and lamp current crest factor≧1.7. In other words, these so-called “high efficient” electronic ballasts actually have a high amount of harmonics and a rather low power factor. The term “high efficiency,” therefore, actually refers to the high frequency lamp lighting. To achieve the true high efficiency, a correction circuit must be added in the electronic ballasts to overcome the foregoing limitations and disadvantages of the conventional electronic ballasts.
Currently, to reduce the amount of harmonics of the input AC current and to increase the power factor at the same time, there are generally two types of correction circuits: the active ones and the passive ones. The active power factor correction circuits adopt active elements and therefore have a complex structure, bulky form factor, and a higher cost. The passive power factor correction circuits can only achieve limited improvement and therefore have little value in real-life applications.
The present invention provides a power factor correction circuit, which comprises a plurality of diodes and capacitors and is located between a bridge rectifier circuit and a high frequency oscillation circuit to replace a single-capacitor DC filter circuit of the conventional electronic ballast. The power factor correction circuit according to the present invention comprises a filtering capacitor charge/discharge circuit and a feedback circuit taking input from a lamp filament. The former offers a smaller equivalent filtering capacitance so that the input AC current has a smoother waveform and thereby a less amount of harmonics is achieved. The former also offers a larger equivalent capacitance so that the RC time constant is increased when discharging to the load. This in turn reduces the ripple fluctuation and therefore the crest factor of the lamp current. On the other hand, the latter further adds the high frequency voltage feedback from the lamp filament onto the low frequency DC voltage output from the bridge rectifier circuit so that the waveform of the input AC current can further approach true sine wave.
The power factor correction circuit provided by the present invention achieves simultaneously a low amount of input AC current harmonics (the total harmonic distortion<10%), a high power factor (the power factor>0.95), and a less-than-rating lamp current crest factor (the lamp current crest factor<1.7). The provided power factor correction circuit also has advantages, such as small form factor, low cost, and high working reliability. The power factor correction circuit according to the present invention is especially suitable for application in self-excited electronic ballasts with small to medium power consumption.
The foregoing and other objects, features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood from a careful reading of a detailed description provided herein below with appropriate reference to the accompanying drawings.
A power factor correction circuit provided by the present invention is structured on and works along with a conventional electronic ballast circuit. A preferred embodiment of the power factor correction circuit in accordance with the present invention is described in details as follows.
The power factor correction circuit provided by the present invention comprises a filtering capacitor charge/discharge circuit and a feedback circuit. Details about the filtering capacitor charge/discharge circuit are explained first as follows.
Diodes D1-D5 and capacitors C1 and C2 constitute the filtering capacitor charge/discharge circuit. A positive output terminal of the bridge rectifier circuit 10 connects to anode of a diode D5. Between a point B at cathode of diode D5 and a point C at a negative output terminal of the bridge rectifier circuit 10, a filtering capacitor C1 and a diode D4 are arranged in a series connection. Anode of the diode D4 is connected to the point C. Also arranged between the points B and C in a series connection are a diode D3 and a filtering capacitor C2 that are parallel to the C1 and D4 connection. Cathode of the diode D3 is connected to the point B. The interconnection point between the filtering capacitor C1 and diode D4 connects to the interconnection point between the diode D3 and filtering capacitor C2 via series-connected diodes D1 and D2. Cathode of the diode D4 is connected to anode of the diode D1. Cathode of the diode D2 is connected to anode of the diode D3.
In the filtering capacitor charge/discharge circuit, the current charging the filtering capacitors C1 and C2 flows from the point B to the point C through the filtering capacitor C1, diodes D1 and D2, and the filtering capacitor C2. On the other hand, the current discharged from the filtering capacitor C1 flows through the point B, the load, the point C, the diode D4, and then back to the filtering capacitor C1. Similarly, the current discharged from the filtering capacitor C2 flows through the diode D3, the point B, the load, the point C, and then back to the filtering capacitor C2.
From the point B, the DC voltage output from the bridge rectifier circuit 10 and the diode D5, on one hand, drives the high frequency oscillation circuit 14 and, on the other hand, charges the filtering capacitor C1 and C2 through the afore-mentioned charging path. In the charging path, the filtering capacitors C1 and C2 actually form a series connection. Assuming the diodes D1 and D2 are ideal (that is, ignoring their conductive resistances) and the capacitances of the filtering capacitors C1 and C2 are both C, the equivalent filtering capacitance equals to (C×C)/(C+C)=C/2 when the filtering capacitors C1 and C2 are charged. That is, the equivalent filtering capacitance when both filtering capacitor C1 and C2 are used is 50% less than when a single filtering capacitor C1 or C2 is used. Due to this reduction of equivalent filtering capacitance, the input AC current Is has a smoother waveform, fewer amounts of harmonics, and higher power factor.
When the DC voltage at the point B is less than the sum of the voltages of the filtering capacitors C1 and C2, the filtering capacitors C1 and C2 discharge to the load in parallel. Assuming the diodes D1 and D2 are ideal (that is, ignoring their conductive resistance) and the capacitances of the filtering capacitors C1 and C2 are both C, the equivalent filtering capacitance equals to (C+C)=2C when the filtering capacitors C1 and C2 discharge. That is, the equivalent filtering capacitance when both filtering capacitor C1 and C2 are used is 100% more than when a single filtering capacitor C1 or C2 is used. The RC time constant when the filtering capacitors C1 and C2 discharge therefore is 100% more than when a single filtering capacitor C1 or C2 is used. Due to this increase of equivalent filtering capacitance, the DC voltage and the current of the lamp tube 17 would be less fluctuant and the lamp current would have a lower crest factor.
The details of the feedback circuit will be described as follows. As shown in
The high frequency signal at the filament terminal of the lamp tube 17 reaches the point A via the coupling capacitor C6. The positive halves of the periods of the high frequency signal charges the filtering capacitor C2 via the diode D2 and the negative halves of the periods of the high frequency signal charges the filtering capacitor C1 via the diode D1. Moreover, the high frequency signal is rectified by the diode D6 and added to the low-frequency DC voltage at the point B. The filtering capacitor charge/discharge circuit then filters the sum of the two voltages. The addition of the high frequency signal makes the waveform of the input AC current Is smoother and closer to the sine wave. This in turn further reduces the ripple of the DC voltage and therefore the crest factor of the current of the lamp tube 17 as well.
The highly efficient power factor correction circuit provided by the present invention has the following advantages: