BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The novel features believed characteristic of the invention are set forth in the appended claims. The invention itself, as well as a preferred mode of use, and advantages thereof, will best be understood by reference to the following detailed description of illustrated embodiments when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals and symbols represent like elements.
FIG. 1 depicts a power supply circuit for driving a string of LEDs at constant current and individual dimming control of each LED in the string.
FIG. 2 depicts a power supply circuit for driving a string of LEDs 108 at constant current with regulation of the LED current by using a feedback of the voltage drop across the LED string.
FIG. 3 shows a power supply circuit of FIG. 2 wherein power to the LED string is supplied using a step-down DC-DC converter of a buck type that operates in a constant off-time mode wherein the off-time is made inverse proportional to the voltage drop across the LED string.
FIG. 4 depicts the waveform of IL, the current in the LED string as a function of the dimming signal states for FIG. 3.
FIG. 5 depicts the LED driver of FIG. 3 with the addition of filter capacitors and corresponding disconnect switches as described in FIG. 1.
FIG. 6 is shows another example of the power supply circuit of FIG. 1 wherein power to the LED string is supplied using a step-down DC-DC converter of a buck type that operates in hysteretic current control mode.
FIG. 7 depicts yet another embodiment of the power supply circuit of FIG. 1 using the output voltage feedback of FIG. 2 wherein the step-down DC-DC converter is of a time-delay hysteretic type.
FIG. 8 shows the inductor current (IL) waveforms illustrating the operation of the power supply circuit of FIG. 7 as a function of the dimming signal states.
FIG. 9 shows another embodiment of the power supply circuit of FIG. 1 using the output voltage feedback of FIG. 2.
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring to FIG. 1, a power supply circuit for driving a string of LEDs 108 at constant current is shown. Power to the LED string is supplied from a switching power converter 100 operating in a constant DC output current mode. There is little or no smoothing capacitor assumed at the output of the power converter 100. Thus, the output current of the power converter 100 is assumed to have a significant AC ripple component. The AC ripple is further filtered using smoothing capacitors 105.
Each LED 108 is equipped with an independently controlled switch 107 adapted to shunt the corresponding LED 108. Brightness of each LED 108 is individually controlled by periodically shunting it using the corresponding switch 107. Each switch 107 is controlled by external periodical dimming signals PWM_1 through PWM_N having controlled duty ratios.
Switches 106 are included in series with each smoothing capacitor 105 for disconnecting the capacitor 105 from the LED 108. The switches 106 are operated out of phase with the switches 107, so that a switch 106 turns off whenever the corresponding shunting switch 107 is on and visa-versa. This ensures that the capacitor 105 preserves its steady-state charge while the corresponding LED 108 is shunted.
The power supply circuit of FIG. 1 achieves fast PWM dimming transitions of the LED current and eliminates delays and overshoots in the LED 108 current.
Referring to FIG. 2, a power supply circuit for driving a string of LEDs 108 at constant current is shown. The power supply circuit includes a switching power converter 130 supplying constant current to a string of LEDs 108. The power supply circuit also comprises a control circuit 131 for controlling the output current of the power converter 130. The control circuit 131 is also adapted to receive a feedback signal VO representative of the output voltage across the LED string.
Each LED 108 is equipped with an independently controlled switch 107 adapted to shunt the corresponding LED 108. Brightness of each LED 108 is individually controlled by periodically shunting it using the corresponding switch 107. Each switch 107 is controlled by external periodical dimming signals PWM1 through PWM_N having controlled duty ratios.
In operation, the control circuit 131 instantly corrects its internal DC state based on the feedback signal VO in such a way that the output current of the power converter 130 remains unchanged when switches 107 close.
Referring to FIG. 3, a power supply circuit of FIG. 2 is shown wherein power to the LED string is supplied using a step-down DC-DC converter of a buck type that receives input voltage VIN from the input power supply 101. Each LED 108 is equipped with an independently controlled switch 107 adapted to shunt the corresponding LED 108. The converter comprises a control switch 102, a catch diode 103, and a filter inductor 104 having inductance value L. The converter also comprises a control circuit for controlling the switch 102 in accordance with the output current and the output voltage VO of the converter. The control circuit includes a current sensing device 112, a reference REF, a peak current comparator 109, a flip-flop circuit 110, and a controlled delay circuit 111.
In operation, the switch 102 is biased conducting by the output of the flip-flop circuit 110 applying the input voltage VIN to the input of the inductor 104. The diode 103 is reverse-biased. The current IL in the inductor 104 is increasing linearly until the signal from the current sensing device 112 exceeds the reference REF. When this occurs, the comparator 109 changes its output state and resets the flip-flop 110. The switch 102 turns off, and the catch diode 103 conducts the inductor current IL. The off-time of the switch 102 is determined by the delay circuit 111 by making this off-time inverse-proportional to the instantaneous output voltage VO across the LED string. Therefore, the product of VO*TDELAY is maintained constant with any number of LEDs in the string.
Brightness of each LED is individually controlled by periodically shunting it using a corresponding switch 107. Each switch 107 is controlled by external periodical dimming signals PWM1 through PWM_N having controlled duty ratios.
FIG. 4 depicts the waveform of IL as a function of the dimming signal states. Switching transitions of the switch 102 are depicted coinciding with the transitions of the switches 107 for the sake of representation simplicity rather than in the limiting sense. Moreover, it is expected that the frequency of the brightness control signals PWM_X is substantially lower than the switching frequency of the switch 102. And even furthermore, the dimming control signals PWM_X do not necessarily need to be synchronized. Referring to FIGS. 3 and 4, inductor 104 is operated in continuous conduction mode (CCM) wherein the peak-to-peak current ripple ΔI is low enough so that IL never equals to zero. The ripple ΔI is maintained constant since ΔI=VO*TDELAY/L. Therefore, the average current in the LED string remains undisturbed with any number of LEDs being shunted.
The LED driver of FIG. 3 suffers a relatively high ripple current in the LEDs 108, since it includes no output filter capacitor to bypass the ripple ΔI. FIG. 5 depicts the LED driver of FIG. 4 with the addition of filter capacitors 105 and corresponding disconnect switches 106 as described in FIG. 1.
Referring to FIG. 6, another example of the power supply circuit of FIG. 1 is shown. In FIG. 6, the power to the LED string is supplied using a step-down DC-DC converter of a buck type that receives input voltage VIN from the input power supply 101. The DC-DC converter comprises a control switch 102, a catch diode 103, and a filter inductor 104 having inductance value L. The converter also comprises a current sense comparator 132 for controlling the switch 102 in accordance with the output of a current sensing means 112. The current sensing means 112 monitors the current IL in the inductor 104 and outputs a signal proportional to IL. In operation, the switch 102 turns on when the output of the current sensing means 112 falls below first reference level REF1. The diode 103 becomes reverse-biased. The current IL in the inductor 104 increases linearly until the signal from the current sensing means exceeds second reference level REF2. When this occurs, the comparator 132 changes its output state, the switch 102 turns off, and the catch diode 103 conducts the inductor current IL.
Brightness of each LED is individually controlled by periodically shunting it using a corresponding switch 107. Each switch 107 is controlled by external periodical dimming signals PWM1 through PWM_N having controlled duty ratios.
The power supply circuit of FIG. 6 exhibits an inherent VO feedback of FIG. 2 since the slew rate of the down-slope of IL is proportional to VO.
FIG. 7 depicts yet another embodiment of the power supply circuit of FIG. 1 using the output voltage feedback of FIG. 2 wherein the step-down DC-DC converter is of a time-delay hysteretic type. Similarly, the DC-DC converter comprises a control switch 102, a catch diode 103, and a filter inductor 104 having inductance value L. The converter also comprises a current sense comparator 132 for controlling the switch 102 in accordance with the output of a current sensing means 112. The current sensing means 112 monitors the current IL in the inductor 104 and outputs a signal proportional to IL. The converter also includes a controlled time delay circuit 140 delaying switching transitions of the switch 102 with respect to the output signal of the comparator 132. The time delay circuit 140 is controlled in such a way that it delays the comparator 132 output by a time inverse proportional to the output voltage VO when the switch 102 is off. When the switch 102 is on, the time delay 140 is inverse proportional to the difference between the input voltage VIN and the output voltage VO.
FIG. 8 shows the inductor 104 current (IL) waveforms illustrating the operation of the power supply circuit of FIG. 7. The switch 102 turns on after a time delay TDELAY1 triggered by the output of the current sensing means 112 falling below the reference level REF. When one or more LEDs 108 is shunted by its corresponding switches 107, TDELAY1 is controlled in the inverse proportion with the resulting output voltage VO. Thus, the ripple current ΔI remains unchanged. The switch 102 turns off after a time delay TDELAY2 triggered by the output of the current sensing means 112 exceeding the reference level REF. The time delay TDELAY2 is made inverse-proportional to the voltage across the inductor 104 which is the difference between VIN and VO. Since the slew rate of IL is inverse-proportional to (VIN−VO) when the switch 102 is on, the average current in the inductor 104 remains unchanged with respect to the variation of the input voltage VIN. Thus, the number of LEDs 108 shunted does not affect the DC value of IL, and the PWM dimming does not affect the instantaneous current in the LEDs 108.
Another embodiment of the power supply circuit of FIG. 1 using the output voltage feedback of FIG. 2 is depicted in FIG. 9. The DC-DC converter 133 is of a flyback type operating in discontinuous conduction mode (DCM). The power supply circuit includes a voltage-controlled oscillator 134 receiving the output voltage signal VO and controlling the DC-DC converter at a switching frequency FS proportional to VO. Since the output power of a DCM flyback converter is inherently proportional to its switching frequency, the LED 108 current will remain unchanged regardless of the number of the LEDs 108 shunted.
Thus, a circuit and a method are shown achieving individual brightness control of LEDs in the series-connected LED string operated at constant current by shunting individual LEDs in the string. The output current disturbance, normally associated with the shunting transitions in the prior art, is removed by adding the output voltage feedback compensation.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the foregoing and other changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.