Dimmable power supplies are available to adjust the brightness of solid-state light emitters. Examples of solid-state light emitters are light-emitting diodes (LEDs), organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs), and laser diodes. In some applications, a solid-state light emitter emits visible light such as white light, red light, green light, and blue light. In other applications, a solid-state light emitter emits non-visible light such as ultraviolet (UV) light including ultraviolet C (UVC) light. For example, suppose that a room has two solid-state light emitters and that each solid-state light emitter is powered by a respective mains power source. By use of a suitable dimmable power supply, each light emitter can be independently dimmed to a power level of less than 100% of the supply. However, it would not be possible to increase the brightness of one of the light emitters to a power level greater than 100%. A solid-state light emitter power supply that enables increasing the brightness of one or more of a plurality of light emitters to a power level greater than 100% would be desirable.
Solid-state light emitter power supplies, dimmable solid-state light sources, and methods of power solid-state light emitters are disclosed herein. In one aspect, a solid-state light emitter power supply includes: a first rectifier circuit couplable to a first dimmer circuit, a second rectifier circuit couplable to a second dimmer circuit, a power factor correction (PFC) stage coupled to the first rectifier circuit and to the second rectifier circuit, a first flyback converter, a second flyback converter, and a microcontroller. Each rectifier circuit is configured to receive a respective phase-cut signal from the respective dimmer circuit as input and output a respective phase-cut rectified power signal. The PFC stage is configured to receive a sum of the first phase-cut rectified power signal and the second phase-cut rectified power signal as input and output a power-factor corrected electrical power. The input circuits of the flyback converters are coupled to the PFC stage. The input circuits of the flyback converters are connected to the PFC stage in parallel. The output circuits of the flyback converters are configured to power a respective load including a respective solid-state light emitter. The microcontroller is configured to receive signals derived from the phase-cut signals (phase-cut derived signals) as inputs and output respective pulse-width modulation (PWM) control signals to the respective flyback input circuits in accordance with respective power output portions. Each respective flyback input circuit receives a respective power output portion of the power-factor corrected electrical power in accordance with the respective PWM control signal. The microcontroller calculates the respective power output portions in accordance with the respective phase-cut derived signals.
In another aspect, a dimmable solid-state light source includes a first load including a first solid-state light emitter, a second load including a second solid-state light emitter, and a solid-state light emitter power supply. The solid-state light emitter power supply powers the first load and the second load.
In yet another aspect, a method of powering solid-state light emitters includes the following. Each one of a plurality of rectifier circuits (numbered 1 through N) receives a respective phase-cut signal from a respective dimmer circuit as input. Each rectifier circuit outputs a respective phase-cut rectified power signal. A power factor correction (PFC) stage receives a sum of the phase-cut rectified power signals as input. The PFC stage outputs a power-factor corrected electrical power to flyback converters (numbering 1 through N). Each respective flyback converter includes a respective flyback input circuit and a respective flyback output circuit. Each respective flyback input circuit is coupled to the PFC stage and each respective flyback output circuit is coupled to a respective load including a respective solid-state light emitter. The flyback input circuits are connected to the PFC stage in parallel. A microcontroller receives respective phase-cut derived signals as inputs, each of which is derived from the respective phase-cut signal. The microcontroller calculates each respective power output portion Pi (i ranges from 1 through N) in accordance with the respective phase-cut derived signals. The microcontroller outputs a respective pulse-width modulation (PWM) control signal to each respective flyback input circuit in accordance with the respective power output portion Pi. Each respective flyback input circuit receives the respective portion Pi, of the power-factor corrected electrical power in accordance with the respective PWM control signal. Each respective flyback output circuit powers the respective load.
The above summary of the present invention is not intended to describe each disclosed embodiment or every implementation of the present invention. The description that follows more particularly exemplifies illustrative embodiments. In several places throughout the application, guidance is provided through examples, which examples can be used in various combinations. In each instance of a list, the recited list serves only as a representative group and should not be interpreted as an exclusive list.
The disclosure may be more completely understood in consideration of the following detailed description of various embodiments of the disclosure in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The present disclosure relates to solid-state light emitter power supplies, dimmable solid-state light sources, and a method of powering solid-state light emitters.
In this disclosure:
The words “preferred” and “preferably” refer to embodiments of the invention that may afford certain benefits, under certain circumstances. However, other embodiments may also be preferred, under the same or other circumstances. Furthermore, the recitation of one or more preferred embodiments does not imply that other embodiments are not useful and is not intended to exclude other embodiments from the scope of the invention.
The terms “comprises” and variations thereof do not have a limiting meaning where these terms appear in the description and claims.
Unless otherwise specified, “a,” “an,” “the,” and “at least one” are used interchangeably and mean one or more than one.
The recitations of numerical ranges by endpoints include all numbers subsumed within that range (e.g., 1 to 5 includes 1, 1.5, 2, 2.75, 3, 3.80, 4, 5, etc.).
For any method disclosed herein that includes discrete steps, the steps may be conducted in any feasible order. As appropriate, any combination of two or more steps may be conducted simultaneously.
In the example shown, rectifier circuit 106 is coupled to the dimmer circuit 104. A rectifier circuit converts an alternating current (AC) waveform to a direct current (DC) waveform (e.g.., current flowing in one direction only). The rectifier circuit 106 is configured to receive the phase-cut signal 134 from the dimmer circuit 104 as input and output a phase-cut rectified power signal 136. A power factor correction (PFC) stage 122 is coupled to the rectifier circuit 106. The power factor PF is defined as a ratio of real power (RP) to apparent power (AP) in a circuit, where the RP is the average, over a cycle, of the instantaneous product of current and voltage (expressed in Watts), and the AP is the product of the RMS value of the current and the RMS value of the voltage (expressed in V A). For a given amount of useful power transferred to a load, a lower power-factor circuit draws more current than a higher power-factor circuit. Accordingly, in order to improve the efficiency of a circuit, it is preferable to use a PFC stage. The PFC stage 122 is configured to receive the phase-cut rectified power signal 136 and output a power-factor corrected electrical power 152. Herein, an electrical power signal output (e.g., 152) by a PFC stage is said to be power-factor corrected when its power factor is greater than that of the electrical power signal (e.g., 136) that the PFC stage receives as input.
A flyback converter can be a switching converter with galvanic isolation. In the examples shown herein, the flyback converters are in a step-down configuration. Flyback converter 108 includes a flyback input circuit 108A (primary circuit) and a flyback output circuit 108B (secondary circuit). The flyback input circuit 108A is coupled to the PFC stage 122 and the flyback output circuit 108B is configured to power a load 110 which includes a solid-state light emitter. A switch of the flyback input circuit 108A is closed or opened in response to a pulse-width modulation (PWM) control signal. In the implementation 100 of
If a room or office where a dimmable solid-state light source is to be installed has a mains power source 102 and a dimmer circuit 104 already installed, there is no need for a dimmable solid-state light source to include a dimmer circuit 104. In this case, a dimmable solid-state light source may need the elements enclosed within region 180 (e.g., rectifier circuit 106, PFC stage 122, flyback converter 108, and load 110) but may not need a dimmer circuit 104. Similarly, a solid-state light emitter power supply may need the elements enclosed within region 170 (e.g., rectifier circuit 106, PFC stage 122, and flyback converter 108) but may not need a dimmer circuit 104.
A PFC stage 222 is coupled to the first rectifier circuit 206 and to the second rectifier circuit 216. The PFC stage 222 is configured to receive a sum 256 of the first phase-cut rectified power signal 236 and the second phase-cut rectified power signal 246 as input (e.g., via an adder 270) and output a power-factor corrected electrical power 252. A first flyback converter 208 includes a first flyback input circuit 208A and a first flyback output circuit 208B. A second flyback converter 218 includes a second flyback input circuit 218A and a second flyback output circuit 218B. The first flyback input circuit 208A and the second flyback input circuit 218A are coupled to the PFC stage 222. The first flyback input circuit 208A and the second flyback input circuit 218A are connected to the PFC stage 222 in parallel. The first flyback output circuit 208B is configured to supply a first power output 238. The second flyback output circuit 208B is configured to supply a second power output 248. The first flyback output circuit 208B is configured to power a first load 210 including a first solid-state light emitter. The second flyback output circuit 218B is configured to power a second load 220 including a second solid-state light emitter.
A microcontroller (MCU) 224 is configured to receive a first phase-cut derived signal 240 and a second phase-cut derived signal 250 as inputs. The first phase-cut derived signal 240 is derived from the first phase-cut signal 234 and the second phase-cut derived signal 250 is derived from the second phase-cut signal 244. In
The microcontroller 224 calculates a first power output portion P1 and a second power output portion P2 in accordance with the first phase-cut derived signal 240 and the second phase-cut derived signal 250. The microcontroller 224 is configured to output a first pulse-width modulation (PWM) control signal 254 to the first flyback input circuit 208A in accordance with the first power output portion P1 and a second PWM control signal 264 to the second flyback input circuit 218A in accordance with the second output portion P2. The first flyback input circuit 208A receives the first power output portion P1 of the power-factor corrected electrical power 252 in accordance with the first PWM control signal 254 and the second flyback input circuit 218A receives the second output portion P2 of the power-factor corrected electrical power 252 in accordance with the second PWM control signal 264.
An example of apportioning output portions P1 and P2 is shown by reference to
P1=S1 when a sum S1+S2<100% (1);
P2=S2 when the sum S1+S2<100% (2);
when the sum S1+S2≥100% (Eq. 3); and
when the sum S1+S2≥100% (Eq. 4).
The microcontroller 224 is configured to receive a first phase-cut derived signal 240 and a second phase-cut derived signal 250 as inputs (at the respective input pins of the MCU). The MCU 224 determines a first internal PWM signal 241 (
There are some useful applications for dimmable solid-state light sources in which there are two mains power sources and two loads. In a first example, a dimmable solid-state light source is used for concurrently providing light for two applications in a room. Suppose that a first solid-state light emitter is configured for task lighting and a second solid-state light emitter is configured for ambient lighting. By adjusting the power output portions P1 and P2, a user can increase the brightness of one of the light emitters to greater than 100% with a corresponding reduction in the brightness of the other of the light emitters. In a second example, a first solid-state light emitter emits white light of a first color temperature T1 and the second solid-state light emitter emits a white light of a second color temperature T2 different from T1. Suppose that the light emitted by the solid-sate light emitters are mixed before reaching the illumination area. By adjusting the power output portions P1 and P2, white light of a range of color temperatures between T1 and T2 can be achieved. In a third example, a first solid-state light emitter emits white light and the second solid-state light emitter emits red light. Suppose that the light emitted by the solid-sate light emitters are mixed before reaching the illumination area. By adjusting the power output portions P1 and P2, white light with a range red content can be achieved.
The implementation 300 includes a plurality of mains power sources 302 (numbered 1 through N), a plurality of dimmer circuits 304 (numbered 1 through N), and a plurality of rectifier circuits (numbered 1 through N). Each mains power source 302 supplies a respective mains power 332 to a respective dimmer circuit 304. Each dimmer circuit 304 is configured to: receive the respective mains power 332, receive a respective dimming input, and output a respective phase-cut signal 334 in accordance with the respective dimming input. Each rectifier circuit 306 is couplable to the respective dimmer circuit 304. Each rectifier circuit 306 is configured to receive a respective phase-cut signal 334 from the respective dimmer circuit 304 as input and output a respective phase-cut rectified power signal 336.
A power factor correction (PFC) stage 322 is coupled to the rectifier circuits 306. The PFC stage 322 is configured to receive a sum 356 (via Adder 370 ) of the respective phase-cut rectified power signals 336 as input and output a power-factor corrected electrical power 352. There is a plurality of flyback converters 308 (numbered 1 through N). Each respective flyback converter 308 includes a respective flyback input circuit 308A and a respective flyback output circuit 308B. Each respective flyback input circuit 308A is coupled to the PFC stage 322. The flyback input circuits 308A are connected to the PFC stage 322 in parallel. Each respective flyback output circuit 308B is configured to supply a respective power output 338. Each respective flyback output circuit 308B is configured to power a respective load 310 including a respective solid-state light emitter.
A microcontroller 324 is configured to receive respective phase-cut derived signals 340 as inputs. Each respective phase-cut derived signal 340 is derived from the respective phase-cut signal 334. The microcontroller 324 calculates respective power output portions Pi, (i ranges from 1 through N) in accordance with the phase-cut derived signals 340. The microcontroller 324 is configured to output a respective pulse-width modulation (PWM) control signal 354 to each respective flyback input circuit 308A in accordance with the respective power output portion Pi. Each respective flyback input circuit 308A receives the respective power output portion Pi(i ranges from 1 through N) of the power-factor corrected electrical power 352 in accordance with the respective PWM control signal 354.
For ease of illustration, one instance i of a diagram portion 320, including foregoing elements 302 (mains power source), 304 (dimmer circuit), 306 (rectifier circuit), 332 (mains power), 334 (phase-cut signal), 336 (phase-cut rectified power signal), and 340 (phase-cut derived signal), is shown. The implementation 300 includes Ninstances of diagram portion 320. Similarly, for ease of illustration, one instance i of a diagram portion 330, including foregoing elements 308 (flyback converter), 310 (load), 338 (power output to load), and 354 (PWM control signal), is shown. The implementation 300 includes N instances of diagram portion 330.
There are some useful applications for dimmable solid-state light sources in which the number N is 3 (e.g., 3 instances each of: mains power sources, dimmer circuits, rectifier circuits, flyback converters, loads, and solid-state light emitters). In a fourth example, a first solid-state light emitter emits red light, a second solid-state light emitter emits green light, and a third solid-state light emitter emits blue light. Suppose that the light emitted by the solid-sate light emitters are mixed before reaching the illumination area. By adjusting the power output portions P1, P2, and P3, a wide range of colors including white can be produced. In a fifth example, a first solid-state light emitter emits a first non-white color, the second solid-state light emitter emits a second non-white color, and the third solid-state light emitter emits white light. Suppose that the light emitted by the solid-state light emitters are mixed before reaching the illumination area. By adjusting the power output portions P1, P2, and P3, a range of colors including (1) white, (2) white with the first non-white color (e.g., red) added, and (3) white with the second non-white color (e.g., blue) added can be produced.
There are some useful applications for dimmable solid-state light sources in which the number N is 4. In a sixth example, a first solid-state light emitter emits red light, a second solid-state light emitter emits green light, a third solid-state light emitter emits blue light, and a fourth solid-state light emitter emits white light. Suppose that the light emitted by the solid-sate light emitters are mixed before reaching the illumination area. By adjusting the power output portions P1, P2, P3, and P4, a wide range of colors including white can be produced. This differs from the foregoing fourth example in that a purer white can be achieved.
A power factor correction (PFC) stage 322 is coupled to the rectifier circuits 306. At step 510, the PFC stage receives a sum 356 (via Adder 370) of the phase-cut rectified power signals 336 as input. At step 512, the PFC stage 322 outputs a power-factor corrected electrical power 352 to a plurality of flyback converters 308 (numbered 1 through N). Each respective flyback converter 308 includes a respective flyback input circuit 308A and a respective flyback output circuit 308B. Each respective flyback input circuit 308A is coupled to the PFC stage 322 and each respective flyback output circuit 308B is coupled to a respective load 310 which includes a respective solid-state light emitter. The flyback input circuits 308A are connected to the PFC stage 322 in parallel.
At step 514, microcontroller 324 receives respective phase-cut derived signals 340 as inputs. Each respective phase-cut derived signal 340 is derived from the respective phase-cut signal 334. At step 516, the microcontroller 324 calculates each power output portion Pi, (i ranges from 1 through N) in accordance with the phase-cut derived signals 340. At step 518, the microcontroller 324 outputs a respective pulse-width modulation (PWM) control signal 354 to each respective flyback input circuit in accordance with the respective power output portion Pi.
At step 520, each respective flyback input circuit 308A receives the respective portion Pi of the power-factor corrected electrical power 352 in accordance with the respective PWM control signal 354. At step 522, each respective flyback output circuit 308B powers the respective load 310.
This application is based on, and claims priority to, U.S. Provisional Application No. 63/189,034, filed on May 14, 2021, the entire contents of which being fully incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63189034 | May 2021 | US |