The present disclosure relates generally to lighting using solid state light sources such as light-emitting diodes or lasers and, more specifically, to lighting devices for various applications that use heat channels to remove heat to provide an energy-efficient long-lasting life source.
This section provides background information related to the present disclosure which is not necessarily prior art.
Providing alternative light sources is an important goal to reduce energy consumption. Alternatives to incandescent bulbs include compact fluorescent bulbs and light-emitting diode (LED) light bulbs. The compact fluorescent light bulbs use significantly less power for illumination. However, the materials used in compact fluorescent bulbs are not environmentally friendly.
Various configurations are known for light-emitting diode lights. Light-emitting diode lights last longer and have less environmental impact than compact fluorescent bulbs. Light-emitting diode lights use less power than compact fluorescent bulbs. However, many compact fluorescent bulbs and light-emitting diode lights do not have the same light spectrum as incandescent bulbs. They are also relatively expensive. In order to achieve maximum life from a light-emitting diode, heat must be removed from around the light-emitting diode. In many known configurations, light-emitting diode lights are subject to premature failure due to heat and light output deterrents with increased temperature.
This section provides a general summary of the disclosure, and is not a comprehensive disclosure of its full scope or all of its features.
The present disclosure provides a lighting assembly that is used for generating light and providing a long-lasting and thus cost-effective unit.
In one aspect of the disclosure, a light assembly includes a cover, a base and a housing coupled between the housing and the base. A first circuit board is disposed within the housing. The first circuit board has a plurality of light sources thereon. The housing comprises an inner wall defining a first volume therein and an outer wall spaced apart from the inner wall. The housing comprising a plurality of spaced apart fins extending between the inner wall and the outer wall define a plurality of channels having a first end proximate the cover and a second end proximate the base. The channels have a first cross sectional area proximate the first end greater than a second cross-sectional area proximate the second end. An elongated control circuit board assembly is electrically coupled to the light sources of the first circuit.
Further areas of applicability will become apparent from the description provided herein. The description and specific examples in this summary are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
The drawings described herein are for illustrative purposes only of selected examples and not all possible implementations, and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
Corresponding reference numerals indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views of the drawings.
The following description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the present disclosure, application, or uses. For purposes of clarity, the same reference numbers will be used in the drawings to identify similar elements. As used herein, the phrase “at least one of A, B, and C” should be construed to mean a logical (A or B or C), using a non-exclusive logical OR. It should be understood that steps within a method may be executed in different order without altering the principles of the present disclosure.
It should be noted that in the following figures various components may be used interchangeably. For example, several different examples of control circuit boards and light source circuit boards are implemented. As well, various shapes of light redirection elements may also be used. Various combinations of heat sinks, control circuit boards, light source circuit boards, and shapes of the light assemblies may be used. Various types of printed traces and materials may also be used interchangeably in the various examples of the light assembly.
In the following figures, a lighting assembly is illustrated having various examples that include solid state light sources such as light-emitting diodes (LEDs) and solid state lasers with various wavelengths. Different numbers of light sources and different numbers of wavelengths may be used to form a desired light output depending upon the ultimate use for the light assembly. The light assembly provides an opto-thermal solution for a light device.
Referring now to
The housing 16 is adjacent to the base 14. The housing 16 may be directly adjacent to the base 14 or have an intermediate portion therebetween. The housing 16 may be formed of a metal or other heat-conductive material such a thermally conductive plastic, plastic or combinations thereof. One example of a suitable metal is aluminum. The housing 16 may be formed in various ways including stamping, extrusion, plastic molding such as over-molding or combinations thereof. Another way of forming the housing 16 includes injected-molded metals such as Zylor®. Thicksoform® molding may also be used. In one constructed example the housing 16 was formed with a first portion 20 and a second portion 22. The first portion 20 is formed of an aluminum material and the second portion 22 is formed at least partially of thermally-conductive plastic. The second portion 22 may also be formed of a portion of thermally-conductive plastic and non-thermally-conductive plastic. Thermally-conductive plastic may be used in higher temperature portions toward the lamp base while non-thermally-conductive less expensive plastic may be used in other portions of the second portion. The formation of the housing 16 will be described further below.
The housing 16 may be formed to provide an air channel 24 formed therein. The air channel 24 has a first cross-sectional area located adjacent to the cover 18 that is wider than the cross-sectional area proximate the lamp base 14. The channels 24 provide convective cooling of the housing 16 and light assembly 10. The tapered cross-sectional area provides a nozzle effect which speeds the velocity of air through the channel 24 as the channel 24 narrows. An inlet 26 to the channel 24 is provided between the second portion 22 and the cover 18. An air outlet 28 provides an outlet from the channel 24. Air from the outlet 28 is travelling at a higher speed than at the inlet 26. Arrows A indicate the direction of input air through the inlet 26 to the channels 24 and arrows B provide the outflow direction of air from the channels 24.
The plurality of channels 24 are spaced around the light assembly 10 to provide distributed cooling.
The housing 16 may define a first volume 29 within the light assembly 10. As will be described below, the first volume 29 may be used to accommodate a control circuit board or other circuitry for controlling the light-emitting diodes or other light sources therein.
The housing 16 may have various outer shapes including a hyperboloidal shape. The housing 16 may also be a free-form shape.
The housing 16 and cover 18 form an enclosure around a substrate or circuit board 30 having light sources 32. The base 14 may also be included as part of the enclosure.
The light assembly 10 includes the substrate or circuit board 30 used for supporting solid state light sources 32. The circuit board 30 may be thermally conductive and may also be made from heat sink material. Solder pads of the light sources may be thermally and/or electrically coupled to radially-oriented copper sectors or circular conductive elements over-molded onto a plastic base to assist in heat conduction. In any of the examples below, the circuit board 30 may be part of the heat sinking process.
The light sources 32 have a high lumen-per-watt output. The light sources 32 may generate the same wavelength of light or may generate different wavelengths of light. The light sources 32 may also be solid state lasers. The solid state lasers may generate collimated light. The light sources 32 may also be light-emitted diodes. A combination of different light sources generating different wavelengths may be used for obtaining a desired spectrum. Examples of suitable wavelengths include ultraviolet or blue (e.g. 450-470 nm). Multiple light sources 32 generating the same wavelengths may also be used. The light sources 32 such as light-emitting diodes generate low-angle light 34 and high-angle light 36. High-angle light 36 is directed out through the cover 18.
The cover 18 may be a partial spheroid, partial ellipsoid or combinations thereof in shape. In this example both a spheroidal portion 38 and a partial rotated ellipsoidal portion referred to as a reflector 40 are formed into the cover 18. That is, the different cover portions 38, 40 may be monolithic or integrally formed. The cover 18 may be formed of a transparent or translucent material such as glass or plastic. In one example, the cover 18 is formed of polyethylene terephthalate (PET). PET has a crystalline structure that allows heat to be transferred therethrough. Heat may be transferred form the housing 16 into the cover because of the direct contact therebetween. The spherical portion 38 of the cover 18 may be designed to diffuse light and minimize backscattered light trapped within the light assembly 10. The spheroid portion 38 of the cover 18 may be coated with various materials to change the light characteristics such as wavelength or diffusion. An anti-reflective coating may also be applied to the inside of the spheroidal portion 38 of the cover 18. A self-radiating material may also be used which is pumped by the light sources 32. Thus, the light assembly 10 may be formed to have a high color rendering index and color perception in the dark.
Often times in a typical light bulb, the low-angle light is light not directed in a working direction. Low angle light is usually wasted since it is not directed out of the fixture into which the light assembly is coupled.
The low-angle light 34 is redirected out of the cover 18 using the reflector 40. The reflector 40 may be various shapes including a paraboloid, ellipsoid, or free-formed shape. The reflector 40 may also be shaped to direct the light from the light sources 32 to a central or common point 42. The reflector 40 may have a coating for wavelength or energy shifting and spectral selection. Coating one or both of the cover 18 and the reflector 40 may be performed. Multiple coatings may also be used. The common point 42 may be the center of the spheroid portion of the cover 18.
The reflector 40 may have a reflective coating 44 used to increase the reflectivity of the reflector. However, certain materials upon forming may not require the reflective coating 44. For example, some plastics, when blow-molded, provide a shiny or reflective surface such as PET. The reflector 40 may be formed of the naturally formed reflective surface generated when blow-molding plastic.
It should be noted that when referring to various conic sections such as an ellipsoid, paraboloid or hyperboloid only a portion of the conic section that is rotated around an axis may be used for a particular surface. In a similar manner, portions of a spheroid may be used.
The circuit board 30 may be in direct contact (or indirect contact through an interface layer 50) with the housing 16, and, more specifically to the first portion 20 the housing 16. The housing 16 may include a plurality of fins 52 that extend longitudinally and radially outwardly to form the channels 24. The fins 52 may be spaced apart to allow heat to be dissipated therefrom. As will be described further below, the channels 24 may be formed between an inner wall 54 of the first portion 20, an outer wall 56 of the second portion 22 and the fins 52 that may be formed of a combination of both the first portion 20 and the second portion 22 of the housing 16.
The housing 16 may thus conduct heat away from the light sources 32 of the circuit board for dissipation outside the light assembly. The heat may be dissipated in the housing and the fins 52. Heat may also be transferred into the cover 18 directly from the housing conduction. In this manner heat may be transferred longitudinally by the housing 16 in two directly opposite directions.
The circuit board 30 may also include a port 60 for communicating air between the first volume 29 and a second volume 61 within the cover 18. Heated air that is in the cover 18 may be transmitted or communicated into the first volume 29 and through an opening 62 within the first portion 20 of the housing 16 to vent air into the channels 24. The opening 62 will be further described below.
The heated air within the cover 18 may conduct through the cover 18 and circuit board 30 to the housing as well as being communicated through the port 60.
Referring now to
The circuit board 30 may also include a plurality of thermal vias 220 thereon. The thermal vias 220 allow the heat from the upper layers caused from the light sources 32 to conduct heat to the bottom of the circuit board 30 and ultimately into the housing 16. The light sources 32 are disposed in a ring 230. The interaction of the ring and the reflector 40 are described further in
Referring now to
Openings 242 may be left in the thermally-conductive material 240 to increase flow through the opening 62 of the housing 16. Because this is an open portion, no thermal conduction takes place directly between the circuit board 30 and the housing 16. However, the thermally-conductive portion 240 may extend completely around the circuit board 30.
Referring now to
Referring now to
The reflector 40 can thus be described as a section having an ellipsoidal cross-section comprising a partial continuous rotated elliptical reflector having a first focal point within the cover 18 and a plurality of second focal points disposed in a continuous second ring coincident with a first ring intersecting the plurality of light sources. The partial continuous rotated ellipsoidal reflector reflects low angle light from the plurality of light sources toward the first focal point then through the cover. The reflector 40 is formed by rotating a major axis of an ellipse around the second ring while continually intersecting the first focal point.
Referring now to
Referring now to
The inner wall 54 may have first fin portions 510 extending therefrom. The fin portions 510 are used to form the channels 24 described above. The first fin portions 510 may not extend the length in a longitudinal direction of the inner wall 54. The spaces between the fin portions 510 illustrated by reference numeral 512 eventually become a portion of the channels.
Referring now to
Σ(ρva)ini=Σ(ρva)outi
Thus, as the air becomes less dense (heated) the velocity in the channel 24 increases. The air at the narrower outlet is faster than the air at the inlet causing the channel to have a nozzle effect.
The outer wall 56 may also contain channels 620 to increase the affectivity of the heat-sinking capability of the housing 16. As well as improving grip when changing the light assembly.
Referring now to
Referring now to
The lamp base 14 also includes a flange 820. The flange 820 may be used to secure the lamp base 14 within the housing 16 illustrated above. The lamp base 14 may be molded to the housing when the second portion of the housing 16 is formed. In this manner, the lamp base 14 will be affixed to the housing 16. Of course, other types of affixing may be performed including adhesives or fasteners.
Referring now to
Referring now to
A coating or a plastic layer 926 may also be formed on the second metallic layer 922. Each of the layers may have a different thermal conductivity.
Referring now to
Referring now to
The additive nature of the thermal conductivity's K5+K5′ with the concentric layers act like parallel thermal resistors to reduce the effective thermal resistance of the system. This is a unique solution to obtain a higher wattage of illumination in a small package. Pyrolitic graphite may also be used as a layer in either of the housing portions to shield electromagnetic radiation from a driver circuit board.
Referring now to
The control circuit board 1010 may include various control chips 1012 that may be used for controlling various functions of the light sources 32. The control chips 1012 may include an alternating current (AC) to direct current (DC) converter, a dimming circuit, a remote control circuit, discrete components such as resistors and capacitors, and a power circuit. The various functions may be included on an application-specific integrated circuit. Although only one control circuit board 1010 is illustrated, multiple circuit boards may be provided within the light assembly 10.
The circuit board 1010 may have a connector 1014. The connector 1014 may couple a connector 1016 of an AC input board 1018. The AC input board 1018 may be located in the lamp base circuit traces 1020, 1022 may provide AC voltage to the connector 1016 which, in turn, provides AC voltage to the connector 1014 and to the circuit board 1010.
Referring now to
The circuit board 1110 may fit within housing 16. The fit may be an interference fit between the housing 16 and the circuit board 1110. More specifically, a pair of grooves 1114 may be formed laterally across the housing 16 from each other so that the circuit board 1110 may be accepted therein. As is best illustrated in
As is best illustrated in
The example illustrated in
Referring now to
In addition to or in replacement of the light-shifter 1310, a light-shifting film 1320 may extend across the light cover 18. The film 1320 may be formed of a material to perform light-shifting. For example, the light sources 32 may emit blue light while the light-shifting film 1320 may change the light to other wavelengths so that white light is emitted from the light film 1310. It should be noted that a gradient may also be formed on the film. A gradient may include more light-shifting toward the middle or center 42 of the light assembly and light less light-shifting toward the cover 18. That is, the light-shifting rate may be a first rate adjacent to the cover 18 and a second rate more than the first rate near the center 42 of the cover 18. The position of the film relative to the circuit board 30 may vary along the longitudinal axis 12 depending on the amount of light to be shifted. If less light is desired to be shifted, the film may be suspended closer to the top of the cover 18 away from the base 14. If more light is desired to be shifted, the light shifter 1320 may be suspended across the cover 18 closer to the junction of the housing and the cover 14.
Referring now to
The FL7730 circuit chip is a single-stage primary-side-regulation pulse width modulated (PWM) controller for LED dimmable driving. Dimming is performed using a triode for alternating current (TRIAC) that is controlled for smoothly managing brightness control without flicker using a single-stage topology with primary-side regulation. Constant on-time control may be utilized through an external capacitor connected to the COMI pin which, in this case, is capacitor C9. The pinouts of the circuit are current sense (CS) which connects a current-sense resistor to a MOSFET current for the output-current regulation in constant-current regulation. The gate pin is a pulse-width modulated signal output which uses an internal totem-pole output driver to drive the power MOSFET. The MOSFET used in this example is M1. The ground GND pin is ground for the integrated circuit. VDD is the power supply which provides the operating current and MOSFET driving current. The dimming pin (DIM) controls the dimming operation of the LED lighting. A voltage sense pin (VS) detects the output voltage information and discharge time for frequency control and constant-current regulation. This pin connects the divider resistors from the auxiliary winding. A constant-current loop compensation (COMI) is the output of the transconductance error amplifier. Ground is also provided on pin 8 of the integrated circuit.
The high power factor is maintained throughout the complete dimming range by maintaining the switcher in discontinuous conduction mode or boundary condition mode. This is achieved by X2 and sensed by R17,R6,C10 which is a ratio of the AUX voltage.
An EMC filter 1414 is provided to meet IEEE C62.41 (surge transients) requirements and conducted emissions is achieved by a T-filter comprised of L5, L6 and C2, which is a low pass filter to the AC input, and a low pass filter to the incoming voltage transients. R15 is a current limit resistor to limit the max inrush at the trailing edge of the TRIAC M2 when at the maximum input voltage, and also serves to limit the current through the varistor U2 during the surge transients which allows the use of a smaller fuse.
A voltage regulator 1416 formed using Q1, D8 turns on when the auxiliary voltage Vaux goes below the IC startup voltage, and provides the voltage needed for startup when the lamp is turned off at any dim level, as long as the input RMS voltage exceeds the startup voltage. Resistors R4 and R5 are used to limit current transients during the charging of capacitor C5.
The dimming circuit 1418 consists of a low pass filter-divider which converts the TRIAC voltage to a corresponding analog voltage. Zener diode Z1 limits the max LED current during system overvoltage conditions by clamping the max analog voltage. A thermal foldback circuit 1420 having Q2, R14, R7 is used for biasing, and temperature sensing using a temperature sensor such as negative temperature coefficient resistor (NTC) or thermistor R11. The NTC R11 can be remotely located at a thermal hot spot within the lamp assembly so that after the temperature exceeds a predetermined threshold determined by the divider R14, R11, R7, the voltage at DIM pin (circuit 1418) will be uniformly scaled back or reduced. This lowers the LED current (and corresponding light output) to a minimum level but not fully turning off the LEDs so light output is still generated from the light assembly. By reducing the LED current the heat dissipated by the light assembly is also reduced. The LED will return to full output when the temperature as sensed by R11 decreases below the threshold.
To ensure the TRIAC has a continuous minimum load, an active bleeder circuit 1422 is included by way of R18. When TRIAC M2 is conducting (on) R18 is pulled in when the current draw drops below 15-20 mA. This is achieved by the voltage drop through R22 and base current through R21. During the off-time (non-conducting state) of the TRIAC M2, the auxiliary voltage will keep the R18 pulled in which provides a DC path for the TRIAC hold current. This eliminates TRIAC misfires at all dimmer levels. C12 in-series with C3 bypasses the current spikes during the trailing edge of the TRIAC which prevents Q3 from conducting during transients.
Although many components are illustrated as discrete components, the functions of the integrated circuit as well as many of the components therearound may be formed using an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC). The application-specific integrated circuit may exclude the TRIAC M2.
The foregoing description of the examples has been provided for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention. Individual elements or features of a particular example are generally not limited to that particular example, but, where applicable, are interchangeable and can be used in a selected example, even if not specifically shown or described. The same may also be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the invention, and all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/495,117, filed on Jun. 9, 2011. The entire disclosure of the above application is incorporated herein by reference.
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