The present invention relates to light emitting diodes (LEDs), particularly to a circuit for driving a plurality of LEDs.
In recent years, the manufacturing and applying technologies of light emitting diodes (LEDs) have developed rapidly and highly. Because of the advantage of great durability and energy-saving, the LEDs have increasingly replaced conventional light sources such as fluorescent lamps, incandescent lamps, halogen bulbs, traffic lights and even backlight of LCD panels. More recently, most LED lamps tend to use one or more LED arrays composed of a plurality of LEDs for heightening overall brightness.
An LED is a semiconductor device with a PN junction, which can emit light when a forward current flows through. The LEDs have an important property, which is the direct proportion relationship between the luminous intensity and forward current. In other words, the larger the forward current is, the higher the luminous intensity is. However, a larger forward current is also accompanied with higher heat. It is very possible that excessive heat results in permanent damage or durability shortening for LEDs. Therefore, LED manufactures always rate an average forward current IAVG for each model of LED under continuous operation and a peak pulsed forward current IPK under momentary operation. The latter must be higher than the former. When an LED performs a high frequency blink, a forward current higher than IAVG and up to IPK can be applied to obtain an instantaneous luminous intensity. When an LED lights up continuously, only a forward current not greater than IAVG can be applied. The luminous intensity generated by continuous forward current is continuous and consistent but must be lower than the instantaneous luminous intensity.
Conventional LED lamps always works under a mode of continuously lighting up, which only can allow a forward current not greater than IAVE being applied. If higher luminous intensity than what IAVE can generate is required, the only solution is to replace original LEDs with higher power ones. However, no doubt, this solution will require considerable expense of purchase. Furthermore, the problem of heat dissipation accompanying higher power LEDs is also harder to solve. On the other side, development of LED or any other productions must be gradually progressive. Each period always has a specific limitation of technique. There is no product which can satisfy all applied requirement in the markets. For example, so far a single LED whose power is higher than 10 W is rare to appear in the markets. Therefore, a technique, which can heighten luminous intensity of existing LED products without resulting in heat increasing and durability shortening, is necessarily required.
The human eye has a property of persistence of vision, which can generate a brain-made illusion of mistaking an illuminator with high frequency blink for continuously lighting up. For example, if an ordinary fluorescent lamp (tube) is driven by a transformer-typed ballast, a blink with a frequency of double the frequency of alternating current (AC) city electricity will appear. (because there are two zero-cross points in a sinusoidal period.) That is to say, a 60 Hz city electricity will cause a 120 Hz blink. The blink with such a low frequency still can be sensed by the human eye, and even may result in a disadvantageous influence on the human eye. There thus are higher level lamps adopting electronic ballasts in the markets. This kind of ballast converts frequency of city electricity into a high frequency range of 10-30 kHz for making the blink frequency heightened to 20-60 kHz. Such a high frequency blink has been out of sensing by the human eye, and can cause a mistaken visual effect of continuous illumination. In other words, though the LEDs themselves are to blink, they are to continuously light up for the human eye.
The present invention utilizes this property to apply a discontinuous current with high frequency switching to a plurality of LEDs or LED arrays for making them sequentially blink. The applied current can be higher than the rated average forward current IAVE and up to the rated peak pulsed forward current IPK. Therefore, the luminous intensity of LEDs can be heightened with no heat increasing, saving costs of purchasing higher power LEDs and accompanying problem of heat dissipation.
Each PWM signal is sent to one of the dimming constant current sources 2a˜2f, so that the dimming constant current source 2a˜2f can separately output a constant current driving power having the same timing as input corresponding PWM signal to one of the LED arrays 3a˜3f. Therefore, the LED arrays can generate a high frequency blink whose timing is identical to
The invention makes a plurality of LED arrays 3a˜3f sequentially and repeatingly blink with high frequency, and applies a driving current larger than rated average forward current IAVG and necessarily not greater than rated peak pulsed forward current IPK. As a result, instantaneous luminous intensity of LEDs can be effectively heightened. Further by means of persistence of vision of the human eye, the heightened instantaneous luminous intensity can form a visual effect almost equal to continuous luminous intensity. In other words, a heightened overall brightness is achieved.
While exemplary embodiment of the foregoing invention has been set forth for purposes of illustration, the foregoing description should not be deemed a limitation of the invention herein. Accordingly, various modifications, adaptations, and alternatives may occur to one skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and the scope of the present invention.