Embodiments of this disclosure relate generally to lighting solutions, and more particularly to systems, methods, and devices for providing a luminaire that is inductively coupled to a power transmission line.
In association with outdoor lighting, there have been previous attempts to power street lights and/or other outdoor or indoor luminaires through harvesting wind or solar power to charge a battery source that in turn powers a light source of a luminaire. However, wind and solar power sources are not always available, leaving an outdoor luminaire powered by such sources dependent on weather conditions. Moreover, the battery or energy storage devices required to operate such luminaires have a limited life span. Additionally, the potentially sporadic nature of the charging cycles associated with available wind or solar energy make the charging of the energy storage device more difficult. Furthermore, such wind or solar collection hardware devices and energy storage devices are costly to install, require generally large hardware, and typically require a pole nearby for the installation.
In other outdoor lighting solutions, there have been attempts to power street lights directly from the 120/240V secondary of a transformer. However, this type of solution involves additional costs of transformer hardware, such as transformer protection devices (e.g., fuses and lightning arresters), as well as higher costs on ballasts, dimming controls, and more costly installation than current street lights. Additionally, transformers are not always located where light is needed. To power such a street light, it is required to have secondary voltage in the vicinity of where the street light is needed. This sometimes requires running long cables to a transformer or adding another transformer at the location the light is needed, which adds to costs. Accordingly, there is a need for a solution that addresses one or more of the above-mentioned shortcomings associated with energy solutions for general lighting.
The present disclosure can address the needs described above with a system, method, and device for providing a luminaire inductively coupled to a power transmission line.
In one aspect, an outdoor luminaire includes a housing that is electrically and mechanically coupled to a power transmission line. Further, the outdoor luminaire includes at least one light source that is coupled to the housing. The power transmission line and the at least one light source are inductively coupled.
In another aspect, an outdoor luminaire includes at least one LED light source that is coupled to a housing. The housing is mechanically coupled to a power transmission line. In addition to the at least one LED light source, the outdoor luminaire includes an energy storage device located on or in the housing. The energy storage device is electrically coupled to the at least one LED light source, and the power transmission line and the energy storage device are inductively coupled.
In yet another aspect, a luminaire includes a current transformer that comprises a plurality of tap points. Further, the luminaire includes a plurality of tap switches that are adapted to be coupled to the plurality of tap points. The plurality of tap switches is coupled to a microcontroller. In addition to the current transformer and the plurality of tap switches, the luminaire includes at least one LED light source.
These and other aspects, features, and embodiments of the disclosure will become apparent to a person of ordinary skill in the art upon consideration of the following brief description of the figures and detailed description of illustrated embodiments.
Having thus described the invention in general terms, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings, which are not necessarily drawn to scale, and wherein:
Embodiments of this disclosure are directed to powering luminaires via power transmission line harvesting technology. The systems and methods described herein may provide several advantages including the ability to power a street light from a power transmission line with a current transformer by coupling alternating current (AC) from high voltage primary or lower voltage secondary conductors to a light emitting diode (LED) based luminaire. Lighting a LED based luminaire by powering the LED based luminaire from a power transmission line with a current transformer enables a reduction in certain costs associated with ballast, heat sinks, transformers, fusing, protection devices and dimming controls that are commonly used with outdoor LED based luminaires. Another significant advantage of this design is the relative cost of the solution. A traditional power transformer is quite costly due in part to installation costs as well as the protective devices involved. These costs can be an order of magnitude higher than the proposed solution.
Embodiments of this disclosure now will be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which embodiments of the disclosure are shown. This disclosure may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout.
A multi-tap current transformer winding design can balance the current supplied to the buck/boost regulator 220. In operation, when the line currents are low, a switch to a lower turn tap point can be made via current transformer tap switches 210 controlled by a microcontroller 245 to supply higher current at a lower voltage that is high enough to boost to a voltage level required to power the light source 235 (e.g., 24 VDC light bars). When the line currents are high, the current transformer tap switches 210 can tap to a higher turn tap point in order to lower the current but still obtain the voltage necessary for the buck or boost regulator 220 to achieve the voltage to illuminate the light source 235. Similar to the example embodiment in
As shown in the example embodiment of
In one embodiment of the disclosure, an energy storage device 225 (e.g. a 24 VDC battery) may be present to directly power the light source 235 (e.g., LED light bars) via the buck circuitry 240. This would provide a steady means of powering the LED-based light source 235. In an example embodiment, the energy storage device may be charged based on power from the transmission line. In another example embodiment, the energy storage device can be charged based on both power from the power transmission line and/or energy harvested from other sources such as vibration, solar, temperature, RF, and so on.
In some example embodiments, the current transformer may charge an energy storage device when the light source is not in use (e.g., when the microcontroller 245 uses a photosensor 215 to determine that there is sufficient daylight to not warrant engaging the light source 235 via the switch 230), such that when the light source is needed it can be powered through the energy storage device only, or alternatively may be switched between being powered by the energy storage device 225 and the current transformer 205 as determined by the microcontroller 245.
The size and recharge rate of the energy storage device 225 or the efficiency of the current transformer 205 necessary to power the light source(s) 235 may be assisted through the use of motion sensor(s) and/or dimming controls (e.g., the current limiting dimming capabilities discuss below.) That is, when motion is detected in the vicinity of the outdoor luminaire via the motion sensor associated with that luminaire, the microcontroller 245 may engage, dim, or intensify the light source 235. For example, when no motion is detected within a visible radius of the motion sensor, the microcontroller may decide to dim the LED lights, which in turn results in efficient usage of either the current transformer or the energy storage device.
In one embodiment, the multi-tap current transformer winding design may be used to dim the light source(s) by current limiting the LED light sources. In other words, it is possible to dim the LED lights by changing the tap points instead of the (often expensive) conventional dimming controls used in existing outdoor luminaires. In some example embodiments, discrete circuit components may implement the logic controlled by the microcontroller described above. Other example embodiments may use an asynchronous integrated circuit (ASIC) chip designed to execute the logic associated with the microcontroller in the description above to control the current transformer taps, switches, sensors, and/or light source.
Also shown in the example embodiment of
As shown in the example embodiment of
In another example embodiment, the communication module 330 described above with reference to
Although not shown in the referenced figures, there are other applications of this power transmission line harvesting technology contemplated that can be used for powering of other devices either separately or in conjunction with LED street lights. These devices include but not limited to warning lights, cameras, radios, and monitoring equipment.
Accordingly, many modifications and other embodiments of the disclosure set forth herein will come to mind to one skilled in the art to which these disclosure pertains having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings. Therefore, it is to be understood that the disclosure is not to be limited to the specific embodiments disclosed and that modifications and other embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of this application. Although specific terms are employed herein, they are used in a generic and descriptive sense only and not for purposes of limitation.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/798,044, filed Mar. 15, 2013, and titled “Systems, Methods, Devices for Providing a Luminaire Inductively Coupled to a Power Transmission Line,” the entire content of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
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