This invention relates to thermal protection for lamp ballasts. Specifically, this invention relates to a ballast having active thermal management and protection circuitry that allows the ballast to safely operate when a ballast over-temperature condition has been detected, allowing the ballast to safely continue to provide power to the lamp.
Lamp ballasts are devices that convert standard line voltage and frequency to a voltage and frequency suitable for a specific lamp type. Usually, ballasts are one component of a lighting fixture that receives one or more fluorescent lamps. The lighting fixture may have more than one ballast.
Ballasts are generally designed to operate within a specified operating temperature. The maximum operating temperature of the ballast can be exceeded as the result of a number of factors, including improper matching of the ballast to the lamp(s), improper heat sinking, and inadequate ventilation of the lighting fixture. If an over-temperature condition is not remedied, then the ballast and/or lamp(s) may be damaged or destroyed.
Some prior art ballasts have circuitry that shuts down the ballast upon detecting an over-temperature condition. This is typically done by means of a thermal cut-out switch that senses the ballast temperature. When the switch detects an over-temperature condition, it shuts down the ballast by removing its supply voltage. If a normal ballast temperature is subsequently achieved, the switch may restore the supply voltage to the ballast. The result is lamp flickering and/or a prolonged loss of lighting. The flickering and loss of lighting can be annoying. In addition, the cause may not be apparent and might be mistaken for malfunctions in other electrical systems, such as the lighting control switches, circuit breakers, or even the wiring.
A lamp ballast has temperature sensing circuitry and control circuitry responsive to the temperature sensor that limits the output current provided by the ballast when an over-temperature condition has been detected. The control circuitry actively adjusts the output current as long as the over-temperature condition is detected so as to attempt to restore an acceptable operating temperature while continuing to operate the ballast (i.e., without shutting down the ballast). The output current is maintained at a reduced level until the sensed temperature returns to the acceptable temperature.
Various methods for adjusting the output current are disclosed. In one embodiment, the output current is linearly adjusted during an over-temperature condition. In another embodiment, the output current is adjusted in a step function during an over-temperature condition. In yet other embodiments, both linear and step function adjustments to output current are employed in differing combinations. In principle, the linear function may be replaced with any continuous decreasing function including linear and non-linear functions. Gradual, linear adjustment of the output current tends to provide a relatively imperceptible change in lighting intensity to a casual observer, whereas a stepwise adjustment may be used to create an obvious change so as to alert persons that a problem has been encountered and/or corrected.
The invention has particular application to (but is not limited to) dimming ballasts of the type that are responsive to a dimming control to dim fluorescent lamps connected to the ballast. Typically, adjustment of the dimming control alters the output current delivered by the ballast. This is carried out by altering the duty cycle, frequency or pulse width of switching signals delivered to a one or more switching transistors in the output circuit of the ballast. These switching transistors may also be referred to as output switches. An output switch is a switch, such as a transistor, whose duty cycle and/or switching frequency is varied to control the output current of the ballast. A tank in the ballast's output circuit receives the output of the switches to provide a generally sinusoidal (AC) output voltage and current to the lamp(s). The duty cycle, frequency or pulse width is controlled by a control circuit that is responsive to the output of a phase to DC converter that receives a phase controlled AC dimming signal provided by the dimming control. The output of the phase to DC converter is a DC signal having a magnitude that varies in accordance with a duty cycle value of the dimming signal. Usually, a pair of voltage clamps (high and low end clamps) is disposed in the phase to DC converter for the purpose of establishing high end and low end intensity levels. The low end clamp sets the minimum output current level of the ballast, while the high end clamp sets its maximum output current level.
According to one embodiment of the invention, a ballast temperature sensor is coupled to a foldback protection circuit that dynamically adjusts the high end clamping voltage in accordance with the sensed ballast temperature when the sensed ballast temperature exceeds a threshold. The amount by which the high end clamping voltage is adjusted depends upon the difference between the sensed ballast temperature and the threshold. According to another embodiment, the high and low end clamps need not be employed to implement the invention. Instead, the foldback protection circuit may communicate with a multiplier, that in turn communicates with the control circuit. In this embodiment, the control circuit is responsive to the output of the multiplier to adjust the duty cycle, pulse width or frequency of the switching signal.
The invention may also be employed in connection with a non-dimming ballast in accordance with the foregoing. Particularly, a ballast temperature sensor and foldback protection are provided as above described, and the foldback protection circuit communicates with the control circuit to alter the duty cycle, pulse width or frequency of the one or more switching signals when the ballast temperature exceeds the threshold.
In each of the embodiments, a temperature cutoff switch may also be employed to remove the supply voltage to shut down the ballast completely (as in the prior art) if the ballast temperature exceeds a maximum temperature threshold.
According to another embodiment of the present invention, a circuit for controlling output current from a ballast to a lamp comprises a temperature sensor and a programmable controller. The temperature sensor is thermally coupled to the ballast to provide a temperature signal having a magnitude indicative of ballast temperature, Tb. The programmable controller is operable to cause the ballast to enter a current limiting mode when the magnitude of the temperature signal indicates that Tb has exceeded a predetermined ballast temperature, T1. The programmable controller causes the output current to be responsive to the temperature signal according to one of (i) a step function or (ii) a combination of step and continuous functions, while continuing to operate the ballast.
In addition, the present invention provides a thermally protected ballast, which comprises a front end AC-to-DC converter, a back end DC-to-AC converter, a temperature sensor, and a programmable controller. The front end AC-to-DC converter receives a supply voltage, while the back end DC-to-AC converter is coupled to the front end AC-to-DC converter for providing output current to a load. The temperature sensor is adapted to provide a temperature signal having a magnitude indicative of a temperature of the ballast, Tb. The programmable controller is responsive to the temperature signal and operable to cause the DC-to-AC circuit to adjust the output current. The temperature signal causes the programmable controller to adjust the output current in response to a detected over-temperature condition, according to one of (i) a step function or (ii) a combination of step and linear functions, while continuing to operate the ballast.
The present invention further provides a method of controlling a ballast comprising the steps of: a) determining a temperature Tb of the ballast; b) comparing the temperature Tb to a first reference temperature T1; and c) controlling an output current provided by the ballast according to one of (i) a step function or (ii) a combination of a step and continuous functions, while continuing to operate the ballast, in accordance with the result of step (b).
Other features of the invention will be evident from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments.
a graphically illustrates the phase controlled output of a typical dimming control.
b graphically illustrates the output of a typical phase to DC converter.
c graphically illustrates the effect of a high and low end clamp circuit on the output of a typical phase to DC converter.
a graphically illustrates operation of an embodiment of the present invention to linearly adjust the ballast output current when the ballast temperature is greater than threshold T1.
b graphically illustrates operation of an embodiment of the present invention to reduce the ballast output current in a step function to a level L1 when the ballast temperature is greater than threshold T2, and to increase the output current in a step function to 100% when the ballast temperature decreases to a normal temperature T3.
c graphically illustrates operation of an embodiment of the present invention to adjust the ballast output current linearly between temperature thresholds T4 and T5, to reduce the ballast output current in a step function from level L2 to level L3 if temperature threshold T5 is reached or exceeded, and to increase the output current in a step function to level L4 when the ballast temperature decreases to threshold T6.
d graphically illustrates operation of an embodiment of the present invention to adjust the ballast output current in various steps for various thresholds, and to further adjust ballast output current linearly between levels L6 and L7 if the stepwise reductions in output current are not sufficient to restore the ballast temperature to normal.
Turning now to the drawings, wherein like numerals represent like elements there is shown in
The above description is applicable to
The signal 219 stimulates ballast drive circuit 222 to generate at least one switching control signal 223a, b. Note that the switching control signals 223a, b shown in
High and low end clamp circuit 220 in the phase to DC converter limits the output 219 of the phase to DC converter. The effect of the high and low end clamp circuit 220 on the phase to DC converter is graphically shown in the
A temperature cutoff switch 110 (
The ballast temperature sensing circuit 300 may comprise one or more thermistors with a defined resistance to temperature coefficient characteristic, or another type of temperature sensing thermostat device or circuit. Foldback protection circuit 310 generates an adjustment signal 315 in response to comparison of temperature signal 305 to a threshold. The foldback protection circuit may provide either a linear output (using a linear response generator) or a step function output (using a step response generator), or a combination of both, if the comparison determines that an over-temperature condition exists. In principle, the exemplary linear function shown in
a-5d graphically illustrate various examples of adjusting the output current during an over-temperature condition. These examples are not exhaustive and other functions or combinations of functions may be employed.
In the example of
The embodiment of the invention of
In the example of
In the example of
In the example of
In each of the examples, a thermal cutout switch may be employed, as illustrated at 110 in
Temperature sensing circuit 300 may be an integrated circuit device that exhibits an increasing voltage output with increasing temperature. The temperature sensing circuit 300 feeds the linear response generator 610 and the step response generator 620. The step response generator 620 is in parallel with the linear response generator 610 and both act in a temperature dependent manner to produce the adjustment signal 315.
The temperature threshold of the linear response generator 610 is set by voltage divider R3, R4, and the temperature threshold of the step response generator 620 is set by voltage divider R1, R2. The hysteresis characteristic of the step response generator 620 is achieved by means of feedback, as is well known in the art.
The threshold of low end clamp 640 is set via a voltage divider labeled simply VDIV1. The phase controlled dimming signal 217 is provided to one input of a comparator 650. The other input of comparator 650 receives a voltage from a voltage divider labeled VDIV2. The output stage 660 of the phase to DC converter 218′ provides the control signal 219′.
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the temperature thresholds of the linear and step response generators 610, 620 may be set such that the foldback protection circuit 310 exhibits either a linear function followed by a step function (See
As before, in normal operation, dimming control 216 acts to deliver a phase controlled dimming signal 217 to the phase to DC converter 218. The phase to DC converter 218 provides an input 219 to the multiplier 700. The other multiplier input is the adjustment signal 315′.
Under normal temperature conditions, the multiplier 700 is influenced only by the signal 219 because the adjustment signal 315′ is scaled to represent a multiplier of 1.0. Functionally, adjustment signal 315′ is similar to 315 of
It can be appreciated by one of skill in the art that the multiplier 700 may be implemented as either an analog or a digital multiplier. Accordingly, the drive signals for the multiplier input would be correspondingly analog or digital in nature to accommodate the type of multiplier 700 utilized.
The programmable controller 910 may be any suitable digital controller mechanism such as a microprocessor, microcontroller, programmable logic device (PLD), or an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC). In one embodiment, the programmable controller 910 includes a microcontroller device that incorporates at least one analog-to-digital converter (ADC) for the analog inputs and at least one digitally controllable output driver suitable for use as a pulse-width modulator. In another embodiment, the programmable controller 910 includes a microprocessor that communicates with a separate ADC and a digitally controlled output driver to act as the pulse-width modulator under program control. It is understood by those of skill in the art that any combination of microcontroller, microprocessor, separate ADC, digital output, PWM, ASIC, and PLD is suitable to implement the programmable controller 910. The programmable controller operates the input and output interfaces via software control for greater flexibility and control than hardware alone. Thus, multiple embodiments of a software control program are possible as is well understood by those of skill in the art.
The programmable controller 910 receives the dimming signal 217 from the dimming control 216 directly and controls the frequency and the duty cycle of the PWM type output signal 915 in response to the dimming signal 217. The ballast drive circuit 222″ performs the same function as the ballast drive circuit 222 of
In normal operation, a software high end clamp value is set in the programmable controller that provides a limit on the maximum value of current that can drive the lamp. The programmable controller 910 is responsive to the dimming control 216 to effectively adjust the current in the lamp 108. The dimming signal is followed until some temperature is reached that would necessitate a reduction of the high end clamp current value for the lamp 108. Thus, the programmable controller 910 normally responds to the dimming control signal 217 until, in an elevated temperature condition, a software high end clamp setpoint is adjusted by the software program. The high end clamp current value adjustment is made so that a maximum predetermined current limit is not exceeded if the dimming control requests a current level that is above a predetermined value for a specific temperature. If an elevated temperature condition is present, but the dimming control is set to a value that would result in a current level that is below the high end clamp value, then the value of the dimming control signal would still control the lamp current. Otherwise, in an elevated temperature condition, where the dimming control would result in a high current value at the lamp, the programming of the digital controller 910 effectively lowers the software high end clamp to keep the lamp operating at a predetermined current level.
Referring back to
V
TEMP=500+10·TFM50 (mV), (Equation 1)
where TFM50 is the temperature of the FM50 temperature sensor in degrees Celsius (° C.), which represents the present temperature of the ballast 900. A different relationship between output voltage and temperature may exist if a different temperature sensor is used.
The temperature signal 925 is filtered by a hardware low pass filter 930 to produce a filtered temperature signal 935. The low pass filter 930 may be a resistor-capacitor (RC) circuit comprising a resistor RLPF and a capacitor CLPF as shown in
Referring to
y(n)=a0·x(n)+b1·y(n−1), (Equation 2)
where x(n) is the present sample of the filtered temperature signals 935 from step 1012, y(n−1) is the previous filtered sample, and y(n) is the present filtered sample, i.e., the present output of the digital low-pass filter. In one embodiment, the constants a0 and b1 have values of 0.01 and 0.99, respectively.
If the timer has not reached a predetermined time tWAIT at step 1016, the process loops to sample and filter once again. In one embodiment, steps 1012 and 1014 are executed once every 2.5 msec. Each of the 2.5 msec samples is applied to the filter and processed before the next sample is taken. When the timer has exceeded the predetermined time tWAIT at step 1016, the output current of the ballast 900 is controlled in response to the filtered sample as described below. In one embodiment, the predetermined time tWAIT is one second, such that the programmable controller 910 does not adjust the output current too quickly in response to the temperature. If the output current is controlled too quickly in response to the temperature of the ballast, noise in the filtered temperature signal 935 could cause the lamp 108 to flicker. The application of multiple samples of the temperature sensor to the digital low pass filter effectively controls flicker by filtering out noise in the temperature samples.
If the filtered sample is not greater than the temperature T4, as shown in
If the filtered sample is greater than the temperature T4 at step 1018, a determination is made as to whether the filtered sample is greater than the temperature T5 (
If the high end setpoint clamp is equal to the level L3 at step 1026, a determination is made as to whether the filtered sample is greater than the temperature T6 (
P=100%−(y(n)−T4)/(T5−T4)·(100%−L2). (Equation 3)
Next, the process loops back around to step 1010.
As noted above, if the dimmer control 216 is requesting a lamp intensity level that requires a lamp current that is less than the software high end clamp level, then the programmable controller is responsive to the dimmer control 216 and the corresponding signal 217. If the dimmer control 216 is set to request a lamp intensity level that corresponds to a lamp current in excess of the software high end clamp current level, then the programmable controller 910 effectively limits the lamp current level to the calculated high end clamp current value.
The method of
In an alternative embodiment, the configuration of
The circuitry described herein for implementing the invention is preferably packaged with, or encapsulated within, the ballast itself, although such circuitry could be separately packaged from, or remote from, the ballast.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations may be made in the apparatus and method of the present invention without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. For example, although a linearly decreasing function is disclosed as one possible embodiment for implementation of current limiting, other continuously decreasing functions, even non-linear decreasing functions, may be used as a current limiting mechanism without departing from the spirit of the invention. Thus, it is intended that the present invention encompass modifications and variations of this invention provided those modifications and variations come within the scope of the appended claims and equivalents thereof.
This application is a continuation application of Ser. No. 11/489,145, filed Jul. 18, 2006, which is a continuation-in-part application of Ser. No. 11/214,314, filed Aug. 29, 2005, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,436,131, which is a continuation application of Ser. No. 10/706,677, filed Nov. 12, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,982,528, all of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11489145 | Jul 2006 | US |
Child | 12714972 | US | |
Parent | 10706677 | Nov 2003 | US |
Child | 11214314 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11214314 | Aug 2005 | US |
Child | 11489145 | US |