1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to electronic ballasts for metal halide lamps, and more particularly to an electronic ballast for metal halide lamps having a three-stage structure. The three-stage electronic ballast for metal halide lamps mainly comprises a step-up converter, a step-down converter and a full-bridge DC-AC converter, wherein the step-down converter operates an inductor in a continuous boundary current mode to achieve reducing power loss and enhancing efficiency. Equipped with a micro processor, the electronic ballast further possesses the function of power regulation. The electronic ballast can be added with various protective functions without complex control circuits and sensing elements, thereby becoming a high-quality and low-cost electronic ballast for metal halide lamps.
2. Description of the Prior Art
High-intensity gas-discharging lamps are widely used as light sources for indoor or outdoor illumination. Given its intensity, efficiency, duration and color, metal halide lamps have been used in department stores, supermarkets or in advertisement boards for providing high quality illumination.
The majority of the electronic ballasts for metal halide lamps of the prior art include a power factor correction circuit made of a step-up converter, a DC—DC step-down converter, a full-bridge DC-AC converter and an ignition circuit. Although circuitry structure of the prior art is similar to the three-state structure according to the present invention, its step-down converter is operated in a discontinuous current mode to lessen running down of switching elements. Because of appreciable variation in the characteristic of a metal halide lamp over running time and different manufacturers, it requires a wider design margin for operating the inductor of a step-down converter in discontinuous current mode. This results in high peak values of the inductor currents and therefore high power loss in the circuit. And, consequently, the electronic ballasts of the prior art have step-down converter of low efficiency and high operating temperature, which makes the electronic ballasts less durable.
Accordingly, the present invention discloses a three-stage electronic ballast for supplying steady power source for a metal halide lamp. The electronic ballast comprises a power factor correction circuit including a step-up converter, a DC step-down converter, a full-bridge DC-AC converter and a high-voltage ignition circuit. The three-stage electronic ballast for metal halide lamps has the advantage of reducing power loss and enhancing efficiency, thereby increasing the duration of the electronic ballast.
Therefore, the primary objective of the present invention is to provide a three-stage electronic ballast for metal halide lamps wherein the inductor of the step-down converter is operated in a continuous boundary current mode for enhancing work efficiency and reducing power loss.
The secondary objective of the present invention is to provide a three-stage electronic ballast for metal halide lamps capable of dealing with the variation in the characteristics of metal halide lamps due to different manufacturers and providing the metal halide lamps with a constant power.
To achieve above object, the present invention provide a three-stage electronic ballast for metal halide lamps. The device comprises a filter and rectification circuit connected to an input voltage source terminal for suppressing electromagnetic disturbances and rectifying an input voltage signal; a step-up converter disposed after the filter and rectification circuit, the step-up converter further comprising a push-pull transistor, a step-up inductor and a rectification diode and a filter capacitor; a step-down converter disposed after the step-up converter, the step-down converter further comprising an inductor, a diode, a capacitor and a transistor switch, the step-down converter controlling the current in the inductor at the boundary of continuity and discontinuity so as to lessen power loss and enhance operation efficiency; a DC-AC converter disposed after the step-down converter for providing an alternating square-wave voltage to a metal halide lamp; an ignition circuit using circuit elements including a step-up transformer and a capacitor to generate an electric voltage up to 3 kilo volts for discharging the metal halide lamp; and a micro processor for controlling the conducting rate of the step-down converter according to the product of output voltage and current of the step-down converter, whereby power regulation can be achieved; The three-stage electronic ballast for metal halide lamps can force the inductor in the step-down converter to operate in a continuous boundary current mode, whereby the peak value of the inductor current will be decreased, and whereby the transistor switch switches under zero current, significantly reducing power loss in switching.
The various objects and advantages of the present invention will be more readily understood from the following detailed description when read in conjunction with the appended drawings.
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Further, the electronic ballasts for metal halide lamps of the prior art use a power-factor correction circuit comprising a step-up converter for jumping input voltage and correcting the power factor at the same time. micro processors for specific purposes can be used to operate a step-up converter in the continuous boundary current mode, which can maintain a fixed DC output voltage under large variations in input voltage. The present invention utilizes the same micro processor controlling the power factor circuits for controlling the switch of a step-down converter. Since the micro processors are common and cheap in the market, the present invention is advantageous in low production cost and low complexity.
The present invention is thus described, and it will be obvious that the same may be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the present invention, and all such modifications as would be obvious to one skilled in the art are intended to be included within the scope of the following claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5381076 | Nerone | Jan 1995 | A |
6107754 | Kim | Aug 2000 | A |
6188177 | Adamson et al. | Feb 2001 | B1 |