This present invention relates generally to image presentation devices, and particularly, to devices that utilize electronic driver circuits to control the operation of a light source, such as a light emitting diode.
Current drive and current control devices are well known in the art. Such devices operate to maintain a given magnitude of current along a particular current path for the purpose of stabilizing the operating current (iD) delivered to a respective load. One use for such devices is to provide stabilized current to a light emitting diode (LED). As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, the brightness of an LED is as a function of the amount of current passing through the LED. To stabilize the brightness of an LED, one must stabilize the current passing through the LED. Prior art patents in the field of current control and stabilized LED operation include U.S. Pat. No. 4,160,934 issued Jul. 10, 1979 to Kirsch; U.S. Pat. No. 5,025,204 issued Jun. 18, 1991 to Su; U.S. Pat. No. 6,097,360 issued Aug. 1, 2000 to Holloman; and U.S. Pat. No. 6,954,039 issued Oct. 11, 2005 to Lin et al.
While stabilized current control in support of LED operation is a laudable pursuit, many current applications require dynamic brightness control for individual LEDs and/or LED arrays. One such application is an optical light engine using LEDs in support of a digital micro-mirror device (DMD) image projection system. In such LED based image projection systems, it is often desirable and frequently necessary to dynamically adjust the individual brightness of one or a plurality of high power LEDs used as projector light sources. LED drive circuits designed to provide stable and/or static brightness control fall short of producing a wide dynamic range of LED brightness control. Therefore, the need exists for LED drive circuitry that permits selective and dynamic LED brightness control. Furthermore, there is a need to provide brightness control circuits that offer advantages in compactness, simplicity, low cost, and speed of operation.
The above and other features and advantages of the invention will be further understood from the following description of the preferred embodiments thereof, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The present description is directed in particular to elements forming part of, or cooperating more directly with, apparatus in accordance with the invention. As will be understood by those familiar with the art, aspects of the invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the scope of the invention as a whole. Accordingly, the disclosures and descriptions herein are intended to be illustrative, but not limiting, of the scope of the invention which is set forth in the following claims.
With reference to
A current path 50 between supply voltage VDD and reference voltage Vref exists along the series combination of forward biased diode 40, terminals 32 and 34 of FET 30, and the current sense network 10. The resistance of current path 50 is a function of the current sense network 10 plus the drain to source resistance of FET 30. Because transistor 30 acts as a voltage controlled current sink, its resistance is determined by the voltage present at output terminal 26 of amplifier 20. The resistance of path 50, and particularly that of FET 30 varies in accordance with the output of amplifier 20. With reference to an assumed and substantially fixed value for supply voltage VDD, the lower the resistance of current path 50, the higher the magnitude of current (iLED) passing through LED 40, thus the brighter LED 40 will illuminate. Conversely, the higher the resistance of current path 50, the lower the magnitude of current (iLED) passing through LED 40, resulting in reduced illumination.
In response to receipt of current passing through source electrode 32, current sense network 10 will provide a voltage response V1 to the inverting input terminal 22 of amplifier 20. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, the V1 response of current sense network 10 may be readily associated with that current (iLED) passing through LED 40. As such, the V response of current sense network 10 can be used as one means of estimating the magnitude of current flow (iLED) passing through LED 40. Said another way, for each V1 response, there is an associated magnitude of current (iLED) passing through LED 40, and a corresponding measure of LED 40 brightness resulting as a function of that current magnitude.
As previously mentioned, the non-inverting input terminal 24 of amplifier 20 is connected to a variable voltage signal source (not shown) capable of producing a variable voltage control signal VDAC. During operation, amplifier 20, acting as a difference amplifier, compares the magnitude of voltage V1 with that of VDAC. When the signals compare, the output 26 of amplifier 20 remains constant, the V1 response remains constant, and the brightness of LED 40 remains substantially unchanged.
When an increase in LED 40 brightness is desired, the variable voltage signal source will issue an increase in the magnitude of control signal VDAC, as applied to the non-inverting input terminal 24 of amplifier 20. In response, the voltage at output terminal 26 of amplifier 20 will increase. When applied to gate electrode 36, the voltage increase will operate to turn-on FET 30. In further response, the resistance of FET 30 will decrease, while the magnitude of current (iLED) passing through LED 40 will increase. As a function of the increase in current (iLED) passing through LED 40, LED 40 brightness will increase. Due to the high gain of amplifier 20 and a feedback network coupled between source electrode 32 of FET 30 and inverting input terminal 22 of amplifier 20, amplifier 20 will continue to drive the gate electrode 36 of FET 30 until the magnitude of voltage response V1 and the magnitude of control signal VDAC are substantially the same.
When a decrease in LED 40 brightness is desired, the variable voltage signal source described in association with
The utility of the present invention is evident in a high current installation having a supply voltage VDD, e.g., 12 volts, and voltage drop across LED 40, e.g., 4.7 volts. For a desired brightness characterized by current (iLED) on the order of 10 amps, resistors R1, R2 and R3 can be 0.02, 0.02 and 1 K ohms, establishing a voltage response V1 at approximately 100 millivolts. This is achieved by way of applying a control signal input VDAC of approximately 100 millivolts on the non-inverting input terminal 24 of amplifier 20. Unlike those prior art references that teach a single desired value of current (iLED) passing through an LED for purposes of establishing a constant LED brightness, the VCLED 100 of the present invention anticipates variable brightness control for LED 40. As such, the control signal input VDAC from the variable voltage signal source is capable of establishing a full and dynamic range of brightness responses from LED 40. A representative sample of typical responses for a particular LED may be seen with reference to Table 1.
As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, the “on-off” modulated control of switch S1 enables the VCLED 200 of
Additionally, the modulated control of switch S1 enables the VCLED 200 of
As shown, the DMD panel device 150 is also coupled to sensor 170. In conjunction with a non-image processing mode of operation, light being incident through the prism 140, but not being projected onto projection optics 160 is input to the sensor 170. In response, sensor 170 outputs a signal representing the output from the light emitting diodes 122,124,126. The sensor output is converted by Analog to Digital (A/D) converter 180 to a digital control signal and then fed to light source controller 110 for purposes of adjusting individual and/or collective light source inputs (VDAC) to respective LED drive circuits 100 or 200. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, sensor 170 is selected from the group of photo-sensors and photo-detection devices capable of outputting an electric signal that corresponds to various characteristics of light energy as generated by light source 122,124, 126. Characteristics of interest include, but are not limited to: light intensity, color accuracy, and color clarity. In accordance with the preferred embodiment, sensor 170 will employ a light intensity sensor, a photoelectric conversion device, a PIN diode, or any other such device capable of converting light energy into electric impulse for purpose of measurement and/or detection. In further accordance with the preferred embodiment, sensor 170 and A/D converter 180 may be combined into a single device commonly referred to as a light-to-digital (L/D) converter 190. In accordance with a preferred embodiment, the digital signal output from L/D converter 190 is input to the digital logic circuitry of light source controller 110, whereby luminance (i.e., light intensity) as measured in values of lux is derived using well known empirical formulas that approximate the human eye response. Light-to-digital converters of the type discussed herein have, in the past, been commercially available by contacting Texas Advanced Optoelectronics Solutions Inc. at their offices located at 800 Juniper Road, Suite 205 Plano, Tex. 75074.
As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, over the life of a projection television system of the type anticipated by the present embodiment, variances in light source operating characteristics may have undesirable affect on the quality and the clarity of images produced by the image presentation device 300. By way of example, should, the operating characteristics of the individual LEDs 122, 124, 126, start to change or deteriorate over time, the color clarity, color accuracy, and picture quality of the images produced by image presentation device 300 will start to decline. It is therefore an advantage of present invention to controllably adjust the brightness of individual light sources 122, 124, 126 for purposes of maintaining a particular white light performance characteristic despite component aging or other conditions giving rise to variances in light source operation. In addition, it is an advantage of the present invention, to provide selective and dynamic LED brightness control in an image presentation device, such as the digital micro-mirror (DMD) based image presentation device 300 of
As previously discussed, and with reference back to
When a decrease in LED 122, 124, 126 brightness is desired, light source controller 110, will issue a decrease in the magnitude of control signal VDAC, as applied to one or more of the drive circuits 100 associated with LED light sources 122,124,126. In response, the voltage at output terminal 26 of amplifier 20 for the selected drive circuit 100 will decrease. When applied to gate electrode 36, the voltage decrease will operate to turn-down FET 30. In further response, the resistance of FET 30 will increase, while the magnitude of current (iLED) passing through LED in question will decrease. As a function of reduced current (iLED) passing through LED in question, LED brightness will decrease.
As previously discussed, and with reference back to
While preferred embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described, it will be clear that the invention is not so limited. Numerous modifications, changes, variations, substitutions and equivalents will occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. By way of example, light source controller 110 may employ a reference voltage lookup table housing predetermined values, as a means of selecting a particular value of VDAC.