Invention relates to a voltage transformer and a rectifier meant for power supply for LED lamps wherein the transformer comprises a three-phase primary winding and at least two three-phase secondary windings, wherein the outputs of the mentioned secondary windings are connected to rectifiers.
LED lamps are becoming more common. One known disadvantage is the fact that LED lamps can cause electromagnetic disturbances. The reason for these disturbances is mostly the power source of the LED lamp which power source is nowadays nearly always a step down switching power supply. The power source in question breaks fast mains voltage (about 320-340V) which is rectified with a diode bridge and filtered with capacitors mostly at the frequency of 50 kHz-500 kHz. This causes a strong electromagnetic radiation to the environment which radiation typically disturbs the listening of radio and watching of TV programmes. In the worst cases the power sources disturb even each other's functioning. In addition to this the input current and the input voltage have various phases in the power source in question which causes unpaired harmonic waves to the electrical network which harmonic waves disturb the functioning of other devices that are connected to the electrical network.
In order to remove the above mentioned disadvantages a new transformer meant for power feed of LED lamps has been developed with which transformer the disturbances caused by the known transformers and voltage variations can be avoided. It is characteristic of the transformer according to the invention that secondary windings are divided for several primary windings with various phases and are connected with various connections between the outputs of the secondary windings in order to create the desired phase differences or the secondary windings have each their own primary winding in which case the connections between the outputs of the secondary windings have a characteristic, desired phase difference.
The power source according to the invention which is suitable for LED illumination can be realized with a help of a 12-pulse transformer which is for example D0/y11n and D0/d0 (400V/50V) being wound around the same core. The primary winding is connected to a delta (D0). The phase difference between the star (yn11) and delta (d0) connections being located in the secondary winding is 30 degrees. When both these are rectified with a conventional 3-phase rectification and the outputs are connected in series or in parallel, a 12-pulse rectified output can be achieved in which output the frequency of the ripple (disturbance voltage) of the output voltage is 600 Hz. For example the ripple voltage of the output voltage of the 12-pulse transformer, which feeds 50V and 50 A, is approximately 2V. This kind of voltage is very suitable for controlling LED lamps even without capacitors that equalize the voltage.
Additionally in the rectification process in the secondary windings the harmonic waves 3, 5, 7 and 9 of the forepart, which are created in the load situation and which cause most disturbance, are summed to be zero when there is a 30 degree phase difference between the secondary windings.
In a corresponding way 18- and 24-pulse transformers can be realized by adding secondary windings and by adjusting the phase difference of the secondary windings. There are three separate secondary windings in the 18-pulse transformer the mutual phase difference of which secondary windings is 20 degrees and there are four secondary windings in the 24-pulse transformer the mutual phase difference of which secondary windings is 15 degrees. The rectified voltages and the summing of their output voltages are realized in the same way as in the 12-pulse transformer.
Advantages: cost-effectiveness and no disturbances. Does not cause disturbances into the feeding electrical network and does not cause electromagnetic disturbance radiation to the environment. Contains very little amount of components which have a simple structure and are durable, in other words MTBF is naturally very long.
In the following the invention is described more detailed by referring to the accompanying drawings in which
In the
The output voltages 1U, 1V and 1W of the first secondary winding 1 are directed to the rectifier B1 the rectified output voltage of which rectifier is 57.5 V DC. The output voltages 2U, 2V and 2W of the second secondary winding 2 are directed to the rectifier B2 the rectified output voltage of which rectifier is also 57.5 DC.
The outputs of the bridge rectifiers B1 and B2 can be connected either in parallel or in series. In the
If the outputs of the rectifiers B1 and B2 are connected in parallel, one gets a power source the output voltage of which power source is 63V DC and the amplitude of the ripple voltage is 2V at the frequency of 600 Hz. In this connection the voltage stays the same and the current doubles itself.
The
In the figures
In the figures
The more pulses the transformer creates, the greater the frequency of the ripple voltage is and at the same time the amplitude of the ripple voltage reduces. Both improve the features of the pulse transformer as a power source of LED illumination.
The primary winding of the transformer can be connected either to the delta or to the star. The secondary windings for their part can be partly connected to the delta and partly to the star. It is characteristic of the invention that when one wants to have a transformer that creates more than 12 pulses that each secondary winding is divided for several primary windings, most advantageously for two in such a way that one achieves equidistant phase differences for the rectified pulses that are created in the connection.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20130161 U | Oct 2013 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FI2014/000024 | 10/1/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2015/049415 | 4/9/2015 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4296296 | Eichelberger | Oct 1981 | A |
4333011 | Mester | Jun 1982 | A |
5343080 | Kammeter | Aug 1994 | A |
5781428 | Paice | Jul 1998 | A |
8575856 | Chung | Nov 2013 | B2 |
8737097 | Swamy | May 2014 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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201750345 | Feb 2011 | CN |
S58190000 | Nov 1983 | JP |
Entry |
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Hoadley, F. et al: “Comparison of AC to DC rectifier topologies operating on various power distribution networks”. Petroleum and Chemical Industry Technical Conference, PCIC 2008. 55th IEEE, Sep. 22, 2008, pp. 1-9. |
Singh, B.: “Power quality improvement in load commutated inverter-fed synchronous motor drives”. The Institution of Engineering and Technology. IET Power Electronics, Journal Article, May 1, 2010, pp. 411-428. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160242248 A1 | Aug 2016 | US |