A LIGHTING CONTROLLER, A LIGHTING SYSTEM AND A METHOD FOR CONTROLLING LIGHTING
20170245337 · 2017-08-24
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02B20/30
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
The invention provides a lighting controller, comprising: a detector adapted to detect a voltage of a power source, said power source is for providing power to a lighting unit via a lighting driver; a controlling unit, coupled to the lighting driver and adapted for controlling the driver to deliver a constant power to the lighting unit regardless of the power source is being consumed, before the detected voltage drops below a first threshold, and controlling the driver to deliver a gradually reduced power to the lighting unit after the detected voltage drops below the first threshold. Wherein the controlling unit is further adapted for switching an up-converter between the power source and the driver to boost the output voltage from the power source to the driver, in a first condition; and bypassing said up-converter, in a second condition, and implementing said step of controlling the driver; wherein said first condition comprises operating in high occupancy periods, and said second condition comprises operating in low occupancy periods
Claims
1. A lighting controller, comprising: a detector adapted to detect an output voltage of a power source, said power source is for providing power to a lighting unit via a lighting driver; a controlling unit, coupled to the lighting driver and adapted for: switching an up-converter between the power source and the driver to boost the output voltage from the power source to the driver, in a first condition; and bypassing said up-converter in a second condition and implementing the below controlling: controlling the driver to deliver a constant power to the lighting unit regardless of the power source is being consumed by the lighting driver, before the detected voltage drops below a first threshold, and controlling the driver to deliver a gradually reduced power to the lighting unit after the detected voltage drops below the first threshold; wherein said first condition comprises operating in high occupancy periods, and said second condition comprises operating in low occupancy periods.
2. A lighting controller according to claim 1, wherein said controlling unit is adapted for: maintaining or increasing a duty cycle of the driver so as to control the driver to deliver a constant power; and maintaining or decreasing the duty cycle of the driver so as to control the driver to deliver a gradually reduced power.
3. A lighting controller according to claim 2, wherein the controlling unit is further adapted for fine tuning the duty cycle of the driver such that the driver delivers the gradually reduced power without fluctuation to the lighting unit, after the detected voltage drops below a second threshold less than said first threshold.
4. A lighting controller according to claim 1, wherein said high occupancy period comprises evening till or before mid-night, and low occupancy periods comprises mid-night till dawn.
5. A lighting controller according to claim 1, wherein the controlling unit is further adapted to control the duty cycle of the up-converter, the up-converter comprises an isolated boost converter, the controlling unit further comprises a diode forwarded between the input and the output of the up-converter.
6. A lighting controller according to claim 1, wherein the controller is further adapted to control the duty cycle of the up-converter, the up-converter comprises a non-isolated boost converter wherein the controlling unit further comprises a boost diode forwarded from the connection point of an inductor and a switch of the boost converter to an output capacitor of the boost converter.
7. A lighting system, comprising: a power source; an up converter coupled with the power source; a lighting driver coupled to the up converter; a lighting unit coupled to the driver; and a lighting controller according to claim 1, with the detector coupled to the power source and the controlling unit coupled to the up converter and to the lighting driver.
8. A method for controlling lighting, comprising the steps of: switching an up-converter between a power source and a lighting driver to boost an output voltage from the power source, in a first condition, said power source is for providing power to a lighting unit via the lighting driver; Bypassing said up-converter in a second condition, and implementing the below steps of controlling: Detecting the output voltage of a power source, controlling the driver to deliver a constant power to the lighting unit regardless of the power source is being consumed by the lighting driver before the detected voltage drops below a first threshold, controlling the driver to deliver a gradually reduced power to the lighting unit after the detected voltage drops below the first threshold; wherein said first condition comprises operating in high occupancy periods, and said second condition comprises operating in low occupancy periods.
9. A method according to claim 8, wherein said step of controlling the driver to deliver a constant power comprises maintaining or increasing a duty cycle of the driver; and said step of controlling the driver to deliver a gradually reduced power comprises maintaining or decreasing the duty cycle of the driver.
10. A method according to claim 11, further comprising: fine tuning the duty cycle and frequency of the driver such that the driver delivers the gradually reduced power without fluctuation to the lighting unit, after the detected voltage drops below a second threshold less than said first threshold.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0023] Examples of the invention will now be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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[0025]
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[0029]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0030] The invention provides a lighting controller, comprising:
[0031] a detector adapted to detect a voltage of a power source, said power source is for providing power to a lighting unit via a lighting driver;
[0032] a controlling unit, coupled to the lighting driver and adapted for [0033] controlling the driver to deliver a constant power to the lighting unit regardless of the power source is being consumed, before the detected voltage drops below a first threshold, and [0034] controlling the driver to deliver a gradually reduced power to the lighting unit after the detected voltage drops below a first threshold.
[0035] Preferably, the controlling unit is further adapted for [0036] switching an up-converter between the power source and the driver to boost the output voltage from the power source to the driver, in a first condition; and [0037] bypassing said up-converter, in a second condition, and implementing said step of controlling the driver.
[0038] Hereinafter, several modes are used for describing in which way the lighting controller is controlling the driver and the up-converter.
[0039] The lighting system according to embodiments of the invention comprises the above lighting controller, and a power source, an up-converter, a bypass switch, and one or more drivers with lighting units such as LED lamps. As shown in
[0040] Preferably, the first condition and the second condition are determined by the occupancy state of the space that is to be illuminated. For example when people are more, more light is generally expected; otherwise when few or no people is there, less light is just enough. This occupancy state can be detected by occupancy sensors. Alternatively, for outdoor application such as road lighting, campus lighting or park lighting, the evening/night time can indirectly reflect the occupancy state: in evening till mid-night there is more occupancy and from mid-night till dawn, less or no people is there; and just before dawn more people may come out. Also, in day time there is no need to turn on the light.
[0041] Thus, the lighting controller can use an RTOS (Real-time operating system) based timer or simple hour-minute timer. The timing flowchart can be shown in
[0042]
[0043] Further,
[0044] After a certain time's consumption, the energy in the battery is partially consumed, and this usually leads to the decrease of the output voltage of the battery. Set a threshold of 45V for this output voltage, and before the output voltage of the battery drops below this threshold, the lighting controller will control the driver to deliver a constant power to the lighting unit regardless of how the power source is being consumed. More specifically, as the voltage decrease from 60V to 45V, the duty cycle of the driver is increased such that constant power is delivered. Additionally, during this decrease from 60V to 45V, the voltage may not continuously decrease but may be stable at some voltage for a while, and in this while the duty cycle of the driver is also maintained such that constant power is delivered. In turn, in mode II, the normal lighting requirement is met via a constant lumen output. More specifically, the driver can have a voltage detection circuit to detect the voltage, and increases its duty cycle proportional to the decrease in battery voltage. Alternatively, the controller can determine a duty cycle proportional to the decrease in battery voltage and notify the drivers about this determined duty cycle.
[0045] Additionally, as the voltage of the battery further drops, there is a risk that the energy in the battery is completely consumed before the desired ending time, such as dawn. Such problem may occur in case that the solar cell does not store enough energy into the battery if the day time is cloudy. If the energy in the battery is completely consumed, no light output can be obtained and a black out occurs. To avoid this, after the voltage of the battery drops below 45V, the lighting controller enters mode III wherein it controls the driver to deliver a gradually reduced power to the lighting unit. More specifically, the controller can maintain or decrease the duty cycle of the driver to maintain or decrease the rate that power is drawn from the battery. Therefore the power delivered to the lighting unit is gradually reduced as the voltage of the battery decreases and the rate is maintained or decreased. Alternatively, in case the driver is a linear driver, the lighting controller can maintain or increases the conductivity of the linear power switch. More specifically, the controller can notify the driver to maintain its duty cycle. Alternatively, the controller can notify the drivers about one constant duty cycle. The lighting system can even switched back to mode II if the output voltage recovers to 45V because additional backup battery is switched in.
[0046] Further, as the voltage of the battery still drops for example below 42V, the battery voltage may fluctuate, namely decrease and increase in a fast manner that results flicker of the lighting unit perceptible by human. To avoid this, the controller may fine tune the duty cycle of the driver such that the driver delivers the gradually reduced and unfluctuated power to the lighting unit. More specifically, the controller may itself or control the driver record the power delivered in a previous instant, for example 10 ms ago, and try to regulate the power, delivered at a subsequent instant, as the same or similar as the recorded one despite whether the battery voltage changes or not. If the battery voltage does not fluctuate, the duty cycle of the driver at the subsequent instant is maintained; if the battery voltage fluctuates, the duty cycle of the driver at the subsequent instant can be tuned in reverse direction. It should be understood that the fine tuning to eliminate fluctuation is in the micro/short term perspective, and in the macro/long term perspective the power is still gradually decrease. To this end, the average duty cycle is maintained or decrease in a slow manner, and the extent of fine tuning may be within a certain percentage of the average duty cycle, such as positive and minus 10% to 20%.
[0047] Further, just before the dawn, the lighting controller can enter mode I again by switching the up-converter back to the loop. The up-converter can boost the output voltage of the battery to 200V and deliver it via the DC grid to the driver and lighting unit. The lighting controller may also notify the driver to work in its normal full bright state, for example to use its normal duty cycle.
[0048] Following will describe some embodiment of the driver and the up-converter.
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[0052] Embodiments of the invention can be used in solar based outdoor lighting e.g. street lighting, campus lighting. This proposed system will find good application in Outdoor Lighting System as it will be at least 8-10% more efficient than conventional static DC grid Outdoor Lighting System and 15% more efficient than AC grid Outdoor Lighting System.
[0053] The invention has been described in connection with an LED lighting arrangement. However, it can be applied to a driver for other types of lighting technology. For example, other solid state lighting technologies may be used. It should also be understood that the above specific voltage values are just for example, and for different battery system or battery chemistry these values will change.
[0054] Other variations to the disclosed embodiments can be understood and effected by those skilled in the art in practicing the claimed invention, from a study of the drawings, the disclosure, and the appended claims. In the claims, the word “comprising” does not exclude other elements or steps, and the indefinite article “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality. The mere fact that certain measures are recited in mutually different dependent claims does not indicate that a combination of these measured cannot be used to advantage. Any reference signs in the claims should not be construed as limiting the scope.