A SUPPLY CABLE, A DRIVER ARRANGEMENT WITH WIRELESS CONTROL FUNCTION AND A CONTROL METHOD
20170229770 · 2017-08-10
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01Q7/00
ELECTRICITY
H01Q1/22
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01Q7/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
The invention provides a connection head (40) for using with a supply cable for supplying power to a device, which device is within a housing. A first end (41) of the connection head is for mounting outside the housing of the device. A second end (43) of the connection head is for mounting inside the housing of the device. A closed loop antenna has at least one coil and a pair of feed lines, wherein the feed lines extend from the first end (41) to the second end (43), and the at least one coil is located within the first end (41). The connection head of the supply cable provides protection for an antenna and enables the antenna to be mounted outside the housing.
Claims
1-6. (canceled)
7. A driver arrangement for driving a lighting arrangement, comprising: a housing (10); a connection head, comprising: a first end for mounting outside the housing of the device; a second end for mounting inside the housing of the device; and a closed loop antenna having at least one coil and a pair of feed lines, wherein the feed lines extend from the first end to the second end, and the at least one coil is located within the first end; a supply cable for supplying power, passing from outside the housing to inside the housing through the connection head; a receiver circuit within the housing, coupled to the antenna via the pair of feed lines for receiving wireless control signals; and a driver circuit within the housing, for obtaining power from the supply cable and driving the lighting arrangement using the obtained power, wherein the driver circuit is coupled to said receiver circuit and configurable based on the wireless control signals received by the antenna and forwarded by the receiver circuit.
8. A driver arrangement as claimed in claim 7, wherein the connection head compises a watertight passage for the supply cable into the housing.
9. A driver arrangement as claimed in claim 8, further comprising a powering cable for connection between the driver arrangement and the lighting arrangement for transferring power to the lighting arrangement, which powering cable also has a watertight passage through the housing.
10. A driver arrangement as claimed in claim 9 which satisfies the IP65 requirements.
11. A driver arrangement as claimed in claim 7, wherein the antenna comprise an NFC antenna and the receiver circuit comprises an NFC integrated circuit, wherein the NFC integrated circuit is adapted to be powered by the NFC antenna, and the receiver circuit is adapted to be disabled when the driver circuit starts to drive the lighting arrangement.
12. A driver arrangement as claimed in claim 7, wherein the driver circuit is configurable to set a current output level and/or set a current dimming level according to the wireless control signals, and the receiver circuit is further adapted as a transceiver also for transmitting wireless control signal, and the driver circuit is further configurable to transmit wireless control signals via the transceiver circuit and the closed loop antenna.
13. A lighting system comprising: a driver arrangement as claimed in claim 7; and a lighting arrangement driven by the driver arrangement.
14. A method of controlling a device which is housed within a housing, comprising: providing wireless control signals; receiving the wireless control signals using an antenna which is mounted outside the housing of the device and a receiver circuit mounted inside the housing of the device; and controlling or configuring the device based on the wireless control signals, wherein the antenna comprises a closed loop antenna having at least one coil and a pair of feed lines, wherein the feed lines extend from within the housing to outside the housing, and wherein the at least one coil is located outside the housing within a connection head for using with a supply cable for supplying power to the device; wherein the device comprises a receiver circuit for receiving wireless control signals via the closed loop antenna, and the closed loop antenna is a near field communications antenna which is further adapted to provide power to the receiver circuit; the device further comprises a driver arrangement for driving a lighting arrangement; controlling the device comprises configuring the driver arrangement based on the wireless control signals.
15. (canceled)
16. A connection head for sing with a supply cable to a device which is within a housing, comprising: a first end for mounting outside the housing of the device; a second end for mounting inside the housing of the device; a closed loop antenna having at least one coil and a pair of feed lines, wherein the feed lines extend from the first end to the second end, and the at least one coil is located within the first end; wherein said antenna is adapted to communicate with a host device separate from and external to the supply cable and the housing.
17. A connection head according to claim 16, wherein an annular recess for engaging with an opening in the housing, wherein the at least one coil of the antenna is encapsulated within the first end of the connection head at an exterior side of the annular recess, and said second end of the connection head is at an interior side of the annular recess, and the connection head for allowing the supply cable passing through and into the housing.
18. A driver arrangement as claimed in claim 7, wherein the connection head further comprising: an annular recess for engaging with an opening in the housing, wherein the at least one coil of the antenna is encapsulated within the first end of the connection head at an exterior side of the annular recess, and said second end of the connection head is at an interior side of the annular recess, and wherein said antenna is adapted to communicate with a host device separate from and external to the supply cable and the housing, and the supply cable is a single and undetachable cable and the connection head is for allowing the cable passing through and into the housing.
19. A driver arrangement as claimed in claim 7, wherein the at least one coil is oriented around an elongate axis of the connection head, and the connection head further allowing passing through of power lines, different from said closed loop antenna, for transferring power.
20. A driver arrangement as claimed in claim 7, wherein the antenna comprises between 6 and 10 coils each with a diameter of 8 to 12 mm, and wherein the connection head is made of radio non-blocking material.
21. A driver arrangement as claimed in claim 7, wherein the closed loop antenna is a near field communications antenna which is further adapted to provide power to a receiver circuit of the device.
22. A driver arrangement as claimed in claim 7, wherein the connection head is for enclosing an outer sheath of the supply cable or, the connection head is integral with an outer sheath of the supply cable.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0053] Examples of the invention will now be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0054]
[0055]
[0056]
[0057]
[0058]
[0059]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0060] The invention provides a supply cable for supplying power to a device, which device is within a housing. A first portion is for mounting outside the housing of the device, the first portion having an outer sheath. A second portion is for mounting inside the housing of the device. A closed loop antenna has at least one coil and a pair of feed lines, wherein the feed lines extend from within the outer sheath of the first portion to the second portion, and the at least one coil is located within the outer sheath of the first portion. The outer sheath of the supply cable provides protection for an antenna and enables the antenna to be mounted outside the housing.
[0061]
[0062] The LED driver has an outer housing 10 inside which the main circuit elements are housed. An NFC antenna 12 is external to the housing 10 and it connects to an NFC integrated circuit (which may be a receiver circuit or a transceiver circuit) and memory. The integrated circuit and memory are shown together as unit 14. There is data and power transfer to a microcontroller 16 which controls a power output stage 18. The power output stage 18 and the microcontroller 16 together function as a driver circuit. The driver circuit controls an output load 20 in the form of an LED arrangement.
[0063] The driver circuit receives power from an input mains cable 22.
[0064] The configuration of the driver circuit can be established using the NFC interface 24 with a host device 26 which may comprise a mobile telephone or other computer device. An output cable 28 transfers power from the driver circuit to the LED arrangement 20.
[0065] The NFC interface can be for the transfer of data and also power, for example using an ISO/IEC 16593 protocol, at a frequency of 13.56 MHz. Of course, other wireless transmission protocols and frequencies may be used.
[0066] This means the LED driver can be configured without mains power being active. When the driver is eventually powered, the configuration information can be retrieved from the memory, for example for retrieving current setting levels or dimming options. The driver is then configured, and the NFC interface may be disabled so that it does not play any role in the normal use of the LED driver.
[0067]
[0068] These embodiments of the invention are of particular interest when the housing 10 requires a level of ingress protection, so that it can be used outdoors. In this case, each connection between an external component and an internal component requires a suitable connector for passage through the housing wall.
[0069] This embodiment of the invention in particular makes use of a single opening in the housing for the antenna feed lines and for the power supply cable 22.
[0070]
[0071] The cable 30 has a first portion 32 for mounting outside the housing 10, the first portion having an outer sheath 34. A second portion 36 is for mounting inside the housing 10. A closed loop antenna has at least one coil and a pair of feed lines 38. The feed lines extend from within the outer sheath of the first portion 32 to the second portion 36 (i.e. they pass from outside to inside the housing), and the at least one coil is located within the outer sheath of the first portion 32.
[0072] This arrangement makes use of the outer sheath 34 to provide protection for the antenna. The routing of the cable through the housing opening will for example meet a desired sealing requirement such as IP65. As a result, the same sealing requirements are met by the antenna arrangement without requiring additional protective sheaths or openings in the housing.
[0073] The supply cable has an enlarged connection head 40 including an annular recess 42 for engaging with an opening in the housing 10. This connection head can be considered to enclose the outer sheath 34 of the cable, so that components defined as “within the outer sheath” include components within the enlarged connection head 40. The at least one coil of the antenna is encapsulated within a first end of the enlarged connection head at the exterior side of the annular recess 42. Then second portion 36 of the cable includes a second end of the enlarged connection head 40 at the internal side of the annular recess 42.
[0074]
[0075]
[0076]
[0077] The antenna may for example comprise between 6 and 10 coils (10 are shown in
[0078] The enlarged connection head 40 is a rubber material which provides a watertight seal between the recess 42 and the opening in the housing. By fitting the antenna coil or coils in the enlarged head, a good use of space is made, and the antenna is at a close proximity to the receiver inside the housing. There may for example be a distance of 20 to 30 mm between the receiver and the antenna.
[0079]
[0080] The cable can be used to replace the separate external connections to the antenna and to the power supply which are shown in
[0081] Thus, a driver arrangement is provided for driving a lighting arrangement, comprising the housing 10, the supply cable 30 passing from outside the housing to inside the housing and the receiver circuit 14 within the housing, coupled to the antenna via the pair of feed lines 38. The driver circuit 16, 18 is also within the housing 10, for obtaining power from the supply cable 22 and driving the lighting arrangement 20 using the obtained power. The separate powering cable 28 connects between the driver arrangement and the lighting arrangement 20 for transferring power to the lighting arrangement. This has another watertight passage through the housing.
[0082] The receiver circuit 14 may further be adapted as a transceiver also for transmitting wireless control signals. The driver circuit 16,18 is then further configurable to transmit wireless control signals via the transceiver circuit and the closed loop antenna.
[0083] This enables two-way communication between the driver circuit and the external controller.
[0084] As mentioned above, the antenna can provide power for the configuration function. The NFC integrated circuit and the memory can be passively powered components over the wireless NFC link, with the host device 26 functioning as the source of power.
[0085] The invention is not limited to lighting systems. A similar NFC control or configuration can be applied to various applications, including wireless payment terminals used in transport networks, E-wallets and other portable electronic devices.
[0086] In the specific example above, the NFC communications link is only used for configuration. However, in other applications, the NFC wireless communication may also be used as part of the normal functioning of the device, so that a user can interface with a device in the housing using the NFC link.
[0087] The invention is also not limited to any particular NFC protocol. Indeed any wireless communication standard can be used providing a suitable antenna can be designed based on the range of possible dimensions of coils a supply cable.
[0088] As mentioned above, it is known to integrate a radio antenna into an earphone cable for use with mobile phones, for example as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,417,592. There are significant differences between embodiments of the invention with this known integrated radio antenna.
[0089] First, in embodiments of the invention, the supply cable is for supplying power into the housing. For the earphone case, the earphone cable is for transferring the audio signal.
[0090] By putting the antenna in the supply cable, radio blocking from the metal enclosure of the driver housing is avoided, while also maintaining the high ingress protection capacity of the enclosure of the driver housing. For the earphone case, the problem to be addressed is that there is not enough space for a UHF radio antenna and a VHF radio antenna which are normally very long. The enclosure of a smartphone normally does not block radio signals (otherwise the cell antenna will also be blocked), so the problem of shielding by a housing does not arise.
[0091] Additionally, for the current smartphones which include NFC capability, such as the iPhone (Trade Mark) series, it is customary to put the NFC antenna also in the phone housing, such as underneath the back plate, not outside the housing.
[0092] There is also a consequent difference for the peripheral circuit. In embodiments of the invention, the NFC circuit does not need the driver to be powered on, because the NFC antenna, the associated NFC integrated circuit and the memory are not powered by the driver but they are powered by the external host NFC transceiver. In the earphone case, the reception and detection circuits for VHF and UHF radio in the smartphone need to be turned on by the phone to receive radio signals from the antenna. The circuitry used in the earphone case thus cannot be used in the embodiments above without adaptation.
[0093] 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.