LED driver and a LED module for use with the driver
11248780 · 2022-02-15
Assignee
Inventors
- Yufei Zhou (Eindhoven, NL)
- Eugen Jacob DE MOL (EINDHOVEN, NL)
- Maurice Lucien Eugene Casanova (Eindhoven, NL)
- Hengliang Luo (Eindhoven, NL)
- Dennis Johannes Antonius Claessens (Eindhoven, NL)
Cpc classification
H05B47/20
ELECTRICITY
H05B45/50
ELECTRICITY
F21V23/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H05B47/25
ELECTRICITY
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
H05B45/50
ELECTRICITY
H05B47/25
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A LED driver comprises two output contacts (310, 311) and an additional contact (312) which enables detection of connection of the LED driver to a LED module (301). The LED driver has a normal current regulating mode and an open circuit protection voltage regulating mode. The LED driver is switched from the voltage regulating mode to the current regulating mode in response to the detection of connection of the LED module. This enables a LED module to be connected to the LED driver while it remains powered, in particular because the LED driver is placed in a voltage regulating mode prior to connection to the LED module.
Claims
1. A LED driver comprising first and second output contacts adapted to connect to a LED module and the LED driver is adapted to power the LED module in a first mode which is an output current regulating mode wherein the LED driver is adapted to regulate the output current of the LED driver to the LED module through the first and second output contacts, wherein the LED driver comprises: a third contact adapted to receive different voltages depending on whether or not the LED driver is connected to the LED module; a detection circuit to detect a voltage associated with the third contact; and a controller, wherein the LED driver has a second mode for open circuit protection which is an output voltage regulating mode wherein the LED driver is adapted to regulate the output voltage of the LED driver across the first and second output contacts, wherein the controller is adapted to switch the LED driver between the second mode and the first mode in response to the detected voltage received on the third contact, wherein the third contact and the second output contact are adapted to be connected by an external setting impedance of the LED module or short circuited, upon the correct connection of the LED module to the second output contact and the third contact, the LED driver further comprises a current source to inject a current through the third contact and the second output contact and is adapted to set a nominal output current of the LED driver according to the voltage on the third contact; and the controller is further adapted to switch the LED driver to the first mode if the voltage on the third contact is within a threshold; and switch the LED driver to the second mode if the voltage on the third contact exceeds the threshold.
2. A LED driver as claimed in claim 1, wherein the LED driver, in the first mode, has a first output voltage threshold, and the LED driver, in the second mode, regulates the output voltage to the regulation voltage which is lower than the first output voltage threshold.
3. A LED driver as claimed in claim 2, wherein the controller is adapted to control the LED driver to switch from the first mode to the second mode when the output voltage of the LED driver reaches the first output voltage threshold and to control the LED driver to discharge the output voltage to the regulation voltage.
4. A LED driver as claimed in claim 1, wherein the detection circuit is adapted to detect a voltage between the third contact and the second output contact as the detected voltage associated with the third contact.
5. A LED driver as claimed in claim 3, comprising an output capacitor and wherein the detection circuit is further adapted to detect whether an output voltage at the output capacitor reaches the first output voltage threshold.
6. A LED driver as claimed in claim 5, wherein the detection circuit comprises a logic circuit for providing a signal to the controller to switch the LED driver between the first and second modes based on a voltage between the third contact and the second output contact and the output voltage at the output capacitor.
7. A LED driver as claimed in claim 1, wherein the third contact is adapted to contact the LED module after the second output contact has contacted the LED module.
8. A LED driver as claimed in claim 1, wherein the first and second output contacts and the third contact are arranged to engage with the LED module such that the first output contact is adapted to contact the LED module before the third contact and the second output contact contact the LED module.
9. A LED driver as claimed in claim 1, wherein a first impedance is between the third contact and the first output contact and a second impedance is between the third contact and the second output contact.
10. A LED driver as claimed in claim 1, comprising a fourth contact coupled to the third contact, wherein said fourth contact is adapted to be coupled to the first contact upon a correct connection of the LED module to the first contact and before a correct connection of the LED module to the third contact.
11. A LED driver as claimed in claim 10, wherein the detection circuit is adapted to detect an order in which the first and second contacts are connected to the LED module, and the controller is adapted to switch the LED driver to the first mode only for one connection order.
12. A LED driver as claimed in claim 10, wherein a first impedance is between the third contact and the fourth contact and a second impedance is between the third contact and the second output contact.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) For a better understanding of the invention, and to show more clearly how it may be carried into effect, reference will now be made, by way of example only, to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
(16) The invention will be described with reference to the Figures.
(17) It should be understood that the detailed description and specific examples, while indicating exemplary embodiments of the apparatus, systems and methods, are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention. These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the apparatus, systems and methods of the present invention will become better understood from the following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings. It should be understood that the Figures are merely schematic and are not drawn to scale. It should also be understood that the same reference numerals are used throughout the Figures to indicate the same or similar parts.
(18) The invention provides a LED driver which comprises two output contacts and an additional contact which enables detection of connection of the LED driver to a LED module. The driver has a normal current regulating mode and an open circuit protection voltage regulating mode. The LED driver is switched from the voltage regulating mode to the current regulating mode in response detection of connection of the LED module. This enables a LED module to be connected to the LED driver while the LED driver remains powered, in particular because it is placed in a voltage regulating mode prior to module connection.
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(20) A resistor divider of a first impedance 321 and a second impedance 322 is provided between the first output contact 310 and the second output contact 311. These impedances define a potential divider. The output of the resistor divider connects to a third contact 312.
(21) A controller 340, in this example in the form of a latch circuit, has two inputs. A first input is from the output voltage of the driver which is fed to a comparator 330 with a hysteresis structure (or a Schmitt trigger). A second input is from the voltage divider 321, 322 which is also fed to a comparator 320 with a hysteresis. An output signal 341 (“disch”, standing for “discharging”) is provided as output from the controller 340. It is used to control the discharge of the output voltage stored on the driver output capacitor 300 as explained below.
(22) The driver provides a regulated output current when driving the LED load/module. A current regulator 344 is shown schematically for this purpose. A voltage regulator 346 is shown for a voltage regulating mode. The latch 340, regulators 344 and 346 and comparators 320 and 330 may be considered together to form part of the overall controller of the LED driver.
(23) When the load is disconnected, the result of the regulated current driving is that the current continues to flow into the capacitor 300 and the comparator 330 detects that the output voltage increases above a first output voltage threshold. The latch circuit 340 is then set so that the output 341 (signal “disch”) is taken to a value “1”. The voltage regulating mode (for open circuit protection) is for regulating the output to a regulation voltage which is lower than the first output voltage threshold. Thus, once an open circuit has been detected based on a high output voltage being reached during current regulation, the mode switches to voltage regulation at a lower voltage.
(24) The actual voltage levels will depend on the load being driven. The high voltage threshold will be higher than the normal forward voltage of the LEDs in the LED module, and the regulation voltage will be lower than that normal forward voltage. The regulation voltage is for example a required power supply voltage for other circuits such as sensors or wireless communication circuits to be powered by the LED driver. Thus, the voltage threshold may be tens or even hundreds of volts, whereas the regulation voltage may be less than 10V.
(25) The voltage regulator 346 monitors the signal “disch” 341 and sets the regulation voltage (by setting a reference provided to the voltage regulator), to a suitable level below the first output voltage threshold, such that the low voltage power supply of the controllers or other circuits can still operate.
(26) When switching from the current regulating mode to the voltage regulating mode (i.e. when the first output voltage threshold is reached) the LED driver discharges the output voltage stored on the capacitor 300 to the regulation voltage. For this purpose, a discharging element 350 such as a current source or dummy load is used to discharge the output capacitor 300. Note the discharging element 350 is an optional feature. It could also be that the LED driver will let the output capacitor leak charge to reach the regulation voltage.
(27) The voltage divider associated with the third contact 312 is for sensing the connection between the LED driver and the LED/LED module. In this embodiment, the correction connection of the LED module would change the voltage division ratio, and if the output of the voltage divider 321, 322 drops below a certain threshold, the output signal “disch” is cleared such that the discharging of the output capacitor 300 stops, and the reference of the voltage controller is sets back to normal. This is in particular in response to the output voltage of the voltage divider, at contact 312, being pulled down to the negative output 311 by the connection to the LED module, as will be apparent from the description below.
(28) The latch thus processes the output voltage at the capacitor as well as the detection voltage relating to connection to the LED module. The latch triggers (e.g. sets) when the high capacitor voltage is detected and triggers (e.g. resets) when the LED module connection is detected.
(29) The circuit needs to be able to detect the insertion of the LED module 301. This is accomplished by the third contact 312, which forms a two-contact connector with the second output contact 311. The second output contact 311 and the third contact 312 are short-circuited when the LED is connected, and open-circuited when the LED module is removed.
(30) In this way, every time the LED module is connected, the LED driver goes through a ramp-up process starting from a low regulated output voltage lower than the LED forward voltage, the LED driver increases its duty cycle and output power gradually so that the outrush current can be eliminated/reduced.
(31) The third contact 312 is thus adapted to associate with different voltages depending on whether or not the LED driver is connected to the LED module. When the LED module is not connected, the contact 312 is at the normal voltage divider output and the voltage division ratio is R.sub.322/(R.sub.322+R.sub.321), and when the LED module is connected, the contact 312 is pulled down to the low voltage rail, connected to the second output contact 311 and the voltage division ratio is zero.
(32) The driver thus has a normal current regulating first mode for driving a LED module. In addition, it has an open circuit protection mode which is a voltage regulating second mode. A LED module can be connected to the LED driver while the LED driver remains powered in this mode. This avoids the need for current limiting elements in series with the LED module, because at the time of connection of the LED module, the driver is in a (low) voltage regulating mode.
(33) When the LED module is removed, the output voltage is higher than a threshold, so the comparator 330 outputs 1, the comparator 320 with an inverter outputs 0, thus the latch 340 outputs 1 “disch”, to discharge the output voltage and control the LED driver to enter voltage regulation mode. After the discharging, the output voltage is lower than the threshold, the comparator 330 outputs 0, but the latch circuit 340 still outputs the previous output which is 1 and keeps the voltage regulation mode. The latch circuit 340 would output zero upon the reset input R changing to 1, meaning the voltage on the third contact 312 is zero which is caused by a correct connection of the LED module. The zero output of the latch circuit would disable the discharging and also control the LED driver to enter the current regulation mode.
(34) The design requires connection to the LED module to form a short between the contacts 311 and 312.
(35) The connector needs to reliably short circuit contacts 311 and 312 when the LED module is plugged in. Furthermore, connection should be made to contact 310 before short-circuiting 311 and 312. This is because as soon as the short circuit is detected, the LED module should be fully ready to receive a regulated current, i.e. the other contact 310 should already be connected.
(36) If a two-contact connector is used, and which can be connected in either order (for example if there are two separate connectors which can be connected in either order), then the connected needs to be in the correct order for the mode switching to take place correctly.
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(38) To ensure a correct connection order, a three contact connector may be used. In this way, the connector itself defines the order in which electrical connections are made.
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(40) Note that in an alternative embodiment (shown in
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(42) This three contact connector provides a safe mechanical structure of the connectors to avoid unintentional or premature short circuiting between the connector 311 and 312. The short circuit between contacts 311 and 312 takes place in the male connector by the last connection of 312 and 312′. Thus, only when both connections 311/311′ and 312/312′ are made will the voltage divider output be pulled down.
(43) This design requires a three pin connector for the LED module, which is not standard. The use of a three contact connector however ensures that the connector can only be joined in one way.
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(45) The same components as in
(46) The contact 310 is split into two contact portions, 310a and 310b (i.e. the first output contact is 310a and there is a new fourth contact 310b). The control logic 340b is modified compared to the latch 340 of
(47) During correct insertion, the third contact 312 first is pulled to the voltage divider output (when 310a and 310b are connected) with a certain value above zero then it is pulled down to the low voltage rail (when 311 and 312 are connected) with a substantial zero voltage.
(48) If the end user inserts the cathode lead wire (LED-) before the anode lead wire (LED+), the “arm-fire” process is missing and the output capacitor 300 is kept at a low voltage. During incorrect insertion, the contact 312 first is pulled to the low voltage (when 311 and 312 are connected) directly and never goes up. At the output of the voltage divider, the voltage is always zero.
(49) Thus, only the correct order of insertion leads to the current regulating mode, without outrush current. This enables a conventional LED module to be used with two separate lead wires instead of requiring replacement with a three contact power adaptor type cable. If connection is in the wrong order, the LED module will not function, and the user will need to disconnect and reconnect in the correct order.
(50) The fourth contact 310b is coupled to the third contact 312 through the top impedance 321 of the voltage divider. The fourth contact 310b is adapted to be coupled to the first output contact 310a upon a correct connection of the LED module to the first contact 310a and before a correct connection of the LED module to the third contact 312. Thus, the intended connection order is to connect 310a and 310b and then to connect 311 and 312.
(51) In this design, the first impedance 321 of the voltage divider is between the third contact 312 and the fourth contact 310b and the second impedance 322 of the voltage divider is between the third contact 312 and the second output contact 311.
(52) The use of a four-contact arrangement enables the connection order to the LED module to be detected, because connection to both output contacts can be detected. In this way, if the connection is in the wrong order the current regulating mode is not initiated, because the output of the voltage divider is always zero and the LED driver is not aware of whether the LED module is or is not correctly connected to receive the current. Thus, the controller is adapted to switch the LED driver to the first mode only for one connection order. Thus, random connection of the LED module can be tolerated.
(53) The logic inside the controller 340b may be implemented by a finite-state machine such as an algorithm in a microcontroller.
(54) For completeness,
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(56) This voltage is supplied to the gate of a FET device 500 and turns it on to draw a predetermined current from the capacitor 300 (
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(58) A potential divider 600, between a reference Vref and ground, sets the voltage to the non-inverting input of a comparator 610. The set voltage depends on the switching state of transistor 620 which sets the lower impedance of the voltage divider to be either one resistor or two resistors in parallel. The comparator 610 has a negative feedback path 630 which regulates the output in dependence on the input provided to the non-inverting input.
(59) Thus, two voltage regulation output are generated, depending on the state of transistor 620, which is controlled by the latch circuit 340.
(60) The examples above enable connection to a standard LED module, either with a standard two pin layout or a three pin connector.
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(62) The connection between the driver and the module is three pins. The shorting between contacts 311 and 312 is implemented in the LED module rather than by the pin connector design.
(63) A third input terminal 312′ is to contact the third contact 312 of the LED driver. A switch 700 is provided to change the voltage associated with the third input terminal 312′ upon an active voltage from the first input terminal 310′.
(64) Thus, if the connection is first made to the first input terminal 310′, the connection provides a control signal to the switch 700 which then immediately implements the shorting of the second and third input terminals 311′ and 312′. This arrangement means connection of the LED module can be tolerated with either terminal making contact first. If the first output contact 310 is connected first, the short circuiting between the second output contact and the third contact is forced by the switch.
(65) If the second output contact 311 is connected first before the first output contact 310, the shorting between the second output contact 311 and the third contact 312 still does not happen until it is forced by the switch when the first output contact 310 makes its connection.
(66) Thus, different connection orders can be tolerated, and the current regulating mode can be established for those different orders, rather than requiring disconnection and reconnection as in the examples above.
(67) The discussion above assumes that the LED module is always connected with the correct polarity. In particular, the mechanical connector designs may ensure that this is always the case. Thus, the protection systems above ensure only that the correct connection order is ensured.
(68) The detection of connections and resulting voltages and currents may also be used to detect the polarity of the connected LED module, and thus prevent the current regulating mode when the LED module is incorrectly connected.
(69) In an alternative embodiment, an Rset interface between the LED driver and the LED module is re-used for detecting the presence of the LED module and make the LED driver switch between normal current mode and open protection mode. This embodiment is shown in
(70) Rset interface is a well known interface for setting the nominal output current of the LED driver. At the LED driver side, besides the positive output contact 310 and negative output contact 311, a third contact 312 is used for connecting to an end of a setting impedance in the LED module, shown as 312′. The other end of the impedance could connect the either of the two input contacts of the LED module, and in this embodiment it connect to the negative input contact 311′. A bias current source injects a bias current Ibias through the third contact 312 and the negative output contact 311. Normally, the LED driver detects the presence and value of the Rset during startup, by detecting the voltage across the contacts 312 and 311. If there is voltage, the voltage is processed by an amplifier AMP and sent to the MCU or IC to determine the set current Iset of the LED driver; if there is no voltage, the MCU or IC would also operate in normal current mode with a default/minimum output current. Note that the setting impedance Rset is a fixed resistor or is once-for-all configured thus is not likely to change in the operation of the LED module. Also, the Rset interface has not be considered as a means for any protection purpose. This Rset interface is quite different from the temperature protection interface based on the above facts, which temperature protection interface has varying impedance during the operation of the LED module.
(71) The embodiment proposes to detect the presence of the LED module and switches between the normal current mode and open protection mode according to the voltage on the third contact 312 (with respective to ground 311) which is to be connected to Rset of the LED module. As shown in
(72) The driver can be configured flexibly how it would react with the absence of the Rset on the third contact: either as the traditional driver that output a default current, or as the proposed embodiment that enters the open protection mode. For example, a maintenance signaling can be sent to the driver indicating that the LED module is to be replaced, and the driver would react as the proposed embodiment thus it is safe when the LED module is hot plugging out and in; after the maintenance, a signaling can be sent to the driver again and request the driver to react in traditional manner: outputting a default/minimum current even if the Rset is not present.
(73) It is noted that the term “contact” is used for the driver output pins and the term “terminal” is used for the LED module input pins. This difference is terminology is to assist in the clarity of the text, but is essentially arbitrary.
(74) 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. A single processor or other unit may fulfill the functions of several items recited in the claims. The mere fact that certain measures are recited in mutually different dependent claims does not indicate that a combination of these measures cannot be used to advantage. A computer program may be stored/distributed on a suitable medium, such as an optical storage medium or a solid-state medium supplied together with or as part of other hardware, but may also be distributed in other forms, such as via the Internet or other wired or wireless telecommunication systems. Any reference signs in the claims should not be construed as limiting the scope.