Flashlight element
11835210 ยท 2023-12-05
Inventors
Cpc classification
F21L4/022
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V23/004
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21L4/027
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F21V29/70
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21L4/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A primary element of a flashlight is provided, incorporating the light source, driver circuitry, positive and negative battery contacts and heat sinking into a single element assembled through standard manufacturing methods on a double-sided metal core printed circuit board substrate. Heat generated by the light source and driver circuit is conducted away through the substrate and may be sunk into a flashlight housing or other mounting structure at the edge of the flashlight element or from top, bottom or both surfaces near the edge. Additional sensors and control functions may be incorporated into the driver circuit to vary the light source drive in response to changes in temperature or light source optical output.
Claims
1. A flashlight element, comprising: a double-sided metal core printed circuit board having a first side and a second side; at least one light emitting diode disposed on the first side; a driver circuit disposed on at least one of said first and second sides and adapted to drive the light emitting diode; a first battery contact disposed on at least one of said first and second sides; a second battery contact disposed on the second side; a light detector disposed on one of said first and second sides and adapted to detect at least a portion of the light emitted by the light emitting diode and to provide a light feedback signal; a light control circuit disposed on at least one of said first and second sides, adapted to receive the light feedback signal and to control the driver circuit so as to maintain the light feedback signal at a predetermined value.
2. A flashlight element, comprising: a double-sided metal core printed circuit board having a first side and a second side; at least one light emitting diode disposed on the first side; a driver circuit disposed on at least one of said first and second sides and adapted to drive the light emitting diode; a first battery contact disposed on at least one of said first and second sides; a second battery contact disposed on the second side; temperature measurement means disposed on at least one of said first and second sides to provide a temperature feedback signal; a temperature control circuit disposed on at least one of said first and second sides, adapted to receive the temperature feedback signal and control the laser driver circuit according to a predetermined function of temperature.
3. A flashlight element, comprising: a double-sided metal core printed circuit board having a first side and a second side; at least one light emitting diode disposed on the first side; a driver circuit disposed on at least one of said first and second sides and adapted to drive the light emitting diode; a first battery contact disposed on at least one of said first and second sides; a second battery contact disposed on the second side; pattern matching means adapted to: detect a pattern of voltage fluctuation between the first and second battery contacts; determine if the pattern of voltage fluctuation matches at least one predetermined voltage fluctuation pattern template; and control the driver circuit according to a predetermined mode of operation associated with the at least one predetermined voltage fluctuation pattern template.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(7) The preferred embodiment 100 of the present invention is depicted in
(8) All components necessary for interfacing with a battery or other power source, providing heat sinking and thermal conduction, and driving the light source are included in flashlight element 100, and may be populated on DSMCPCB 110 using standard automated pick-and-place equipment and processes, including spring contact 150. Assembling the flashlight element using standard printed circuit board (PCB) technology results in improved reliability of production in comparison to prior-art modules requiring hand assembly and multi-step processes. Moreover, use of standard PCB fabrication equipment eliminates the need for special assembly equipment, secondary operations and operations performed by hand. Furthermore, the fully self-contained nature of the flashlight element simplifies the design and implementation of a flashlight incorporating the flashlight element, since it obviates the need for wires or hand-soldering, resulting in reduced manufacturing cost, faster assembly time, and superior reliability.
(9) Because the LED light source is incorporated directly in the Flashlight Element, any need for wires or hand soldering is thereby eliminated. Incorporation of the LED in the flashlight element provides improved performance by eliminating losses in wires that would otherwise be necessary, and improves reliability by eliminating additional solder joints, as well. Additionally, it contributes to ease of manufacturing by eliminating these secondary assembly steps.
(10) Because the DSMCPCB is double-sided, it allows for the ring battery contact geometry to be placed on the first side, second side, or both sides. This enables various flashlight embodiments, in which a mating housing or heatsink may be designed to contact the flashlight element on its first surface, second surface or both, for the purpose of conducting heat away from the flashlight element. Additionally, since the ring contacts on the first and second surfaces are electrically connected, electrical connection to a battery or power supply may be made through the contact on the first surface, second surface, or both. Other configurations are possible, as well. For example, a heatsink or housing may contact ring area 130 on one of the sides for the purpose of transferring heat, while an electrical contact may mate with ring area 130 on the opposing side for the purpose of making an electrical connection to a power supply.
(11) In the preferred embodiment, flashlight element 100 is incorporated into flashlight assembly 200 as illustrated in
(12) In one alternative embodiment, retaining ring 216 and first tube 212 may not be threaded, and retaining ring 216 may be press-fit into first tube 212. In addition to the high-conductivity thermal interface between ring area 130 on the first side of flashlight element 100 and mating surface 224 in first tube 212, a second high-conductivity thermal connection is established between retaining ring 216 and contact ring area 130 on the second side of flashlight element 100, so that heat may be conducted through retaining ring 216 and through the press-fit junction between retaining ring 216 and first tube 212.
(13) In another alternative embodiment, retaining ring 216 and first tube 212 may not be threaded, and retaining ring 216 may be press-fit into first tube 212. In addition to the high-conductivity thermal interface between ring area 130 on the first side of flashlight element 100 and mating surface 224 in first tube 212, a second high-conductivity thermal interface is established between the metal core of DSMCPCB 110 and the inside surface of first tube 212 through the outer periphery of the metal core that is in press-fit contact with tube 212.
(14) In another alternative embodiment, retaining ring 216 may be further adapted with a central cavity configured to enclose and cover driver circuit 140 so as to hide the circuit from view. This configuration also serves to provide a backstop preventing battery 220 from contacting components within the driver circuit, thereby protecting driver circuit 140 in situations in which spring contact 150 is caused to be compressed beyond its normal range, such as occurs when the flashlight is subject to shock or vibration.
(15) In another alternative embodiment, retaining ring 216 is not employed, and flashlight element 100 is retained directly by second tube 218. First tube 212 and second tube 218 are threaded on their mating surfaces such that second tube 218 screws into first tube 212 in the orientation shown in
(16) In yet another alternative embodiment, retaining ring 216 is not employed, and DSCMPCB 110 may be press-fit into first tube 212. In addition to the high-conductivity thermal interface between ring area 130 on the first side of flashlight element 100 and mating surface 224 in first tube 212, a second high-conductivity thermal connection is thereby established between the edge of DSMCPCB 110 and first tube 212, so that heat may be conducted directly through the press-fit junction between the two elements.
(17) In another embodiment, retaining ring 216 is made of a plastic material. In a further embodiment, retaining ring 216 is coated, for example in an anodization process, over at least a portion of its surface.
(18) In each of the aforementioned embodiments, a paste or epoxy having high thermal conductivity, high electrical conductivity, or a combination of both, may be disposed at one or more of the interfaces between the flashlight element and tubes 212 and 218 to improve heat flow and ensure reliable electrical connection.
(19) Most applications use MCPCBs in a manner that assumes that it will be mounted onto a heat sink, and thus heat will flow in a direction normal to the surface of the MCPCB. In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, the DSMCPCB makes ring contact between the MCPCB and a housing or other structure that may carry heat away from the flashlight element. Since both sides of the DSMCPCB contain heat-generating components, heat flow is thus radial from the typically centrally-located heat-generating elements, such as the light source and the drive circuit, out toward the edges of the flashlight element. MCPCBs may be constructed with arbitrary thickness, limited only by the availability of metal bar or sheet stock available for use as the central substrate. Thus, the DSMCPCB may be designed with such thickness as is necessary to support the required heat flow from the heat generating elements. From there, the heat may be conducted away from the flashlight element through either or both of the first and second surfaces, or through the edge of the flashlight element, provided that suitable contact is made with a heat sink or heat-conductive material. In certain applications, the thermal mass of the flashlight element itself may be sufficient to effectively cool heat-generating components, provided that the flashlight is operated, for example, substantially intermittently, and the flashlight element is allowed to cool through normal convection or radiation processes between periods of operation.
(20) In a preferred embodiment of a flashlight 400 incorporating the flashlight element 100, shown schematically in
(21) The specific design topology for the driver circuit depends on various factors, including the number of LED sources and their connection arrangement, the specific characteristics of the LEDs employed in the design, and the number and type of batteries and their connection arrangement. If an alternate power source is used, the design will depend on the specific characteristics of the power supply. Drive circuit topologies include buck, boost, buck-boost, SEPIC, and flyback designs.
(22) In a preferred embodiment, for example, two CR123 batteries are employed in series with approximately six volts at full charge, driving a single white-light LED with a voltage drop of approximately 3.5 volts. A buck regulator provides a constant drive current through the LED.
(23)
(24) Because typical current regulators can operate over a range of input voltages while maintaining a constant current through the load, in this case, the LED light source, the present invention allows additional batteries to be added in series or parallel, up to the maximum input voltage of the drive circuit, to extend the useful operating time before the batteries are exhausted. Non-obvious is the fact that increasing the number of series-connected batteries by a factor of x results in more than x times the useful operating lifetime of the device on a fully-charged set of batteries due to changes in operating efficiency of typical switching current regulators over different input voltage regimes, as well as decreased losses in the batteries.
(25) For example,
(26) Collocating both the LED light source and the drive circuitry on the same heat-conductive flashlight element substrate also enables the incorporation of one or more temperature sensors so that the drive circuit may be designed to adjust the current through the light source as a function of temperature. For example, the drive circuit may decrease the drive current through the LED when the temperature rises above a certain threshold value; or the drive circuit may increase or decrease the drive current to compensate for temperature-related changes in LED efficiency, thereby maintaining constant optical output power or intensity from the LED.
(27) More advanced features may also be integrated into the flashlight element, as well. For example, the flashlight element could be designed to detect single-click, double-click and press-and-hold actuation patterns of the switch and cause the driver to operate in alternate modes, depending on which actuation pattern is detected. To accomplish this, a pattern-matching means could be incorporated into the driver to monitor the voltage supplied to the flashlight element. When it detects fluctuations across the battery contacts, it may try to match the pattern of fluctuations against a set of pattern templates, and if it finds a match, it may put the driver into a mode of operation corresponding to the pattern template that matches. For example, a single-click may indicate that the flashlight should subsequently operate in low-power mode, and a double-click may indicate that it should subsequently operate in high-power mode. Press-and-hold may cause the driver to turn on the LED in the last-indicated power mode. One possible pattern matching means could be a microcontroller programmed to time when the monitored voltage crosses a threshold. A pattern template could then be a set of timing windows in which the voltage is expected to cross the threshold for patterns matching that template.
(28) It should be noted that though the present invention is described herein in the context of a battery-operated flashlight element designed for incorporation in a flashlight design, the same principles could be employed effectively on systems in many other application areas without deviating from the scope of the present invention.