Single optic LED venue lighting fixture
10738990 ยท 2020-08-11
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F21V5/045
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/83
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V15/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V7/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/59
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21W2131/105
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21Y2115/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/56
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V31/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/673
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/51
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V7/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V23/045
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F21V1/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/56
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/58
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V31/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V5/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/71
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/51
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
An outdoor area LED lighting system including: a housing containing a large array of LEDs mounted to an aluminum direct thermal path printed circuit board and a single lens. The large array of LEDs are capable of producing light rays directed through the single lens to produce a beam of light to illuminate the outdoor area. The single lens is preferably a Fresnel lens. The housing is preferably capable of being sealed in a weather-tight manner. A second housing may at least partially surround the first housing such that at least one air passage is provided between the first housing and the second housing. A heat sink including a heat block in thermal communication with a plurality of heat tubes and fin assemblies may be in partial thermal contact with the LED module and in fluid communication with the at least one air passage. At least one fan may be provided in or in fluid communication with said at least one air passage to cool the heat sink. A digital interface may connect the LED module to a host computer to monitor and track information and trending for statistical process control.
Claims
1. A single optic LED venue lighting fixture, comprising: a first housing including an LED module having an input power of at least 450 watts and a first lens; said first housing including a reflector; said first housing being capable of being sealed in a weather-tight manner; a heat block in thermal contact with said LED module, said heat block including a heat tube in thermal communication with said heat block; said heat tube in thermal communication with at least one heat fin; a second housing which provides an air passage adapted for receiving a flow of ambient air and which allows at least a portion of said flow of ambient air over said at least one heat fin; said LED lighting system being configured to allow mechanical connection to a support.
2. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 1 further including a fan.
3. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 1 wherein at least one heat fin forms said second housing.
4. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 1 further including a fan in fluid communication with said air passage; said fan adapted for drawing said flow of ambient air into said air passage.
5. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 4 wherein said LED module includes a plurality of LEDs mounted on a printed circuit board.
6. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 1 wherein said heat tube includes a coolant liquid.
7. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 1 wherein said first lens is glass.
8. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 1 wherein said reflector forms at least a segment of said first housing.
9. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 1 further including a host computer wherein a digital interface connects said host computer to said LED module.
10. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 1 further including a visor.
11. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 1 wherein said LED module is a chip-on-board type module.
12. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 1 wherein said LED module is divided into a plurality of independently dimmable electrical channels.
13. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 1 further including multiple reflectors.
14. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 1 wherein said LED module is in electrical communication with a switch mode power supply.
15. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 14 wherein said switch mode power supply is located remote from said LED module.
16. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 1 further including a digital dimming interface.
17. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 16 wherein said digital dimming interface communicates using Ethernet.
18. The single optic LED venue lighting fixture of claim 16 wherein said digital dimming interface communicates using Wifi.
19. A single optic LED venue lighting fixture, comprising: a first housing including an LED module having an input power of at least 450 watts and a first lens; said first housing including a reflector; said first housing being capable of being sealed in a weather-tight manner; a heat block in thermal contact with said LED module, said heat block including a heat tube in thermal communication with said heat block; said heat tube in thermal communication with at least one heat fin; a second housing which provides an air passage adapted for receiving ambient air and which allows said ambient air in thermal communication with said at least one heat fin; wherein said at least one heat fin forms said second housing; said LED lighting system being configured to allow mechanical connection to a support.
20. A single optic LED venue lighting fixture, comprising: a first housing including an LED module having an input power of at least 450 watts and a first lens; said first housing including a reflector; said first housing being capable of being sealed in a weather-tight manner; a heat block in thermal contact with said LED module, said heat block including a heat tube in thermal communication with said heat block; said heat tube in thermal communication with at least one heat fin; a second housing which provides an air passage adapted for receiving ambient air and which allows a flow of said ambient air over said at least one heat fin; wherein said at least one heat fin forms said second housing; a fan; said LED lighting system being configured to allow mechanical connection to a support.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
(15)
(16)
(17)
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(18) Before explaining the present invention in detail, it is important to understand that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of the construction illustrated and the steps described herein. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or carried out in a variety of ways. It is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology employed herein is for the purpose of description and not of limitation.
(19) Referring now to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals indicate the same parts throughout the several views, one preferred embodiment of a light emitting diode based venue light 102 is shown in its general environment in
(20) For purposes of the present invention, the terms fixture, luminaire, and head are used interchangeably to refer to a single lighting instrument, such as fixture 102. Turning to
(21) With reference to
(22) Turning next to
(23) Heat sink 406 includes heat block 422 which provides a mounting surface for module 402 and receives a plurality of heat tubes 408. Heat tubes 408 conduct heat produced by module 402 to fin assemblies 410 which are located in airway 420 distributed about the periphery of reflector 414. It is a feature of the fixture 102 of the present disclosure to include a two-part housing. The first part housing 440 of the two-part housing includes LED module 402, lens 404, reflector 414 (which may form a segment of first part housing 440), and Fresnel lens 204 all sealed by gasket 418 compressed by screws 416. In certain embodiments, the heat block 406 may be at least partially within first part housing 440. It shall be understood by one skilled in the art that first part housing 440 may be sealed in a variety of suitable ways, including adhesive, mating threads between reflector 414 and flange 302 (or Fresnel lens 204), interlocking tabs, rivets, or the like. A second part housing 450 includes outer housing 202, typically heat block 406, heat tubes 408, fin assemblies 410 and fan assembly 412. An airway or air passage 420 is formed between first part housing 440 and second part housing 450. Fan 412 draws air into airways 420, through fin assemblies 410, and discharges the heated air out the back of fixture 420, thus providing cooling of fixture 102.
(24) The geometry of first part housing 440 and second part housing 450 may be varied as desired or required for design and/or application purposes. For example, and without limitation, first part housing 440 and second part housing 450 may be conical or frusto-conical as depicted in
(25) In one alternate embodiment, fan 412 may be reversible so as to reverse the flow of air within airways 420. The purpose of this is to be able to clear any type of clog that may have formed such as storm debris, bird nests, water, or even ice which may form in the winter.
(26) With reference to
(27) Shutter 424 is preferably coated on one surface 426 with reflective material similar to that coating the surfaces of the interior of reflector 414 such that when shutter 424 is in the open position, as depicted in
(28) In the embodiment depicted in
(29) In a preferred arrangement, shutter 424 would be closed (
(30) In an alternate embodiment, shutter 424 could be configured as an aperture such as a diaphragm shutter found in a camera lens, for example. Preferably, shutter 424 is positioned within the sealed first part housing 440 within the interior 430 of reflector 414 but could alternatively be positioned outside or on top of lens 204 such as in a basic embodiment. Shutter 424 could even be a leaf shutter manually positioned between an open and closed position.
(31) With reference to
(32) With outdoor stadiums, air carried by duct 602 could be collected from large groups of lights and delivered to the sidelines to warm player benches in cold weather. In warm weather, the heated air would simply be discharged upwards and away from spectators.
(33) In another preferred embodiment, rather than using a COB module, the LED module of the inventive luminaire employs a large, dense array of surface mount light emitting diodes 700 as shown in
(34) It should be noted that in this embodiment, board 700 is laid out such that the number of LEDs contributing light are far fewer at the top 720 than at bottom 722. Since the light is inverted as it passes through the Fresnel lens, when the fixture is pointed at the field, there will be more LEDs contributing light incident at the furthest point than at closer points, thus overcoming the inverse square falloff of light intensity typical of prior art fixtures.
(35) Since the fixtures 102 are typically mounted as depicted in
(36) In an alternate arrangement, the array may use LEDs of different wattages so as to provide increased intensity areas. This may eliminate perceived dark areas or shadows as may be necessary or desired.
(37) Additionally and/or alternatively, LEDs 702 may be grouped together in a plurality of separate electrical channels. This provides benefits in redundancy and other benefits. For example, without limitation, the different channels may be independently dimmed. A preferred arrangement would include at least two dimming channels. The preferred arrangement would include one driver for each channel and would each independently operate as discussed below with regard to
(38) It should be understood by one of skill in the art that the asymmetrical design of
(39)
(40) Turning to
(41) As is well known in the art, parallel arrangements of LEDs do not load share well without ballasting. While variations in forward voltage can cause a single string to draw too much current, a larger problem is that the forward voltage falls as an LED warms up. Thus, if one string is warmer than its companion strings, the forward voltage of the string will fall causing it to draw more current at the expense of current flowing through the other strings. More current will cause the string to get hotter still causing the forward voltage to drop even more, and so the process continues. Ballasting radically reduces the positive-feedback between current hogging and thermal runaway. Thus each string includes a ballast resistor 704. This arrangement is shown schematically in
(42) To illuminate the LEDs 702, positive electrical power is applied at terminal 710 and negative power at 712. In a preferred embodiment, the power applied at terminals 710 and 712 will be current controlled and deliver approximately 23 amps at maximum brightness. LEDs 702 are rated at one watt per device. While the LEDs 702 of board 700 are thus capable of operating collectively at 1188 watts, in the preferred embodiment it is contemplated that board 700 will be operated at 1000 watts, thus operating each string 802 at roughly 234 milliamps.
(43) As stated previously, the proper method for driving LEDs is through current, rather than voltage, control. One scheme for properly driving the array of
(44) When a current is flowing through transistor 906 a voltage is developed across resistor 908. In one preferred embodiment, resistor 916 and resistor 918 are selected to provide a gain of ten. Thus, by way of example and not limitation, if 20 amps of electrical current is flowing through resistor 908, the output of amplifier 910 would be four volts. If the voltage at input 914 is less than four volts, the output of amplifier 912 will move towards its minus rail, thus reducing the current flowing through transistor 906. If the voltage at input 914 is greater than four volts, the output of amplifier 912 will move towards its positive rail, thus increasing the current flowing through transistor 906. Accordingly, with an input of four volts, circuit 900 will regulate the LED current at 20 amps. It should be noted that amplifier 912 could be used as a straight comparator, but by reducing the gain to 100 with resistors 920 and 922, the propensity of the circuit to oscillate or ring can be reduced. Optionally, capacitor 924 can be used to filter the output of amplifier 912 and thus limit the slew rate of its output to reduce overshoot and noise.
(45) Another circuit which could be used to control the current through the LED array is shown in
(46) As will be apparent to one skilled in the art, the choice of using a linear circuit such as circuit 900 of
(47) As will be apparent to one skilled in the art, the present invention can incorporate an asymmetric array of LEDs to compensate for the inverse square fall off nature of light. This particular problem arises when a light source is aimed such that the light beams strike the target at an angle rather than straight-on. It should be noted that by passing the light generated by the light emitting diodes through a single lens, the asymmetric nature of the light can be preserved at the target location of the fixture. To achieve a like result from an array of LEDs which were individually lensed would require the array to employ many different lenses to provide varying beam sizes to achieve even lighting over the lit area.
(48) The precise number of fixtures required for a particular venue will depend on a number of factors beyond just light levels. For example, the set back of the poles 104 (
(49) It should also be noted that the present invention is driven by DC electrical power at approximately 46-48 volts. In a large stadium where three phase power is available, it may be advantageous to select three phase transformers that, when rectified with a six diode bridge, will produce approximately 46-48 volts DC and produce the appropriate power in-bulk for an entire array of fixtures for a single pole. Where three phase power is not readily available, or in installations where the total harmonic distortion of current taken from the power utility is of concern, it may be more practical to use a power supply which takes line voltage in and delivers 46-48 volts DC out. Such power supplies capable of delivering 1000 watts of power are well known in the art and readily available.
(50) In one alternate preferred embodiment where three-phase power is available, a transformer may be included to provide ballasting effect. With reference to
(51) Transformer 1312 inherently current limits. This is because the inductance of the winding in light of the operating frequency limits the output current of the transformer. The result being a transformer 1310 that provides the requisite power in-bulk for an entire array of fixtures for a single pole, or for a single fixture. As will be apparent to one skilled in the art, the circuit of
(52) In a preferred embodiment, as depicted in
(53) Digital interface 1410 allows the collection of data at host computer 1412 so that useful trends may be observed, in what may be known in other contexts as Statistical Process Control. The host computer 1412 preferably includes software that keeps track of the operating conditions/trends of the lighting fixtures 1414. Keeping track of trends allows identification of failing systems before they become a larger problem or lead to fixture or system failure. For example, and not limitation, in a known temperature condition, such as 75 F., the software in the host computer may determine over time that the fan in the lighting fixtures has a normal operating range of a certain CFM (cubic feet per minute). The software in the host computer may additionally be programmed to detect when the CFM of the fan in one or more of the individually lighting fixtures is trending downward in the same (temperature) conditions. It can then alert an operator that maintenance of the lighting fixture(s) may be required before the fan or fans fail. As a result, the fan or fans may be either fixed or replaced before it/they fail which may in turn avoid failure of the entire LED array in the fixture. Thus, failure of a fixture during an event is avoided and costly repairs or replacement of entire fixtures can likewise be avoided. It should be understood that the specific example pertaining to the fan is for exemplification purposes only and that other operating conditions/data is contemplated and may be identified and tracked for trends as would be apparent to one of skill in the art (such as the ballast transformer 1310 of
(54) As will be apparent to one skilled in the art, the inventive luminaire could also find broad use in architectural lighting. It should be noted that the asymmetric array of LEDs used to overcome inverse square fall off could be exaggerated to improve the look of the light at extreme angles of incidence as commonly found in building washes.
(55) Finally, while preferred embodiments of the present invention have been described as employing a plastic Fresnel lens, the invention is not so limited. Obviously a glass lens could be employed to achieve identical results or the invention could be readily modified to use multiple lenses.
(56) Thus, the present invention is well adapted to carry out the objects and attain the ends and advantages mentioned above as well as those inherent therein. While presently preferred embodiments have been described for purposes of this disclosure, numerous changes and modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Such changes and modifications are encompassed within the spirit of this invention.