Lighting fixture controller for controlling color temperature and intensity
11470698 · 2022-10-11
Assignee
Inventors
- Yelena N. Davis (Worthington, OH, US)
- Yaser Abdelsamed (Granville, OH, US)
- Ryan D. Meldahl (Newark, OH, US)
- Yan Rodriguez (Alpharetta, GA, US)
Cpc classification
H05B45/60
ELECTRICITY
H05B45/48
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H05B45/60
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A light fixture controller is configured for controlling the color temperature and intensity of a light fixture that includes at least two LED groups. Each LED group includes multiple LEDs configured to produce light at certain color temperatures. The light fixture controller receives a color temperature setting and an intensity setting for the light fixture and generates control signals based on these settings. A first control signal only turns on the first LED group for a first duration of a cycle and a second control signal only turns on the second LED group for a second duration of the cycle. The ratio between the first and second duration is determined based on the color temperature setting. The control signal further includes a dimming control signal for controlling a current flowing through the LED groups based on the intensity setting for the light fixture.
Claims
1. A light fixture controller configured for controlling color temperature, intensity, and light distribution of a light fixture, the light fixture controller comprising: one or more interfaces configured for receiving a color temperature setting, an intensity setting, and a light distribution setting for the light fixture, wherein the light fixture comprises a first light-emitting diode (LED) group, a second LED group, a driver for powering the first LED group and the second LED group, the first LED group comprising at least two portions of a plurality of LEDs configured to produce light at a first color temperature wherein a first portion of the first LED group is located at a first area of the light fixture and a second portion of the first LED group is located at a second area of the light fixture, the second LED group comprising at least two portions of a plurality of LEDs configured to produce light at a second color temperature wherein a first portion of the second LED group is located at the first area of the light fixture and a second portion of the second LED group is located at the second area of the light fixture, and one or more switches located within the light fixture operably connected to the portions of the plurality of LEDs comprising the LED groups; and a microcontroller configured for generating control signals based on the light distribution setting, the color temperature setting, and the intensity setting for the light fixture, wherein the control signals comprise: a first light distribution control signal for controlling an open/closed state of a first switch operably connected to the first portion of the first LED group and a second light distribution control signal for controlling an open/closed state of a second switch operably connected to the first portion of the second LED group, wherein the first light distribution control signal enables the first portion of the first LED groups to receive power from the driver; and the second light distribution control signal enables the second subset portion of the second LED group to receive power from the driver; a first control signal for controlling a first color temperature switch connected in series with the first LED group and a second control signal for controlling a second color temperature switch connected in series with the second LED group, wherein the first control signal turns on the first color temperature switch only for a first duration of an ON/OFF cycle and the second control signal turns on the second color temperature switch only for a second duration of the ON/OFF cycle, wherein the ON/OFF cycle comprises multiple time periods, and during each of the multiple time periods, at least one LED group of the light fixture is set to be on and at least one another LED group of the light fixture is set to be off, and a ratio between the first duration and the second duration is determined based, at least in part, upon the color temperature setting for the light fixture; and a dimming control signal output by the microcontroller to an input of the driver configured for controlling the driver of the light fixture to adjust the intensity of the light fixture by adjusting a current provided to the first LED group and the second LED group based on the intensity setting for the light fixture, wherein the current is proportional to a voltage value of the dimming control signal.
2. The light fixture controller of claim 1, wherein the dimming control signal comprises a 0-10V control signal having a value varying between 0 and 10V.
3. The light fixture controller of claim 1, wherein the first control signal or the second control signal comprises a pulse width modulation (PWM) signal.
4. The light fixture controller of claim 1, wherein the driver of the light fixture is a single-channel driver.
5. The light fixture controller of claim 1, wherein the one or more interfaces comprise at least one of, switches, tactile buttons, break-away PCB tabs or traces, near field communication (NFC)-TAG interfaces, digital wired network communication interfaces, wireless communication interfaces, or optical communication interfaces.
6. A method for controlling color temperature, light distribution, and intensity of a light fixture, comprising: receiving, at a light fixture controller of the light fixture, a color temperature setting, an intensity setting, and a light distribution setting for the light fixture, the light fixture comprising a plurality of LED groups comprised of one or more portions of a plurality of LEDs wherein each portion of the LED group is located at a corresponding area of the light fixture, a driver for powering the plurality of LED groups, each of the plurality of LED groups comprising LEDs configured to produce light at a particular color temperature, and switches operably connected to the portions of the plurality of LEDs comprising the LED groups; determining, by the light fixture controller, an open/closed state of the switches operably connected to the portions of the plurality of LEDs to enable one or more portions of the LED groups to receive power from the driver, wherein the open/closed state of the switches is based on the light distribution setting; determining, by the light fixture controller, an ON/OFF cycle for the plurality of LED groups based on the color temperature setting, wherein the ON/OFF cycle comprises multiple time periods, and during each of the multiple time periods, at least one of the enabled portions of one of the plurality of LED groups is turned ON and the enabled portions of remaining LED groups of the plurality of LED groups are kept OFF, and wherein a ratio between the multiple time periods is determined based on the color temperature setting for the light fixture; generating, by the light fixture controller, a plurality of control signals to control the switches based on the determined open/closed state of the switches and the determined ON/OFF cycle; generating, by the light fixture controller, a dimming control signal configured for controlling the driver of the light fixture to adjust the intensity of the light fixture by adjusting a current provided to the plurality of LED groups based on the intensity setting for the light fixture, wherein the current is proportional to a voltage value of the dimming control signal.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the dimming control signal comprises a 0-10V control signal having a value varying between 0 and 10V.
8. The method of claim 6, wherein each of the plurality of control signals comprises a pulse width modulation (PWM) signal.
9. The method of claim 6, wherein the driver of the light fixture is a single-channel driver.
10. The method of claim 6, wherein the color temperature setting or the intensity setting for the light fixture are received through at least one of a switch, a tactile button, a break-away PCB tab or trace, a near field communication (NFC)-TAG interface, a digital wired network communication interface, a wireless communication interface, or an optical communication interface.
11. A light fixture, comprising: a first lighting element group comprising two or more portions of a first plurality of lighting elements wherein a first portion is located at a first area of the light fixture and a second portion is located at a second area of the light fixture and the portions of the first lighting element group are configured to produce light at a first color temperature; a second lighting element group comprising two or more portions of a second plurality of lighting elements wherein a first portion is located at the first area of the light fixture and a second portion is located at the second area of the light fixture and the portions of the second lighting element group are configured to produce light at a second color temperature; a plurality of switches operably connected to the portions of the lighting element groups; a driver; and a light fixture controller configured for performing operations for controlling color temperature, light distribution, and intensity of the light fixture, the light fixture controller comprising: one or more interfaces configured for receiving at least a color temperature setting, an intensity setting, and a light distribution setting for the light fixture; and a microcontroller configured for generating control signals based, at least in part, upon the color temperature setting, and the light distribution setting for the light fixture, wherein the control signals comprise a first control signal, a second control signal, a third control signal, and a fourth control signal, wherein: the first control signal controls a first switch connected to the first portion of the first lighting element group to select the first portion of the first lighting element group to receive current provided by the driver based on the light distribution setting and based on an ON/OFF cycle, the second control signal controls a second switch connected to the first portion of the second lighting element group to select the first portion of the second lighting element group to receive current provided by the driver based on the light distribution setting and based the ON/OFF cycle, the third control signal controls a third switch connected to the second portion of the first lighting element group so the second portion of the first lighting element group remains off, and the fourth control signal controls a fourth switch connected to the second portion of the second lighting element group so that the second portion of the second lighting element group remains off; the first control signal turns on the first switch only for a first duration of the ON/OFF cycle and the second control signal turns on the second switch only for a second duration of the ON/OFF cycle, wherein the ON/OFF cycle comprises multiple time periods, and during each of the multiple time periods, one of the first lighting element group or the second element group of the light fixture is set to be on and the other is set to be off; and a ratio between the first duration and the second duration is determined based, at least in part, upon the color temperature setting for the light fixture.
12. The light fixture of claim 11, wherein the control signals further comprise a dimming control signal configured for controlling the driver of the light fixture to adjust a current flowing through both the first lighting element group and the second lighting element group based on the intensity setting for the light fixture.
13. The light fixture of claim 12, wherein the driver is a single-channel driver.
14. The light fixture of claim 13, wherein the dimming control signal comprises a 0-10V control signal having a value varying between 0 and 10V.
15. The light fixture of claim 11, wherein the first control signal or the second control signal comprises a pulse width modulation (PWM) signal.
16. The light fixture of claim 11, wherein a lighting element is a light-emitting diode (LED) or an organic light-emitting diode (OLED).
17. The light fixture of claim 11, wherein the one or more interfaces comprise at least one of, switches, tactile buttons, break-away PCB tabs or traces, near field communication (NFC)-TAG interfaces, digital wired network communication interfaces, wireless communication interfaces, or optical communication interfaces.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Features, embodiments, and advantages of the present disclosure are better understood when the following Detailed Description is read with reference to the accompanying drawings, where:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(11) Briefly described, the present disclosure generally relates to a controller that is configured for controlling multiple light-emitting diode (LED) groups of a light fixture with a single-channel driver to produce different color temperatures and intensities. Based on a color temperature setting, the controller can control the flow of the output current of the driver through each of the LED groups so that the light fixture produces light with a color temperature that matches the color temperature setting of the controller. In addition, the controller further controls the current flowing through the groups of LEDs to control the intensity of the light fixture based on an intensity setting at the controller.
(12) In some configurations, a controller is configured to control multiple color temperature switches in order to control the color temperature of the light fixture. Each color temperature switch is configured to control the current flow of the corresponding LED group. For example, the controller can control the color temperature switches so that at a given time, only a first LED group is e ON while the remaining LED groups are OFF and, at another time, only a second LED group is ON while the remaining LED groups are OFF. The time duration when the first LED group is ON and the time duration when the second LED group is ON determine the resulting color temperature of the light fixture. As such, by controlling the current flow through each of the LED groups, the controller can control the color temperature of the light fixture to match the color temperature setting of the controller.
(13) To control the intensity of the light fixture, in one configuration, the controller provides a dimming control input to the driver of the light fixture, such as a 0-10V dimming control input. The dimming control input can cause the driver to adjust the current output by the driver and flowing through the LED groups thereby adjusting the intensity of the light fixture. In another configuration, the LED groups of the light fixture can each be connected to one or more intensity switches that control the ON/OFF state of a portion of LEDs in each LED group. The controller can thus control the intensity of the light fixture by controlling the number of LEDs in an LED group that are ON via the intensity switches. Similarly, the controller can also control other aspects of the light fixture, such as the light pattern, light distribution or light direction by controlling these intensity switches.
(14) The controller can be pre-set or programmed through various interfaces such as switches, tactile buttons, break-away PCB tabs or traces. The controller can also be controlled by advanced features such as digital wired network communication interfaces, wireless communication interfaces, optical communication interfaces, an OEM “push-on-programmer” or a wireless NFC-TAG interface. External control or programming interface devices could be made through cell phones, computer or lighting controller interfaces, or other OEM designed devices.
(15) By using the controller presented herein, different outputs that are traditionally provided by different light fixtures, such as different color temperatures, intensities, light patterns, concentrations, and so on, can be provided by a single light fixture. Further, the controller presented herein does not require a special driver to achieve these multiple outputs of the light fixture. Rather, a single-channel off-the-shelf driver can be used in the light fixture and controlled by the controller.
(16) Referring now to the figures,
(17) In some configurations, different LED groups 104 have different color temperatures. In an example where the LED groups 104 have two LED groups such as LED group 104A and LED group 104B, LED group 104A can be configured to produce light with a color temperature of 5000K and LED group 104B can be configured to produce light with a color temperature of 2700K. Color temperatures of 5000K and above are generally considered “cool white”, and color temperatures between 2000K-3000K are generally considered “warm white.” By controlling the ON/OFF cycles of LED group 104A and LED group 104B, different color temperatures of the light fixture 100 can be achieved.
(18) To control the ON/OFF state of the LED groups 104, the light fixture 100 shown in
(19) The light fixture 100 can further include a controller 108 for controlling various aspects of the light fixture 100, such as the color temperature, the intensity, light pattern, light distribution, light direction and so on. In one configuration, the controller 108 is a microcontroller-based device that is compatible with off-the-shelf LED drivers to add various functionalities to the light fixture 100. The controller circuitry can be integrated on an LED light engine board or on a stand-alone printed circuit board (PCB) (not shown in
(20) The controller 108 can be configured to accept various control inputs, such as a color temperature control 112 and an intensity control 114. The color temperature control 112 can specify a color temperature setting so that the controller 108 can control the light fixture 100 to produce light with a color temperature that matches the color temperature setting. Similarly, the intensity control 114 can specify an intensity setting so that the controller 108 can control the light fixture 100 to produce light with an intensity that matches the intensity setting. In one example, the controller 108 can be pre-set or programmed with the intensity and color temperature settings or other settings through various interfaces, such as slide switches or PCB jumpers. Detailed examples of the interfaces that can be utilized to set or program the settings of the controller 108 are provided below with regard to
(21) In the example shown in
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(23) To achieve the color temperature specified in the color temperature setting, the controller 108 determines an ON/OFF cycle. At a given duration of the cycle, the controller 108 can control one of the LED groups 104 to be ON while the remaining LED groups 104 are kept OFF. At another duration of the cycle, another LED group can be set ON while the remaining LED groups are kept OFF. By controlling the ON/OFF cycle of the LED groups, the controller 108 can control the light fixture 100 to produce light at a certain color temperature. To change the color temperature of the light fixture 100, the controller 108 can adjust the ON/OFF cycle to change the time duration for the individual LED group to be in an ON state. Because the switches 106 are utilized here to control the color temperature of the light fixture 100, these switches are also referred to herein as “color temperature switches 106.” Additional details regarding the operations of the light fixture 100 are provided below with regard to
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(26) It should be understood that while the examples in
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(28) Different from the light fixture 100 shown in
(29) The controller 308 of the light fixture 300 is also similar to the controller 108 of the light fixture 100 shown in
(30) Because the intensity of the light fixture 300 can be controlled using the intensity switches, the dimming control signal provided by the controller to the LED driver can be eliminated as shown in
(31) It should be understood that while
(32) It should be further understood that while the above examples use three intensity switches to control the intensity of the light fixture 300 at 60%, 80%, and 100% intensities, more or fewer than three intensity switches can be added to each LED group at other locations to control the intensity of the light fixture 300 to be at any intensity values, such as 10%, 20%, 50%, and so on.
(33) To control the color temperature of the light fixture 300 shown in
(34) In another configuration, a separate color temperate switch (not shown in
(35) In the example shown in
(36) In addition to controlling the intensity of the light fixture 300, the intensity switches shown in
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(40) As discussed above, in order for the controller to control the color temperature, intensity and other properties of the light fixture, the controller can be programmed with settings for these varies properties of the light fixture through various interfaces.
(41) The middle figure of
(42) The left figure of
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(44) In one example, the controller can be programmed with the proper firmware and the NFC programmed settings can be set to a default value, such as 50% of intensity. When installing the light fixture, an installer can scan the QR code to obtain the information about the light fixture and the controller. The installer can further use a phone app to program the NFC TAG to set the light fixture at a specific color temperature or intensity level. By implementing the interface device in this way, no special tools are required to program the controller. Further, the information needed for configuring the controller is readily available by scanning the QR code. As a result, a single light fixture can be utilized to provide multiple light outputs which are traditionally provided by multiple light fixtures.
(45) It should be understood that the example interfaces shown in
(46) It should be further understood that the controller presented herein can be adapted with additional functionality such as wireless controls, expanded light engine configurations, communications interfaces, integrated sensors, alternate means of interfacing with the controller (human interface devices), etc.
GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS
(47) The color temperatures, intensities, number of LED groups, number and arrangements of LEDs in an LED group, and currents used in the above examples are exemplary. Other implementations may use different values, numbers, or arrangements and may use other types of lighting elements. The fixture may be any type of a fixture, including a linear fixture, a downlight, or a flush mount fixture. The LEDs of the different LED groups may be arranged so that the LEDs from different groups are spatially interspersed in the fixture or may be arranged so that LEDs from different groups are separated in the fixture. Other light characteristics other than color temperature and intensity may also be changed or controlled.
(48) A switch may use any type of component or combination of components to provide the described states or switching functions. A switch may include any type of mechanical, electrical, or software switch and a switch may be controlled or set directly or indirectly. A switch may be controlled by a user or by another component that is either part of the fixture or remote from the fixture.
(49) Although the foregoing describes exemplary implementations, other implementations are possible. It will be appreciated that those skilled in the art, upon attaining an understanding of the foregoing, may readily produce alterations to, variations of, and equivalents to the described aspects. Accordingly, it should be understood that the present disclosure has been presented for purposes of example rather than limitation and does not preclude inclusion of such modifications, variations, and/or additions to the present subject matter as would be readily apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art.
(50) Unless specifically stated otherwise, it is appreciated that throughout this specification discussions utilizing terms such as “processing,” “computing,” “calculating,” “determining,” and “identifying” or the like refer to actions or processes of a computing device, such as one or more computers or a similar electronic computing device or devices, that manipulate or transform data represented as physical electronic or magnetic quantities within memories, registers, or other information storage devices, transmission devices, or display devices of the computing platform.
(51) The use of “adapted to” or “configured to” herein is meant as an open and inclusive language that does not foreclose devices adapted to or configured to perform additional tasks or steps. Additionally, the use of “based on” is meant to be open and inclusive, in that a process, step, calculation, or other action “based on” one or more recited conditions or values may, in practice, be based on additional conditions or values beyond those recited. Headings, lists, and numbering included herein are for ease of explanation only and are not meant to be limiting.