WO1999014990A1 - Floating driver having common emitter drive stage - Google Patents

Floating driver having common emitter drive stage Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1999014990A1
WO1999014990A1 PCT/US1998/019445 US9819445W WO9914990A1 WO 1999014990 A1 WO1999014990 A1 WO 1999014990A1 US 9819445 W US9819445 W US 9819445W WO 9914990 A1 WO9914990 A1 WO 9914990A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
timer
transistor
driver
output
common
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1998/019445
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
David Pacholok
Original Assignee
Everbrite, Inc.
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Everbrite, Inc. filed Critical Everbrite, Inc.
Priority to AU22469/99A priority Critical patent/AU2246999A/en
Publication of WO1999014990A1 publication Critical patent/WO1999014990A1/en

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B41/00Circuit arrangements or apparatus for igniting or operating discharge lamps
    • H05B41/14Circuit arrangements
    • H05B41/26Circuit arrangements in which the lamp is fed by power derived from dc by means of a converter, e.g. by high-voltage dc
    • H05B41/28Circuit arrangements in which the lamp is fed by power derived from dc by means of a converter, e.g. by high-voltage dc using static converters
    • H05B41/282Circuit arrangements in which the lamp is fed by power derived from dc by means of a converter, e.g. by high-voltage dc using static converters with semiconductor devices
    • H05B41/2825Circuit arrangements in which the lamp is fed by power derived from dc by means of a converter, e.g. by high-voltage dc using static converters with semiconductor devices by means of a bridge converter in the final stage
    • H05B41/2828Circuit arrangements in which the lamp is fed by power derived from dc by means of a converter, e.g. by high-voltage dc using static converters with semiconductor devices by means of a bridge converter in the final stage using control circuits for the switching elements

Definitions

  • the present invention comprises a power supply that is particularly suitable for gas discharge lamps. More particularly, the present invention comprises a floating high side driver with a common emitter drive stage for providing power to a gas discharge lamp.
  • the power supply according to the present invention is self-oscillating, and is capable of switching high voltages without using high power devices.
  • Gas discharge lamps are highly efficient sources of light energy.
  • Gas discharge lamps are typically formed of gas filled vessels having electrodes. In order to power a gas discharge lamp, a high voltage is applied across electrodes at a high frequency. Gases within the tube become ionized as they are excited by high energy radiation. Light output of the gas output lamp is thus directly related to the input power signal characteristics.
  • the driver for a gas discharge lamp includes a timer which has an output that varies from a high state to a low state, and a pin electrically connected to a common line.
  • the driver also includes a pair of transistors electrically connected to the timer output in a half-bridge complimentary common-emitter configuration.
  • the common node is electrically connected between the two transistors and electrically connected in circuit to an output transformer that drives a load, such as a gas discharge lamp.
  • An electrical conduit connects the common node with the common line such that the potential on the common line is substantially the same as the potential on the common node.
  • the present invention also includes a source of DC power, whereby the output of the timer going to a high state turns on the first transistor to apply a positive DC voltage to the transformer and to the common line.
  • the timer output goes to a low state, the timer output turns off the first transistor and turns on the second transistor to apply a low state signal to the transformer and to the common line, electrically connected to the timer.
  • the present invention may also include a blocking diode and a bootstrap capacitor electrically connected in circuit between the blocking diode and the common line.
  • the circuit is comprised of an integrated timer device, such as a 555 timer, two discrete bipolar power transistors, a blocking diode and additional resistors and capacitors as described herein.
  • an integrated timer device such as a 555 timer, two discrete bipolar power transistors, a blocking diode and additional resistors and capacitors as described herein.
  • the present invention is preferably used to provide high side and low side drive, it may also be used with a separate low side driver.
  • the present invention enables a push-pull drive scheme to be used without crossover, while still allowing the transistors to be driven higher or lower than the power rails without using high voltage devices.
  • FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of a circuit that incorporates the present invention.
  • the inventive matter herein employs a low cost, low voltage oscillator Ul, such as the familiar 555 timer or a CMOS gate type oscillator and a complementary pair of
  • Bipolar transistors or metal-oxide-semiconductor fold effect transistors Ql and Q2.
  • the emitter terminals of both the PNP and NPN devices Q2 and Ql, respectively are operationally connected together and further connected to the common or ground terminal GND of the low voltage oscillator.
  • both the PNP and the NPN devices require alternate floating drive, the NPN requiring a (+) current and the PNP requiring a (-) current alternating on opposite half cycles of the inverter output frequency. Both of these currents are referenced to the common floating ground; that is, the junction 10 of transistors Ql and Q2 emitters which is the output of the half bridge and "bounces" from ground to the full supply voltage as described above.
  • transistor Q2 When transistor Q2 is on, current flows through resistor R8, transistor Q3, and diode Dl into capacitor Cl and returns to ground by jumper J2 and transistor Q2. This action charges capacitor Cl every 1/2 cycle of inverter operation, maintaining a voltage substantially identical to the supply voltage across capacitor Cl, which provides power for oscillator Ul, the 555 oscillator.
  • transistor Ql When transistor Ql is turned on during opposite 1/2 cycles, the voltage at the cathode of diode Dl rises to essentially twice the supply voltage and diode Dl is thereby turned off, while a voltage equal to the supply voltage still appears across capacitor Cl which provides uninterrupted power for oscillator Ul.
  • Oscillator Ul provides 50 percent duty unipolar square waves at pin 3 whose frequency is determined by resistors Rl, R2 and R3 and capacitor C2 according to standard time constant calculations. This unipolar output has an average of 1/2 the capacitor Cl voltage at its 50 percent duty cycle.
  • capacitor C3 and resistor R4 Since the time constant of capacitor C3 and resistor R4 is long compared to the oscillator period, and since the parallel-connected base emitter junctions of transistor Ql and transistor Q2 allow current flow in both directions, a DC voltage of 1/2 the capacitor Cl voltage appears across capacitor C3, with the side connected to pin 3 being positive.
  • pin 3 goes high, a (+) current flows through capacitor C3, resistor R4 and the base-emitter junction of transistor Ql, turning it on.
  • pin 3 drops low energy stored in capacitor C3 produces a (-) current flow through resistor R4 and the base-emitter junction of transistor Q2 , turning it on.
  • Resistor R4 also serves to limit current through the base-emitter junctions of both transistors.
  • each transistor During the minority carrier storage time of each transistor, the base- emitter voltage of each is maintained near its respective on-state voltage until the carriers recombine and it turns off; this effectively prevents the opposite part from being turned on until its partner is completely off, thus preventing cross conduction or "shoot through” current in transistors Ql and Q2.
  • Capacitors C5, C6 and C7 are high frequency bypass capacitors.
  • Inductors LI and L2 , and capacitors C8 and C9 form a Pi-L low pass network for electromagnetic interference (EMI) control
  • capacitor C4 resonates the transformer inductance during start-up of the lamp load to provide maximum starting voltage and during lamp running to provide typical series resonant inverter ZIS to minimize switching losses in transistors Ql and Q2, and increase efficiency.
  • Resistor R5 provides a leakage path to charge capacitor Cl to start oscillation of oscillator Ul when power is first applied; once the bootstrap charging action of capacitor Cl takes place, resistor R5 serves no additional purpose.
  • Resistor R8 limits peak currents through diode Dl and transistor Q3 and isolates switching noise from transistors Ql and Q2 from the oscillator circuit Ul.
  • Transistor Q3 and resistors R6 and R7 provide a means of remote control of inverter on/off and dimming functions. If pin CT is left open or pulled to the input supply voltage, transistor Q3 is off and no bootstrap power can be applied to capacitor Cl and oscillator Ul, and the inverter and lamp load are off. When pin CT is pulled low, however, transistor Q3 is turned on which allows normal inverter operation. As the inverter may be turned on and off in this way hundreds of times per second, a pulse width modulated square wave in this frequency range may be applied to this CT pin to effect dimming of the lamp load over a wide range.
  • the human eye integrates the average light output of a source that is on, for example, 3 milliseconds (ms) and off 7 ms as being only 3/10 as bright as a source that is on all the time; no flicker is perceived.
  • the CT pins of each ballast may be connected together to a common switch to ground, which will turn all lamps on and off simultaneously or to a common low frequency PWM source (see above) to provide substantially equal dimming of all lamps without the running of individual unsightly and expensive power wires for each ballast and dimmer or switch.
  • a common low frequency PWM source see above
  • all ballast/lamp assemblies are connected to the input power supply at all times, by connecting the CT terminal to ground for full light output and opening the CT terminal by the same switch to turn the lamp desired completely off, or even locally controlled in brightness with a local PWM source.
  • this local ballast/lamp switch is thrown to the "master dim" position, thereby connecting the CT pin to the master dim line, the master dimmer will control the brightness of that lamp.

Abstract

A driver for a gas discharge lamp is claimed. The driver comprises a timer having an output that varies from a high state to a low state and has a pin connected to a common line. A first and a second transistor is electrically connected to the timer output in a half-bridge complimentary common-emitter configuration. A common node is disposed between the first and second transistors, connecting in circuit to an output transformer that drives a lamp. An electrical conduit is connected between the common node and the common line such that the potential of the common line is substantially the same as the potential at the common node. The present invention also includes a source of DC power whereby the output of the timer going to a high state turns on the first transistor to apply a positive DC voltage to the transformer and to the common line, and whereby the output going to a low state line, and whereby the timer output going to a low state turns off the first transistor and turns on the second transistor to apply a low state signal to the transformer and to the common line connected to the timer.

Description

FLOATING DRIVER HAVING COMMON EMITTER DRIVE STAGE
This application claims priority of United States provisional patent application number 60/059,240, filed on September 18, 1997.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention comprises a power supply that is particularly suitable for gas discharge lamps. More particularly, the present invention comprises a floating high side driver with a common emitter drive stage for providing power to a gas discharge lamp. The power supply according to the present invention is self-oscillating, and is capable of switching high voltages without using high power devices.
Gas discharge lamps are highly efficient sources of light energy. Gas discharge lamps are typically formed of gas filled vessels having electrodes. In order to power a gas discharge lamp, a high voltage is applied across electrodes at a high frequency. Gases within the tube become ionized as they are excited by high energy radiation. Light output of the gas output lamp is thus directly related to the input power signal characteristics.
In the past, numerous methods have been devised to provide floating gate or base drive for the top transistor in the familiar half bridge power converter topology; these include base or gate drive transformers and discrete and integrated semiconductor circuits that use high voltage current sources or optoelectronic means to achieve the necessary isolation as the emitter or the source of the top switching device "bounces" from ground to the full supply voltage at the switching frequency. While these techniques work well, they are both rather expensive for a low cost low power device such as an electronic ballast. In production quantities, the lowest cost device to date is the IR2151 by International Rectifier Inc. and sells for about $.50 in large volumes. Transformers on the other hand tend to cost at least this much each and have had difficulties with interwinding insulation failures and production consistency issues.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the driver for a gas discharge lamp includes a timer which has an output that varies from a high state to a low state, and a pin electrically connected to a common line. The driver also includes a pair of transistors electrically connected to the timer output in a half-bridge complimentary common-emitter configuration. The common node is electrically connected between the two transistors and electrically connected in circuit to an output transformer that drives a load, such as a gas discharge lamp. An electrical conduit connects the common node with the common line such that the potential on the common line is substantially the same as the potential on the common node. The present invention also includes a source of DC power, whereby the output of the timer going to a high state turns on the first transistor to apply a positive DC voltage to the transformer and to the common line. When the timer output goes to a low state, the timer output turns off the first transistor and turns on the second transistor to apply a low state signal to the transformer and to the common line, electrically connected to the timer. The present invention may also include a blocking diode and a bootstrap capacitor electrically connected in circuit between the blocking diode and the common line.
The circuit is comprised of an integrated timer device, such as a 555 timer, two discrete bipolar power transistors, a blocking diode and additional resistors and capacitors as described herein. Although the present invention is preferably used to provide high side and low side drive, it may also be used with a separate low side driver.
The present invention enables a push-pull drive scheme to be used without crossover, while still allowing the transistors to be driven higher or lower than the power rails without using high voltage devices.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF INVENTION
FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of a circuit that incorporates the present invention. The inventive matter herein employs a low cost, low voltage oscillator Ul, such as the familiar 555 timer or a CMOS gate type oscillator and a complementary pair of
Bipolar transistors or metal-oxide-semiconductor fold effect transistors (MOSFETS) Ql and Q2. The emitter terminals of both the PNP and NPN devices Q2 and Ql, respectively (source terminals if P channel and N MOSFETS are used) are operationally connected together and further connected to the common or ground terminal GND of the low voltage oscillator. In this configuration, both the PNP and the NPN devices require alternate floating drive, the NPN requiring a (+) current and the PNP requiring a (-) current alternating on opposite half cycles of the inverter output frequency. Both of these currents are referenced to the common floating ground; that is, the junction 10 of transistors Ql and Q2 emitters which is the output of the half bridge and "bounces" from ground to the full supply voltage as described above.
When transistor Q2 is on, current flows through resistor R8, transistor Q3, and diode Dl into capacitor Cl and returns to ground by jumper J2 and transistor Q2. This action charges capacitor Cl every 1/2 cycle of inverter operation, maintaining a voltage substantially identical to the supply voltage across capacitor Cl, which provides power for oscillator Ul, the 555 oscillator. When transistor Ql is turned on during opposite 1/2 cycles, the voltage at the cathode of diode Dl rises to essentially twice the supply voltage and diode Dl is thereby turned off, while a voltage equal to the supply voltage still appears across capacitor Cl which provides uninterrupted power for oscillator Ul. Oscillator Ul provides 50 percent duty unipolar square waves at pin 3 whose frequency is determined by resistors Rl, R2 and R3 and capacitor C2 according to standard time constant calculations. This unipolar output has an average of 1/2 the capacitor Cl voltage at its 50 percent duty cycle.
Since the time constant of capacitor C3 and resistor R4 is long compared to the oscillator period, and since the parallel-connected base emitter junctions of transistor Ql and transistor Q2 allow current flow in both directions, a DC voltage of 1/2 the capacitor Cl voltage appears across capacitor C3, with the side connected to pin 3 being positive. When pin 3 goes high, a (+) current flows through capacitor C3, resistor R4 and the base-emitter junction of transistor Ql, turning it on. Similarly, when pin 3 drops low, energy stored in capacitor C3 produces a (-) current flow through resistor R4 and the base-emitter junction of transistor Q2 , turning it on. Resistor R4 also serves to limit current through the base-emitter junctions of both transistors. During the minority carrier storage time of each transistor, the base- emitter voltage of each is maintained near its respective on-state voltage until the carriers recombine and it turns off; this effectively prevents the opposite part from being turned on until its partner is completely off, thus preventing cross conduction or "shoot through" current in transistors Ql and Q2.
Other component functions are as follows: Capacitors C5, C6 and C7 are high frequency bypass capacitors. Inductors LI and L2 , and capacitors C8 and C9 form a Pi-L low pass network for electromagnetic interference (EMI) control, and capacitor C4 resonates the transformer inductance during start-up of the lamp load to provide maximum starting voltage and during lamp running to provide typical series resonant inverter ZIS to minimize switching losses in transistors Ql and Q2, and increase efficiency. Resistor R5 provides a leakage path to charge capacitor Cl to start oscillation of oscillator Ul when power is first applied; once the bootstrap charging action of capacitor Cl takes place, resistor R5 serves no additional purpose. Resistor R8 limits peak currents through diode Dl and transistor Q3 and isolates switching noise from transistors Ql and Q2 from the oscillator circuit Ul.
Transistor Q3 and resistors R6 and R7 provide a means of remote control of inverter on/off and dimming functions. If pin CT is left open or pulled to the input supply voltage, transistor Q3 is off and no bootstrap power can be applied to capacitor Cl and oscillator Ul, and the inverter and lamp load are off. When pin CT is pulled low, however, transistor Q3 is turned on which allows normal inverter operation. As the inverter may be turned on and off in this way hundreds of times per second, a pulse width modulated square wave in this frequency range may be applied to this CT pin to effect dimming of the lamp load over a wide range. The human eye integrates the average light output of a source that is on, for example, 3 milliseconds (ms) and off 7 ms as being only 3/10 as bright as a source that is on all the time; no flicker is perceived.
In an installation comprising several ballasts and lamps, the CT pins of each ballast may be connected together to a common switch to ground, which will turn all lamps on and off simultaneously or to a common low frequency PWM source (see above) to provide substantially equal dimming of all lamps without the running of individual unsightly and expensive power wires for each ballast and dimmer or switch. Conversely, since all ballast/lamp assemblies are connected to the input power supply at all times, by connecting the CT terminal to ground for full light output and opening the CT terminal by the same switch to turn the lamp desired completely off, or even locally controlled in brightness with a local PWM source. When this local ballast/lamp switch is thrown to the "master dim" position, thereby connecting the CT pin to the master dim line, the master dimmer will control the brightness of that lamp.
Although several embodiments of the invention have been shown and described, alternate embodiments may be apparent to those skilled in the art. Therefore, the invention is to be limited only to the following claims.

Claims

CLAIMSWe claim:
1. A driver for a gas discharge lamp, comprising: a timer having an output that varies from a high state to a low state; first and second transistors connected to said timer output in a half bridge complementary common- emitter configuration; a common node disposed between said two transistors, connected in circuit to an output transformer that drives the lamp; an electrical conduit connected between said common node and said common line such that the potential on said common line is substantially the same as the potential at said common node; and a source of DC power; whereby the output of the timer going to a high state turns on the first transistor to apply a positive DC voltage to the transformer and to the common line; and whereby the timer output going to a low state turns off said first transistor and turns on said second transistor to apply a low state signal to the transformer and to the common line connected to the timer.
2. The driver of claim 1, further comprising: a blocking diode; and a bootstrap capacitor connected in circuit between the blocking diode and said common line.
3. The driver of claim 1, wherein said timer is a 555 timer. 4. The driver of claim 1, wherein said first and second transistors are bipolar transistors.
5. The driver of claim 1, wherein the first and second transistors are MOSFETS.
6. The driver of claim 1, wherein said first transistor is a P-channel device and said second transistor is a N-channel device.
AMENDED CLAIMS
[received by the International Bureau on 12 February 1999 (12.02.99); original claim 1 amended; new claim 7 added; remaining claims unchanged (2 pages)]
1. A driver for a gas discharge lamp, comprising: a timer having an output that varies from a high state to a low state and having a pin electrically connected to a common line; first and second transistors connected to said timer output in a half bridge complementary common- emitter configuration; a common node disposed between said two transistors, connected in circuit to an output transformer that drives the lamp; an electrical conduit connected between said common node and said common line such that the potential on said common line is substantially the same as the potential at said common node; and a source of DC power; whereby the output of the timer going to a high state turns ON the first transistor to apply a positive DC voltage to the transformer and to the common line; and whereby the timer output going to a low state turns OFF said first transistor and turns ON said second transistor to apply a low state signal to the transformer and to the common line connected to the timer.
2. The driver of claim 1, further comprising: a blocking diode; and a bootstrap capacitor connected in circuit between the blocking diode and said common line.
3. The driver of claim 1, wherein said timer is a 555 timer.
4. The driver of claim 1, wherein said first and second transistors are bipolar transistors.
5. The driver of claim 1, wherein the first and second transistors are MOSFETS.
6. The driver of claim 1, wherein said first transistor is a P-channel device and said second transistor is a N-channel device.
7. The driver of claim 1, further comprising: a third transistor that is connected in circuit to said timer; and a control line that delivers a control signal to said third transistor to switch said third transistor; whereby timer operation is interrupted in response to the switching of said third transistor to at least briefly shut off said lamp.
STATEMENT ACCOMPANYING ARTICLE 19
Claim 1 has been amended to recite that the timer has a pin connected to a common line. Claim 7 has been added to recite a feature of the invention that is discussed at page 5, lines 16 through 32.
PCT/US1998/019445 1997-09-18 1998-09-17 Floating driver having common emitter drive stage WO1999014990A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU22469/99A AU2246999A (en) 1997-09-18 1998-09-17 Floating driver having common emitter drive stage

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US5924097P 1997-09-18 1997-09-18
US60/059,240 1997-09-18

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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2010070582A3 (en) * 2008-12-15 2010-09-02 Lighting 21St Limited Electronic ballast for low wattage lighting applications
JP2016530853A (en) * 2013-05-23 2016-09-29 エルイーディー ライティング コンサルタンツ リミテッドLed Lighting Consultants Limited Power adapter
US9736894B2 (en) 2013-12-12 2017-08-15 Verdi Vision Limited Improvements relating to power adaptors

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5315214A (en) * 1992-06-10 1994-05-24 Metcal, Inc. Dimmable high power factor high-efficiency electronic ballast controller integrated circuit with automatic ambient over-temperature shutdown
GB2298749A (en) * 1994-03-04 1996-09-11 Int Rectifier Corp Electronic ballasts for gas discharge lamps

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5315214A (en) * 1992-06-10 1994-05-24 Metcal, Inc. Dimmable high power factor high-efficiency electronic ballast controller integrated circuit with automatic ambient over-temperature shutdown
GB2298749A (en) * 1994-03-04 1996-09-11 Int Rectifier Corp Electronic ballasts for gas discharge lamps

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2010070582A3 (en) * 2008-12-15 2010-09-02 Lighting 21St Limited Electronic ballast for low wattage lighting applications
JP2016530853A (en) * 2013-05-23 2016-09-29 エルイーディー ライティング コンサルタンツ リミテッドLed Lighting Consultants Limited Power adapter
US10790762B2 (en) 2013-05-23 2020-09-29 Adp Corporate Limited Relating to power adaptors
EP3000285B1 (en) * 2013-05-23 2020-10-21 ADP Corporate Limited Improvements relating to power adaptors
US9736894B2 (en) 2013-12-12 2017-08-15 Verdi Vision Limited Improvements relating to power adaptors

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