WO2014152933A1 - Controlled electronic system power dissipation via an auxiliary-power dissipation circuit - Google Patents

Controlled electronic system power dissipation via an auxiliary-power dissipation circuit Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2014152933A1
WO2014152933A1 PCT/US2014/028299 US2014028299W WO2014152933A1 WO 2014152933 A1 WO2014152933 A1 WO 2014152933A1 US 2014028299 W US2014028299 W US 2014028299W WO 2014152933 A1 WO2014152933 A1 WO 2014152933A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
auxiliary
power converter
switching power
excess energy
energy
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2014/028299
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
John L. Melanson
Prashanth Drakshapalli
Siddharth MARU
Rahul Singh
Original Assignee
Cirrus Logic, 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 Cirrus Logic, Inc. filed Critical Cirrus Logic, Inc.
Priority to CN201480027678.7A priority Critical patent/CN105247958B/en
Priority to EP14726029.3A priority patent/EP2974545A1/en
Publication of WO2014152933A1 publication Critical patent/WO2014152933A1/en

Links

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
    • H05B45/00Circuit arrangements for operating light-emitting diodes [LED]
    • H05B45/30Driver circuits
    • H05B45/37Converter circuits
    • H05B45/3725Switched mode power supply [SMPS]
    • H05B45/385Switched mode power supply [SMPS] using flyback topology
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B45/00Circuit arrangements for operating light-emitting diodes [LED]
    • H05B45/10Controlling the intensity of the light
    • H05B45/14Controlling the intensity of the light using electrical feedback from LEDs or from LED modules
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B45/00Circuit arrangements for operating light-emitting diodes [LED]
    • H05B45/30Driver circuits
    • H05B45/357Driver circuits specially adapted for retrofit LED light sources
    • H05B45/3574Emulating the electrical or functional characteristics of incandescent lamps
    • H05B45/3575Emulating the electrical or functional characteristics of incandescent lamps by means of dummy loads or bleeder circuits, e.g. for dimmers
    • YGENERAL 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
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02BCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO BUILDINGS, e.g. HOUSING, HOUSE APPLIANCES OR RELATED END-USER APPLICATIONS
    • Y02B20/00Energy efficient lighting technologies, e.g. halogen lamps or gas discharge lamps
    • Y02B20/30Semiconductor lamps, e.g. solid state lamps [SSL] light emitting diodes [LED] or organic LED [OLED]

Definitions

  • the present invention relates in general to the field of electronics, and more specifically to a system and method of controlling power dissipation via an auxiliary power dissipation circuit of an electronic system, such as a lighting system.
  • Switching power converters convert power received from a power source, such as a voltage supply, into power suitable for a load.
  • the power received from the voltage supply is referred to as "POWER IN”
  • the power provided to the load is referred to as "POWER OUT”.
  • All switching power converters have some inherent power losses due to, for example, non-ideal component characteristics. Such inherent power losses tend to be minimized so as to increase the efficiency of the switching power converters. Inherent power losses are represented herein by " ⁇ " ⁇
  • the amount of power supplied to the switching power converter can exceed the amount of power provided by the switching power converter to a load, i.e. POWER IN > POWER OUT+Pi NH .
  • the switching power converter passively dissipates the excess energy using passive resistors.
  • a dimmable lighting system that includes a low power lamp, such as one or more light emitting diodes (LEDs), represents one context when the POWER IN to the switching power converter can be greater than the POWER OUT plus inherent power losses P INH power of the switching power converter.
  • the switching power converter receives current through a triode for alternating current ("triac") based dimmer. Once a triac-based dimmer begins conducting during a cycle of an alternating current (“AC”) supply voltage to prevent the triac from disadvantageously, prematurely disconnecting during mid-cycle of the supply voltage, the switching power converter draws a minimum current referred to as a "hold current".
  • the triac-based dimmer should not prematurely disconnect.
  • a premature disconnect occurs when the dimmer begins conducting and stops conducting prior to reaching a zero crossing of the supply voltage. Premature disconnects can cause problems with the lighting system, such as flicker and instability.
  • the minimum POWER IN to the switching power converter equals the hold current ("I H O LD ”) times an input voltage "V IN " to the switching power converter.
  • Conventional triac-based dimmers were designed to provide power to incandescent light bulbs. For desired dimming levels, an incandescent light bulb generally draws a current at least equal to the hold current for all usable dimming levels.
  • other lamps, such as LEDs are more efficient than incandescent light bulbs in terms of power versus light output and, thus, provide equivalent light output while using less power than an incandescent light bulb.
  • lighting systems with LEDs typically utilize less power and less current than incandescent bulbs.
  • the lighting system utilizes one or more passive resistors to internally dissipate excess power.
  • Figure 1 depicts a lighting system 100 that includes a leading edge, phase-cut dimmer 102.
  • Figure 2 depicts ideal, exemplary voltage graphs 200 associated with the lighting system 100.
  • the lighting system 100 receives an AC supply voltage VIN from voltage supply 104.
  • the supply voltage Vi N indicated by voltage waveform 202, is, for example, a nominally 60 Hz/1 10 V line voltage in the United States of America or a nominally 50 Hz/220 V line voltage in Europe.
  • a leading edge dimmer 102 phase cuts leading edges, such as leading edges 204 and 206, of each half cycle of supply voltage VIN- Since each half cycle of supply voltage Vi N is 180 degrees of the input supply voltage Vi N , the leading edge dimmer 102 phase cuts the supply voltage Vi N at an angle greater than 0 degrees and less than 180 degrees. Generally, the voltage phase cutting range of a leading edge dimmer 102 is 10 degrees to 170 degrees.
  • Phase cutting the supply voltage refers to modulating a leading edge phase angle of each cycle of an alternating current ("AC") supply voltage.
  • Phase cutting of the supply voltage is also commonly referred to as "chopping”. Phase cutting the supply voltage reduces the average power supplied to a load, such as a lighting system, and thereby controls the energy provided to the load.
  • the input signal voltage Vo j N to the lighting system 100 represents a dimming level that causes the lighting system 100 to adjust power delivered to a lamp 122, and, thus, depending on the dimming level, increase or decrease the brightness of the lamp 122.
  • dimmers use a digital or analog coded dimming signal that indicates a desired dimming level.
  • the triac-based dimmer 102 phase cuts a leading edge of the AC input supply voltage VIN.
  • the leading edge dimmer 102 can be any type of leading edge dimmer such as a triac-based leading edge dimmer available from Lutron
  • the phase cut dimmer 102 supplies the input voltage Vo IN as modified by the phase cut dimmer 102 to a full bridge diode rectifier 106.
  • the full bridge rectifier 106 supplies an AC rectified voltage VOR JN to the switching power converter 108.
  • Capacitor 1 10 filters high frequency components from rectified voltage VOR j N .
  • controller 1 10 generates a control signal CSo to control conductivity of field effect transistor (FET) switch 1 12.
  • the control signal CSo is a pulse width modulated signal.
  • Waveform 1 14 for control signal CSo represents an exemplary control signal CSo.
  • the controller 110 generates the control signal CSo with two states as shown in the waveform 114.
  • Each pulse of control signal CS 0 turns switch 112 ON (i.e. conducts) and represents a first state that causes the switch 112 to operate efficiently and minimize power dissipation by the switch 112.
  • the inductor current i L increases, as shown in the exemplary inductor current waveform 115, to charge inductor 116 during a charging phase Tc.
  • Diode 118 prevents current flow from link capacitor 120 into switch 112.
  • the inductor current 1 L decreases during the flyback phase T FB , as shown in inductor current waveform 115.
  • the inductor current 1 L boosts the link voltage across the link capacitor 120 through diode 118.
  • DCM discontinuous conduction mode
  • the flyback phase T FB ends before the next charging phase Tc begins.
  • the flyback phase T FB begins as soon as the charging phase Tc ends.
  • the switching power converter 108 is a boost-type converter, and, thus, the link voltage V LINK is greater than the rectified input voltage VO R jN .
  • Controller 110 senses the rectified input voltage VO R IN at node 124 and senses the link voltage V LINK at node 126.
  • Controller 110 operates the switching power converter 108 to maintain an approximately constant link voltage V LINK for lamp 122, provide power factor correction, and correlate the link current i L1NK with the phase cut angle of the rectified input voltage VO R IN .
  • Lamp 122 includes one or more light emitting diodes.
  • Figure 3 depicts an exemplary light output/power graph 300 that compares light output per watt of power for an exemplary incandescent bulb and an exemplary light emitting diode (LED).
  • LEDs Per watt of power, LEDs provide more light output than incandescent light bulbs.
  • the low power usage by LEDs correlates to a relatively low operating current compared to the operating current for an incandescent light bulb. Since the light output of LEDs is approximately linear with power and LEDs operate at an approximately constant voltage, operating current for an LED decreases approximately linearly with decreasing light output and power.
  • the phase cut dimmer 102 increases the phase cut angle of the rectified input voltage VOR IN, i.e. time TOFF increases and time TON decreases.
  • the controller 1 10 responds to the increased phase cut angle by decreasing the current I L INK provided to the lamp 122, which decreases the light output of the lamp 122.
  • the switching power converter 108 includes a power dissipation resistor 128 so that the dimmer current IDIM does not fall below the hold current value and prematurely disconnect during a cycle of the rectified input voltage VOR IN.
  • the "POWER IN" power supplied to the switching power converter 108 equals Vo IN ' IDIM-
  • the "POWER OUT" power supplied by switching power converter 108 equals VLINK ' ILINK- Because of the relatively low power requirements of an LED based lamp 122, particularly at low light output levels, if the POWER IN power equals the POWER OUT + PINH power, the dimmer current i Om may fall below the hold current value and cause the phase-cut dimmer 102 to prematurely disconnect.
  • the controller 1 10 causes the switching power converter 108 to maintain the dimmer current IDIM above the hold current value, which causes the POWER IN power to be greater than the POWER OUT + PINH power. Since the POWER IN power is greater than the POWER OUT + Pi NH power, the switching power converter 108 dissipates the excess power through power dissipation resistor 128.
  • This hold current may be of the order of 60-90 mA for U.S. dimmers and 30-45 mA for European and Asia Pacific dimmers.
  • Resistor 128 is relatively cheap to implement as part of switching power converter 108. However, when the link current I LINK is sufficiently high such that POWER IN equals POWER OUT + P INH , the dimmer input current I DIM could be maintained above the hold current value without dissipating power through resistor 128. However, since the dimmer input current i DIM always flows through the resistor 128 when the switch 108 is conducting, the resistor 128 still passively dissipates power regardless of whether the POWER IN is equal to the POWER OUT + P INH , which decreases the efficiency of lighting system 100.
  • an apparatus includes a controller configured to generate an excess energy control signal to control a transfer of excess energy, drawn from a power supply through a primary-side winding of a switching power converter, to an auxiliary-winding of an auxiliary power dissipation circuit to dissipate the excess energy.
  • the excess energy comprises energy drawn through the primary-side winding of the switching power converter to provide operational compatibility between a dimmer and a load.
  • a method in another embodiment, includes generating an excess energy control signal to control a transfer of excess energy, drawn from a power supply through a primary-side winding of a switching power converter, to an auxiliary-winding of an auxiliary power dissipation circuit to dissipate the excess energy.
  • the excess energy comprises energy drawn through the primary-side winding of the switching power converter to provide operational compatibility between a dimmer and a load.
  • a lighting system includes one or more light emitting diodes (LEDs) and a switching power converter coupled to the LEDs.
  • the lighting system also includes a controller configured to (1) generate an excess energy control signal to control a transfer of excess energy, drawn from a power supply through a primary-side winding of a switching power converter, to an auxiliary-winding of an auxiliary power dissipation circuit to dissipate the excess energy and (2) control power conversion by the switching power converter for the LEDs.
  • the excess energy comprises energy drawn through the primary-side winding of the switching power converter to provide operational compatibility between a dimmer and the LEDs.
  • Figure 1 (labeled prior art) depicts a lighting system that includes a leading edge dimmer.
  • Figure 2 (labeled prior art) depicts exemplary voltage graphs associated with the lighting system of Figure 1.
  • Figure 3 (labeled prior art) depicts power versus light output for exemplary
  • Figure 4 depicts an electronic system with excess energy transfer to an auxiliary power dissipation circuit.
  • Figures 5 and 6 depict respective lighting systems, which each represent one embodiment of the electronic system of Figure 4.
  • Figure 7 depicts a primary-side and auxiliary-side transformer model configuration of the lighting system of Figure 6.
  • Figure 8 depicts waveforms associated with the primary- side and auxiliary- side transformer model configuration of Figure 7.
  • An electronic system and method include a controller to actively control transfer of excess energy to an auxiliary transformer winding of an auxiliary power dissipation circuit.
  • the "auxiliary transformer winding" is referred to herein as an "auxiliary- winding.”
  • the excess energy is a transfer of energy from a primary winding of a switching power converter to the auxiliary-winding of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit.
  • the electronic system is a lighting system that includes a triac-based dimmer.
  • the excess energy is energy drawn through the primary-side winding of the switching power converter to provide operational compatibility between a dimmer through which a power supply provides energy to the switching power converter and a load to which the switching power converter provides energy.
  • the lighting system when the lighting system includes a light source, such as one or more light emitting diodes (LEDs), that uses less power than an incandescent light bulb, the lighting system draws more power in the form of a holding current from the power supply to maintain compatibility between the dimmer and the light source.
  • the controller causes the switching power converter to draw the excess energy to maintain this compatibility between the dimmer and the light source.
  • Energy equals power multiplied by time.
  • the dissipation of excess energy over time is referred to as power dissipation.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit is configured dissipate the excess energy in the form of heat and/or a stored energy for subsequent use.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit includes a Zener diode to dissipate the excess energy as heat.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit also includes a capacitor to store at least some of the excess energy.
  • the controller and the auxiliary dissipation circuit can be configured to transfer the excess energy during either a flyback phase or during a forward phase of the switching power converter. Additionally, in at least one embodiment, excess energy can also be dissipated in other power dissipation circuits that are connected to or included in the switching power converter. Thus, in at least one embodiment, the controller actively controls power dissipation by generating one or more signals to actively and selectively control power dissipation in the electronic system.
  • FIG. 4 depicts an electronic system 400 that includes a controller 402 that maintains compatibility between a dimmer 102 and a load 404, such as one or more LEDs, by controlling a switching power converter 406 to draw excess energy through the dimmer 102 from a power supply 104.
  • the excess energy is more energy than an amount of energy drawn by the switching power converter 406 from the power supply 104 less an amount of energy delivered to the load 404 other than the auxiliary power dissipation circuit (P/S) 408 plus inherent energy losses of the switching power converter 406.
  • Power is defined as an amount of energy transferred over a period of time.
  • the amount of excess energy dissipated by the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408 over a half line cycle of the supply voltage V IN is constant or at least approximately constant, and, thus, the average power dissipation by the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408 over the half line cycle is also constant or at least approximately constant.
  • the electronic system 400 which in at least one embodiment, is a lighting system, includes an electromagnetic interference (EMI) filter 410.
  • EMI electromagnetic interference
  • the particular design of the EMI filter 410 is a matter of design choice, and, in at least one embodiment, is a capacitor such as capacitor 110.
  • the electronic system 400 optionally includes a dimmer compatibility circuit 412.
  • the implementation of the dimmer compatibility circuit 412 is a matter of design choice and can be, for example, a DC-DC converter, such as a boost or a buck converter or an active circuit such as described in U.S.
  • the electronic system 400 includes the optional dimmer compatibility circuit 412 when the controller 402 is configured to dissipate excess energy in a circuit other than the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408.
  • the controller 402 generates a control signal CS 2 to control dimmer compatibility as described in the Dimmer Compatibility Documents.
  • the switching power converter 406 includes a primary-side control circuit 416 that controls the draw of energy from the power supply 104 through a primary-side winding 418 of transformer 414.
  • the controller 402 generates control signal CSi to control the draw of energy by the primary-side control circuit 416 through the primary-side winding 418.
  • the particular implementation of the primary-side control circuit 416 is a matter of design choice.
  • the control signal CSi is a pulse width modulated signal
  • the primary-side control circuit 416 is a switch (not shown) whose conductivity follows the pulses of the control signal CSi and generates pulses of the primary- side current ip through the primary- side winding 418.
  • auxiliary-winding When the auxiliary-winding is configured to conduct during a flyback phase of the switching power converter 406, during the flyback phase, energy is transferred to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408.
  • auxiliary- winding When the auxiliary- winding is configured to conduct during a forward phase of the switching power converter 406, during the forward phase energy, energy is transferred to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408. Embodiments of flyback phase energy transfer and forward phase energy transfer are discussed subsequently.
  • the switching power converter 406 transfers at least the excess energy previously described to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408. Whether the excess energy is transferred during the forward phase or the flyback phase is a matter of design choice.
  • the controller 402 generates an excess energy control signal AUXCNTL to control energy transfer to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408 dissipates the excess energy, which equates to excess power when the excess energy is transferred over a period of time.
  • the particular implementation of the power auxiliary power dissipation circuit is a matter of design choice.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit can use virtually any circuit to dissipate the excess energy.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit includes both active and passive circuits, such as one or more field effect transistors, Zener diodes, capacitors, and/or resistors.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408 is configured to dissipate the excess energy in the form of heat in the Zener diode and/or a stored energy for subsequent use in the capacitor.
  • the controller 402 can control excess energy dissipation in other power dissipation circuits that are connected to or included in the switching power converter 406 as for example, described in U.S. Patent Application no. 13/289,845, entitled, "Controlled Energy Dissipation in a Switching Power Converter,” and filed on
  • the controller 402 actively controls power dissipation by generating one or more signals to actively and selectively control power dissipation in the electronic system 400.
  • Figure 4 depicts the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408 as located separate from the controller 402, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408 can be included as part of the controller 402.
  • the controller 402 is an integrated circuit, and the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408 is located external to the controller 402.
  • dissipating power outside the controller 402 serves a dual purpose of providing dimmer 102-to- load 404 compatibility and avoiding generating excess heat in the controller 402.
  • FIG. 5 depicts a lighting system 500, which represents one embodiment of the electronic system 400 of Figure 4.
  • the lighting system 500 includes a switching power converter 501 and a controller 502, which represents one embodiment of controller 402.
  • Controller 502 includes an auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 that generates the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL to transfer excess energy from the primary-side winding 418 to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 during a flyback phase of the switching power converter 501.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 represents one embodiment of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 is "actively controllable" because the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 controls when the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 generates and does not generate power.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 504 is incorporated into controller 502; although, whether the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 504 is incorporated as part of the controller 502 or separate from the controller is a matter of design choice.
  • the controller 502 is configured to control the switching power converter 501 so that that during the transfer of energy to the auxiliary-winding 506, the switching power converter 501 does not transfer energy to secondary-winding 422.
  • the switching power converter 501 isolates the secondary transformer winding current is from an auxiliary- winding current IAUX-
  • the controller 502 can transfer excess energy to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 without affecting in any significant way the energy transferred to the one or more LEDs 508.
  • the LED(s) 508 represent one embodiment of the load 404.
  • a diode and resistor- capacitor filter circuit 510 provides a path for voltage perturbations.
  • the switching power converter 501 is configured in a flyback configuration so that when FET 512 conducts (switch 502 represents one embodiment of the primary-side current control circuit 416) the primary-side current i P , and the primary-side current i P ramps up through the primary-side winding 418.
  • switch 502 represents one embodiment of the primary-side current control circuit 416) the primary-side current i P , and the primary-side current i P ramps up through the primary-side winding 418.
  • the dot convention of primary- side winding 418 and the diode 420 prevent flow of the secondary-side current is from the secondary- winding 506 when the primary current ip is drawn into the primary- side winding 418.
  • the controller 502 When the controller 502 generates the switch control signal CSi to stop the FET 512 from conducting the primary- side current ip, the primary-side current ip falls to 0, and the voltage across the primary-side winding 418 reverses (also referred to as the "flyback phase"). During the flyback phase, the secondary- side current is quickly rises and charges capacitor 424. Capacitor 424 provides an output voltage V LD and current to the LED(s) 508. The resistor 538 conducts the primary-side current i P and develops a voltage V IP S EN S E that is directly proportional to the primary- side current i P .
  • the controller 502 utilizes the voltage V IP S EN S E to, for example, detect a peak value of the primary-side current ip to determine when the controller 502 deasserts the control signal CSi.
  • the term “deassert” refers to transitioning a signal from a logical 1 to a logical 0.
  • asserting the control signal CSi refers to generating a pulse of the control signal CSi, and deasserting the control signal CSi refers to ending the pulse.
  • the manner of generating the control signal CSi is a matter of design choice.
  • the control signal CSi is generated as described in U.S. patent application no. 12/919,086, entitled "Primary-Side Control of a Switching Power Converter With Feed Forward Delay
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 asserts the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL while a value of a reflected voltage V REF s across the secondary-winding 422 is greater than a value of a reflected voltage V REF A across the auxiliary- winding 506.
  • the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL is asserted while the reflected voltage V REF s is greater than the reflected voltage V REF A, the transfer of excess energy is isolated to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504.
  • auxiliary power dissipation circuit control signal AUXCNTL has a value of VDD, which shifts the voltage across capacitor 524 and reverse biases the Zener diode 526.
  • the Zener breakdown voltage Vzo of Zener diode 526 is greater than the threshold voltage of the FET 528.
  • the gate voltage VG rises to near VDD + Vzo, such as +12V, and the FET 528 conducts.
  • a low impedance current path for auxiliary current IAU X is available through diode 522, FET 528, and diode 530.
  • control signal CSi is a logical one, and FET 512 conducts the primary current i P through the primary- winding 418.
  • the lighting system 500 includes a Zener diode 514 and capacitor 516 to respectively dissipate a portion of the excess energy as heat and store a portion of the excess energy for subsequent use.
  • the capacitor 516 dissipates a portion of the excess energy via charging to a Zener breakdown voltage Vzi set by the breakdown voltage Vzi of Zener diode 514.
  • Vzi set by the breakdown voltage Vzi of Zener diode 514.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 asserts the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL to control the energy transfer to the Zener diode 514 by generating a positive voltage pulse of the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL.
  • the particular implementation of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 is a matter of design choice.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 generates the pulse of the control signal AUXCNTL during each cycle of the input voltage V IN , which is a half line cycle of the supply voltage VSU PPLY ( Figure 4), for which excess energy is to be transferred to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504.
  • a reflected voltage for the auxiliary winding 506 is smaller than the reflected voltage for the secondary-winding 422, energy can be transferred to the auxiliary- winding 506 during the flyback phase by turning on FET 512.
  • U.S. Patent Application no. 13/715,451 entitled “Isolation of Secondary Transformer Winding Current During Auxiliary Power Supply Generation", and filed on December 14, 2012 describes exemplary embodiments of generating the signal AUXCNTL.
  • the dotted line 532 indicates that the voltage VDD can optionally be provided to the controller 502 as an auxiliary supply voltage.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 can also function as an auxiliary power supply.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 also includes resistors 534 and 536 configured as a voltage divider to sample the reflected voltage VREF _ ⁇
  • the voltage divider of resistors 534 and 536 has a relatively high impedance and conducts a negligible amount of current.
  • the zero voltage detection (ZVD) signal represents the voltage across resistor 536, and the signal ZVD is used by the controller 502 to detect a zero crossing in the input voltage Vi N .
  • the controller 502 when the controller 502 detects the zero crossing of the input voltage VIN via the signal ZVD, the dimmer 102 (e.g., as shown in Figure 4) stops conducting. When the dimmer 102 stops conducting, there is no need for a hold current.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 deasserts the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL to stop excess energy transfer corresponding to the hold current.
  • the switching power converter 501 does not deliver all energy to the LED(s) 508.
  • the primary-side winding 418 delivers energy to both the secondary- winding 422 and the auxiliary- winding 506.
  • the controller 502 ensures that the times when charge is delivered to the secondary- winding 422 and to the auxiliary-winding 506 are known and mutually exclusive.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 and the actively controllable auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 allow the controller 502 to isolate the energy transferred to the LED(s) 508 from the energy transferred to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504.
  • the controller 502 can, thus, determine the amount of energy the switching power converter 501 delivers to the LED(s) 508.
  • the lighting system 500 achieves an isolation between transfer of energy to the secondary-side winding 422 and to the auxiliary- winding 506 by ensuring that a value of a reflected voltage V REF s across the secondary-winding 422 is greater than a value of a reflected voltage V REF A across the auxiliary- winding 506 when transferring energy to the auxiliary- winding 506 and, conversely, by providing a high impedance current path for the auxiliary current IAU X when transferring energy to the secondary- winding 422.
  • the controller 502 controls mutually exclusive times for the transfer of energy from the primary- winding 418 of the transformer 414 to the secondary- winding 422 and to the auxiliary- winding 506 for the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504. For example, during a first period of time, the controller 502 controls the transfer of energy from the primary- winding 418 of the transformer 414 to the secondary- winding 422. During a second period of time, the controller 502 actively controls transfer of energy from the primary- winding 418 to the auxiliary- winding 506 without transferring any energy to the secondary-winding.
  • the secondary-side current is transfers energy to the LED(s) 508 only when diode 420 is forward biased.
  • Diode 420 is forward biased only when the reflected voltage V REF s is greater than the forward bias voltage V F of diode 420 plus the load voltage V LD -
  • the forward bias voltage V F of diode 420 is generally less than or equal to IV, such as 0.7V.
  • the auxiliary power controller 503 controls the reflected voltage across the auxiliary- winding 506 by controlling the auxiliary power dissipation circuit control circuitry 518.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit control circuitry 518 when the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 asserts the auxiliary voltage control signal AUXCNTL, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit control circuitry 518 provides a low impedance path from the auxiliary-winding 506 to the node 520. The low impedance path keeps the reflected voltage V REF A at the voltage level VDD across the capacitor 516.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 controls the auxiliary power dissipation circuit control circuitry 518 so that when energy is transferred from the primary- winding 418 to the auxiliary-winding 506, the reflected voltage V REF A is less than the value of the forward bias voltage V F of diode 420 plus the load voltage V LD , i.e. when the signal
  • V REF A V F + V LD
  • V F + V LD the flyback voltage across the primary- winding 418
  • the reflected voltage V REF A will remain less than (V F + V LD ) as the primary- winding 418 transfers energy to the auxiliary- winding 506. Since the reflected voltage V REF A will remain less than (V F + V LD ), diode 420 will be reversed biased, and the secondary current i s will not flow. Thus, no charge is transferred to the LED(s) 508 when the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 asserts the auxiliary voltage control signal AUXCNTL.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit control circuitry 518 raises an impedance of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 to a value that prevents most if not all energy transfer to the auxiliary- winding 506.
  • the primary- winding 418 transfers all energy to the secondary- winding 422.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit control circuitry 518 raises an impedance of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 by causing the FET 528 to stop conducting and become an open circuit between the diode 522 and the capacitor 516.
  • the diode 420 When all energy is transferred to the secondary- side winding, the diode 420 is forward biased, and the secondary-side current is delivers all the charge from the primary-winding 418 to the secondary-winding 422 and then to the LED(s) 508. Since the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 can control mutually exclusive energy transfer to the LED(s) 508 and to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504, the controller 502 can determine very precisely the amount of charge delivered to the LED(s) 508.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 controls the auxiliary power dissipation circuit circuitry 518 so that the reflected voltage V REF A is less than the value of the forward bias voltage V F of diode 420 plus the load voltage V LD , i.e. when the signal AUXCNTL is asserted, V REF A ⁇ (V F + V LD ).
  • V F + V LD the load voltage
  • the reflected voltage V REF A will remain less than (V F + V LD ) as the primary- winding 418 transfers energy to the auxiliary-winding 506.
  • Equation 1 The reflected voltage V REF s is determined in accordance with Equation 1 : Equation 1
  • V REF s is the reflected voltage due to the secondary-winding 422
  • V LD is the voltage across the LED(s) 508
  • Nl is the turns ratio between the secondary-winding 422 and the primary- winding 418.
  • V REF A is the reflected voltage due to the auxiliary- winding 506 of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504
  • VDD is the voltage across the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 when the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL is asserted
  • N2 is the turns ratio between the auxiliary- winding 506 and the primary- winding 418.
  • Figure 6 depicts a lighting system 600, which represents one embodiment of the electronic system 400 of Figure 4.
  • the lighting system 600 includes a switching power converter 601 and a controller 602, which represents one embodiment of controller 402.
  • Controller 602 includes an auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 603 that generates the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL to transfer excess energy from the primary-side winding 418 to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 605 during a forward phase of the switching power converter 501.
  • auxiliary winding 604 in transformer 614 is not dependent on the type of DC-DC converter and the following discussion can be extended to any other DC-DC converter topology (isolated or non-isolated) as long as the auxiliary winding 604 has the same dot configuration as the primary- side winding 418.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 603 drives the control signal AUXCNTL to a logical zero (e.g. 0V).
  • a logical zero e.g. 0V
  • the gate voltage VG drops and turns the FET 528 OFF (i.e. non-conductive). Turning the FET 528 OFF prevents any significant energy transfer to the auxiliary-winding 604 (except for the negligible current used to generated the ZVD signal).
  • the controller 602 When the controller 602 generates a pulse of the control signal CSi, the primary-side current ip ramps up in the primary-side winding 418.
  • the auxiliary current IAUX also ramps up, which transfers energy from the primary-winding 418 to the auxiliary- winding 604.
  • a comparator 607 compares a reference voltage VI with a primary-side current i P sense voltage VIP SENSE developed across the sense resistor 538.
  • comparison of voltage VI against voltage VIP SENSE essentially compares the primary-side current i P against the target current ITARGET.
  • the comparator 605 transitions the comparator output signal CO from a logical 1 to a logical 0.
  • the controller 602 then deasserts the control signal CSi to turn the FET 512 OFF. Generating a logical zero value of the control signal AUXCNTL stops the excess energy transfer, and turning the FET 512 OFF stops the primary-side current ip..
  • the excess energy transfer mechanism is discussed with reference to Figures 6 and 7.
  • the value of the reference voltage VI is a matter of design choice.
  • the value of the reference voltage VI sets the state change point for the comparator 607.
  • increasing the value of the reference voltage VI increases the excess energy transfer time and, thus, increases the amount of excess energy transferred to the capacitor 516 and Zener diode 514 of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 605 during a cycle of the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL.
  • decreasing the value of the reference voltage V I decreases the excess energy transfer time and, thus, decreases the amount of excess energy transferred to the capacitor 516 and Zener diode 514 of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 605 during a cycle of the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL.
  • controller 602 When the control signal AUXCNTL is driven high simultaneously with the control signal CSi, energy is transferred to capacitor 516. The impact of turning on control signal AUXCNTL and the detection of a peak value of primary current IP is next discussed.
  • the controller 602 generates the control signal CSi as described in conjunction with controller 502.
  • Figure 7 depicts a primary-side and auxiliary-side transformer model configuration 700 of the lighting system 600.
  • Figure 8 depicts waveforms associated with the primary-side and auxiliary- side transformer model configuration 700.
  • the primary- side winding 702 is an equivalent of the primary-side winding 418 ( Figure 6) and is modeled as a magnetizing inductance 704 in parallel with an ideal transformer consisting of primary winding 706 and auxiliary- winding 708.
  • auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 603 At time t 0 , auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 603 generates the control signal AUXCNTL to turn the switch 528 ON at the same time the controller 602 asserts a pulse of the control signal CSi.
  • the controller 602 drives the control signal AUXCNTL low at time tl .
  • Driving the control signal AUXCNTL causes the auxiliary current IAUX to go to zero, which in turn causes the reflected forward component i FW to go to zero.
  • the primary-side current i P equals the magnetizing component i M .
  • the primary-side current ip thus ramps up with a slope governed by the magnetizing component 1M until the voltage VIP SENSE across resistor 538 reaches voltage VI .
  • the comparator 605 changes states indicating via signal CO to the controller 602 that the primary-side current i P sense voltage VIP SENSE has reached the reference voltage VI .
  • the controller 602 then turns switch 528 OFF, thus causing the energy built in the transformer 614 to be transferred to the secondary winding 422 and the LED(s) 508.
  • the duration of period TAUX for control signal AUXCNTL can be varied by the controller 602 to determine the amount of excess energy to transfer to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 605.
  • the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 603 ensures that the voltage VIP SENSE across resistor 538 does not reach the reference voltage VI while the control signals CSi and AUXCNTL are driven high. If the reference voltage VI is reached when both control signals CSi and AUXCNTL are driven high, the comparator 605 will generate a state change, even though the actual energy build up in the transformer 614 has not yet reached the desired level.
  • the lighting system 600 properly functions when the lighting system 600 complies with the following three constraints:
  • the period T A ux for control signal AUXCNTL is short enough so that the primary-side current i P does not increase sufficiently to cause the sensed voltage V IP S EN S E to exceed the reference voltage VI during the period TAU X -
  • the controller 602 can ignore any comparator state change detected during the period TAU X for control signal AUXCNTL and can deassert the control signal CSi at a following state change of comparator 605.
  • an electronic system and method such as a lighting system and method, include a controller to actively control transfer of excess energy to an auxiliary-winding of an auxiliary power dissipation circuit.

Landscapes

  • Circuit Arrangement For Electric Light Sources In General (AREA)

Abstract

An electronic system and method include a controller to actively control transfer of excess energy to an auxiliary-winding of an auxiliary power dissipation circuit. The excess energy is a transfer of energy from a primary winding of a switching power converter to the auxiliary-winding of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit. In at least one embodiment, the electronic system is a lighting system that includes a triac-based dimmer. The excess energy is energy drawn through the primary-side winding of the switching power converter to provide operational compatibility between a dimmer through which a power supply provides energy to the switching power converter and a load to which the switching power converter provides energy.

Description

CONTROLLED ELECTRONIC SYSTEM POWER DISSIPATION VIA AN
AUXILIARY-POWER DISSIPATION CIRCUIT
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
[001] This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) and 37 C.F.R. § 1.78 of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/782,253, filed March 14, 2013, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION Field of the Invention
[002] The present invention relates in general to the field of electronics, and more specifically to a system and method of controlling power dissipation via an auxiliary power dissipation circuit of an electronic system, such as a lighting system.
DESCRIPTION OF THE RELATED ART
[003] Switching power converters convert power received from a power source, such as a voltage supply, into power suitable for a load. The power received from the voltage supply is referred to as "POWER IN", and the power provided to the load is referred to as "POWER OUT". All switching power converters have some inherent power losses due to, for example, non-ideal component characteristics. Such inherent power losses tend to be minimized so as to increase the efficiency of the switching power converters. Inherent power losses are represented herein by "ΡΙΝΗ"· In some contexts the amount of power supplied to the switching power converter can exceed the amount of power provided by the switching power converter to a load, i.e. POWER IN > POWER OUT+PiNH. When the POWER IN is greater than the POWER OUT+PiNH, the switching power converter passively dissipates the excess energy using passive resistors.
[004] A dimmable lighting system that includes a low power lamp, such as one or more light emitting diodes (LEDs), represents one context when the POWER IN to the switching power converter can be greater than the POWER OUT plus inherent power losses PINH power of the switching power converter. In this exemplary context, the switching power converter receives current through a triode for alternating current ("triac") based dimmer. Once a triac-based dimmer begins conducting during a cycle of an alternating current ("AC") supply voltage to prevent the triac from disadvantageously, prematurely disconnecting during mid-cycle of the supply voltage, the switching power converter draws a minimum current referred to as a "hold current". As long as an input current to the switching power converter is greater than or equal to the hold current, the triac-based dimmer should not prematurely disconnect. For a leading edge dimmer, a premature disconnect occurs when the dimmer begins conducting and stops conducting prior to reaching a zero crossing of the supply voltage. Premature disconnects can cause problems with the lighting system, such as flicker and instability.
[005] Thus, to prevent premature disconnection of the triac-based dimmer, the minimum POWER IN to the switching power converter equals the hold current ("IHOLD") times an input voltage "VIN" to the switching power converter. Conventional triac-based dimmers were designed to provide power to incandescent light bulbs. For desired dimming levels, an incandescent light bulb generally draws a current at least equal to the hold current for all usable dimming levels. However, other lamps, such as LEDs are more efficient than incandescent light bulbs in terms of power versus light output and, thus, provide equivalent light output while using less power than an incandescent light bulb. Thus, lighting systems with LEDs typically utilize less power and less current than incandescent bulbs. To balance the power when the lighting system draws more POWER IN power than the lighting system inherently dissipates and provides as POWER OUT power to the lamp, the lighting system utilizes one or more passive resistors to internally dissipate excess power.
[006] Figure 1 depicts a lighting system 100 that includes a leading edge, phase-cut dimmer 102. Figure 2 depicts ideal, exemplary voltage graphs 200 associated with the lighting system 100. Referring to Figures 1 and 2, the lighting system 100 receives an AC supply voltage VIN from voltage supply 104. The supply voltage ViN, indicated by voltage waveform 202, is, for example, a nominally 60 Hz/1 10 V line voltage in the United States of America or a nominally 50 Hz/220 V line voltage in Europe. A leading edge dimmer 102 phase cuts leading edges, such as leading edges 204 and 206, of each half cycle of supply voltage VIN- Since each half cycle of supply voltage ViN is 180 degrees of the input supply voltage ViN, the leading edge dimmer 102 phase cuts the supply voltage ViN at an angle greater than 0 degrees and less than 180 degrees. Generally, the voltage phase cutting range of a leading edge dimmer 102 is 10 degrees to 170 degrees. "Phase cutting" the supply voltage refers to modulating a leading edge phase angle of each cycle of an alternating current ("AC") supply voltage. "Phase cutting" of the supply voltage is also commonly referred to as "chopping". Phase cutting the supply voltage reduces the average power supplied to a load, such as a lighting system, and thereby controls the energy provided to the load.
[007] The input signal voltage Vo jN to the lighting system 100 represents a dimming level that causes the lighting system 100 to adjust power delivered to a lamp 122, and, thus, depending on the dimming level, increase or decrease the brightness of the lamp 122. Many different types of dimmers exist. In general, dimmers use a digital or analog coded dimming signal that indicates a desired dimming level. For example, the triac-based dimmer 102 phase cuts a leading edge of the AC input supply voltage VIN. The leading edge dimmer 102 can be any type of leading edge dimmer such as a triac-based leading edge dimmer available from Lutron
Electronics, Inc. of Coopersberg, PA ("Lutron"). A triac-based leading edge dimmer is described in the Background section of U.S. Patent Application No. 12/858,164, entitled Dimmer Output Emulation, filed on August 17, 2010, and inventor John L. Melanson.
[008] The phase cut dimmer 102 supplies the input voltage Vo IN as modified by the phase cut dimmer 102 to a full bridge diode rectifier 106. The full bridge rectifier 106 supplies an AC rectified voltage VOR JN to the switching power converter 108. Capacitor 1 10 filters high frequency components from rectified voltage VOR jN. To control the operation of switching power converter 108, controller 1 10 generates a control signal CSo to control conductivity of field effect transistor (FET) switch 1 12. The control signal CSo is a pulse width modulated signal. Waveform 1 14 for control signal CSo represents an exemplary control signal CSo. The controller 110 generates the control signal CSo with two states as shown in the waveform 114. Each pulse of control signal CS0 turns switch 112 ON (i.e. conducts) and represents a first state that causes the switch 112 to operate efficiently and minimize power dissipation by the switch 112. During each pulse of control signal CSo, the inductor current iL increases, as shown in the exemplary inductor current waveform 115, to charge inductor 116 during a charging phase Tc. Diode 118 prevents current flow from link capacitor 120 into switch 112. When the pulse of control signals CS0 ends, the control signal CS0 is in a second state, and the inductor 116 reverses voltage polarity (commonly referred to as "flyback"). The inductor current 1L decreases during the flyback phase TFB, as shown in inductor current waveform 115. The inductor current 1L boosts the link voltage across the link capacitor 120 through diode 118. When the flyback phase TFB ends and when the next charging phase Tc begins depends on the operating mode of the switching power converter. In discontinuous conduction mode (DCM), the flyback phase TFB ends before the next charging phase Tc begins. However, regardless of whether the switching power converter 108 operates in discontinuous conduction mode, continuous conduction mode, or critical conduction mode, the flyback phase TFB begins as soon as the charging phase Tc ends.
[009] The switching power converter 108 is a boost-type converter, and, thus, the link voltage VLINK is greater than the rectified input voltage VOR jN. Controller 110 senses the rectified input voltage VOR IN at node 124 and senses the link voltage VLINK at node 126. Controller 110 operates the switching power converter 108 to maintain an approximately constant link voltage VLINK for lamp 122, provide power factor correction, and correlate the link current iL1NK with the phase cut angle of the rectified input voltage VOR IN. Lamp 122 includes one or more light emitting diodes.
[0010] Figure 3 depicts an exemplary light output/power graph 300 that compares light output per watt of power for an exemplary incandescent bulb and an exemplary light emitting diode (LED). Per watt of power, LEDs provide more light output than incandescent light bulbs. The low power usage by LEDs correlates to a relatively low operating current compared to the operating current for an incandescent light bulb. Since the light output of LEDs is approximately linear with power and LEDs operate at an approximately constant voltage, operating current for an LED decreases approximately linearly with decreasing light output and power. [001 1] Referring to Figures 1 , 2, and 3, to decrease the light output of the lamp 122, the phase cut dimmer 102 increases the phase cut angle of the rectified input voltage VOR IN, i.e. time TOFF increases and time TON decreases. The controller 1 10 responds to the increased phase cut angle by decreasing the current ILINK provided to the lamp 122, which decreases the light output of the lamp 122.
[0012] The switching power converter 108 includes a power dissipation resistor 128 so that the dimmer current IDIM does not fall below the hold current value and prematurely disconnect during a cycle of the rectified input voltage VOR IN. The "POWER IN" power supplied to the switching power converter 108 equals Vo IN ' IDIM- The "POWER OUT" power supplied by switching power converter 108 equals VLINK ' ILINK- Because of the relatively low power requirements of an LED based lamp 122, particularly at low light output levels, if the POWER IN power equals the POWER OUT + PINH power, the dimmer current iOm may fall below the hold current value and cause the phase-cut dimmer 102 to prematurely disconnect. In this situation, to prevent the dimmer current IDIM from falling below the hold current value, the controller 1 10 causes the switching power converter 108 to maintain the dimmer current IDIM above the hold current value, which causes the POWER IN power to be greater than the POWER OUT + PINH power. Since the POWER IN power is greater than the POWER OUT + PiNH power, the switching power converter 108 dissipates the excess power through power dissipation resistor 128. This hold current may be of the order of 60-90 mA for U.S. dimmers and 30-45 mA for European and Asia Pacific dimmers.
[0013] Because of component non-idealities, the switching power converter 108 includes inherent power losses. Inherent power losses include conductor resistances and switching losses in switch 1 12. However, circuits are generally designed to minimize inherent power losses, and these inherent power losses are often negligible and, thus, insufficient to dissipate enough power to compensate for the difference between the POWER IN power and the POWER OUT + PINH power at some POWER OUT levels. To increase the power loss of switching power converter so that the dimmer current IDIM remains above a hold current value even at lower power demand by the lamp 122, switching power converter 108 includes the resistor 128 to create a passive power loss when switch 1 12 conducts the inductor current iL. For negligible inherent power losses, the resistance value of the resistor 128 is selected so that when the switching power converter is providing a minimum link current ILINK, the POWER IN = POWER OUT + PI H + PASSIVE POWER DISSIPATE.
[0014] Resistor 128 is relatively cheap to implement as part of switching power converter 108. However, when the link current ILINK is sufficiently high such that POWER IN equals POWER OUT + PINH, the dimmer input current IDIM could be maintained above the hold current value without dissipating power through resistor 128. However, since the dimmer input current iDIM always flows through the resistor 128 when the switch 108 is conducting, the resistor 128 still passively dissipates power regardless of whether the POWER IN is equal to the POWER OUT + PINH, which decreases the efficiency of lighting system 100.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0015] In one embodiment of the present invention, an apparatus includes a controller configured to generate an excess energy control signal to control a transfer of excess energy, drawn from a power supply through a primary-side winding of a switching power converter, to an auxiliary-winding of an auxiliary power dissipation circuit to dissipate the excess energy. The excess energy comprises energy drawn through the primary-side winding of the switching power converter to provide operational compatibility between a dimmer and a load.
[0016] In another embodiment of the present invention, a method includes generating an excess energy control signal to control a transfer of excess energy, drawn from a power supply through a primary-side winding of a switching power converter, to an auxiliary-winding of an auxiliary power dissipation circuit to dissipate the excess energy. The excess energy comprises energy drawn through the primary-side winding of the switching power converter to provide operational compatibility between a dimmer and a load.
[0017] In a further embodiment of the present invention, a lighting system includes one or more light emitting diodes (LEDs) and a switching power converter coupled to the LEDs. The lighting system also includes a controller configured to (1) generate an excess energy control signal to control a transfer of excess energy, drawn from a power supply through a primary-side winding of a switching power converter, to an auxiliary-winding of an auxiliary power dissipation circuit to dissipate the excess energy and (2) control power conversion by the switching power converter for the LEDs. The excess energy comprises energy drawn through the primary-side winding of the switching power converter to provide operational compatibility between a dimmer and the LEDs.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018] The present invention may be better understood, and its numerous objects, features and advantages made apparent to those skilled in the art by referencing the accompanying drawings. The use of the same reference number throughout the several figures designates a like or similar element.
[0019] Figure 1 (labeled prior art) depicts a lighting system that includes a leading edge dimmer.
[0020] Figure 2 (labeled prior art) depicts exemplary voltage graphs associated with the lighting system of Figure 1.
[0021] Figure 3 (labeled prior art) depicts power versus light output for exemplary
incandescent bulbs and light emitting diodes.
[0022] Figure 4 depicts an electronic system with excess energy transfer to an auxiliary power dissipation circuit.
[0023] Figures 5 and 6 depict respective lighting systems, which each represent one embodiment of the electronic system of Figure 4.
[0024] Figure 7 depicts a primary-side and auxiliary-side transformer model configuration of the lighting system of Figure 6.
[0025] Figure 8 depicts waveforms associated with the primary- side and auxiliary- side transformer model configuration of Figure 7.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0026] An electronic system and method include a controller to actively control transfer of excess energy to an auxiliary transformer winding of an auxiliary power dissipation circuit. The "auxiliary transformer winding" is referred to herein as an "auxiliary- winding." The excess energy is a transfer of energy from a primary winding of a switching power converter to the auxiliary-winding of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit. In at least one embodiment, the electronic system is a lighting system that includes a triac-based dimmer. The excess energy is energy drawn through the primary-side winding of the switching power converter to provide operational compatibility between a dimmer through which a power supply provides energy to the switching power converter and a load to which the switching power converter provides energy. As previously described, when the lighting system includes a light source, such as one or more light emitting diodes (LEDs), that uses less power than an incandescent light bulb, the lighting system draws more power in the form of a holding current from the power supply to maintain compatibility between the dimmer and the light source. The controller causes the switching power converter to draw the excess energy to maintain this compatibility between the dimmer and the light source. Energy equals power multiplied by time. Thus, the dissipation of excess energy over time is referred to as power dissipation.
[0027] The particular implementation of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit is a matter of design choice. In at least one embodiment, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit is configured dissipate the excess energy in the form of heat and/or a stored energy for subsequent use. In at least one embodiment, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit includes a Zener diode to dissipate the excess energy as heat. In at least one embodiment, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit also includes a capacitor to store at least some of the excess energy.
[0028] Additionally, the controller and the auxiliary dissipation circuit can be configured to transfer the excess energy during either a flyback phase or during a forward phase of the switching power converter. Additionally, in at least one embodiment, excess energy can also be dissipated in other power dissipation circuits that are connected to or included in the switching power converter. Thus, in at least one embodiment, the controller actively controls power dissipation by generating one or more signals to actively and selectively control power dissipation in the electronic system.
[0029] Figure 4 depicts an electronic system 400 that includes a controller 402 that maintains compatibility between a dimmer 102 and a load 404, such as one or more LEDs, by controlling a switching power converter 406 to draw excess energy through the dimmer 102 from a power supply 104. In at least one embodiment, the excess energy is more energy than an amount of energy drawn by the switching power converter 406 from the power supply 104 less an amount of energy delivered to the load 404 other than the auxiliary power dissipation circuit (P/S) 408 plus inherent energy losses of the switching power converter 406. Power is defined as an amount of energy transferred over a period of time. In at least one embodiment, the amount of excess energy dissipated by the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408 over a half line cycle of the supply voltage VIN is constant or at least approximately constant, and, thus, the average power dissipation by the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408 over the half line cycle is also constant or at least approximately constant.
[0030] The power supply 104, dimmer 102, and full-bridge rectifier 106 function as described in conjunction with Figures 1 and 2 to generate the rectified dimmer voltage VORJN . Referring to Figure 4, the electronic system 400, which in at least one embodiment, is a lighting system, includes an electromagnetic interference (EMI) filter 410. The particular design of the EMI filter 410 is a matter of design choice, and, in at least one embodiment, is a capacitor such as capacitor 110. The electronic system 400 optionally includes a dimmer compatibility circuit 412. The implementation of the dimmer compatibility circuit 412 is a matter of design choice and can be, for example, a DC-DC converter, such as a boost or a buck converter or an active circuit such as described in U.S. Patent Application no. 12/858,164, entitled "Dimmer Output Emulation" and filed August 17, 2010 and U.S. Patent Application no. 13/290,032, entitled "Switching Power Converter Input Voltage Approximate Zero Crossing Determination" and filed November 4, 2011 that describe exemplary embodiments of dimmer output compatibility systems and methods and are both incorporated by reference in their entireties (referred to herein as the "Dimmer Compatibility Documents"). In at least one embodiment, the electronic system 400 includes the optional dimmer compatibility circuit 412 when the controller 402 is configured to dissipate excess energy in a circuit other than the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408. In at least one embodiment, the controller 402 generates a control signal CS2 to control dimmer compatibility as described in the Dimmer Compatibility Documents.
[0031] The switching power converter 406 includes a primary-side control circuit 416 that controls the draw of energy from the power supply 104 through a primary-side winding 418 of transformer 414. The controller 402 generates control signal CSi to control the draw of energy by the primary-side control circuit 416 through the primary-side winding 418. The particular implementation of the primary-side control circuit 416 is a matter of design choice. In at least one embodiment, the control signal CSi is a pulse width modulated signal, and, in at least one embodiment and as subsequently described, the primary-side control circuit 416 is a switch (not shown) whose conductivity follows the pulses of the control signal CSi and generates pulses of the primary- side current ip through the primary- side winding 418.
[0032] When the auxiliary-winding is configured to conduct during a flyback phase of the switching power converter 406, during the flyback phase, energy is transferred to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408. When the auxiliary- winding is configured to conduct during a forward phase of the switching power converter 406, during the forward phase energy, energy is transferred to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408. Embodiments of flyback phase energy transfer and forward phase energy transfer are discussed subsequently.
[0033] The switching power converter 406 transfers at least the excess energy previously described to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408. Whether the excess energy is transferred during the forward phase or the flyback phase is a matter of design choice. In at least one embodiment, the controller 402 generates an excess energy control signal AUXCNTL to control energy transfer to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408.
[0034] The auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408 dissipates the excess energy, which equates to excess power when the excess energy is transferred over a period of time. The particular implementation of the power auxiliary power dissipation circuit is a matter of design choice. The auxiliary power dissipation circuit can use virtually any circuit to dissipate the excess energy. As subsequently described in more detail, in at least one embodiment, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit includes both active and passive circuits, such as one or more field effect transistors, Zener diodes, capacitors, and/or resistors. In at least one embodiment, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408 is configured to dissipate the excess energy in the form of heat in the Zener diode and/or a stored energy for subsequent use in the capacitor.
[0035] Additionally, in at least one embodiment, the controller 402 can control excess energy dissipation in other power dissipation circuits that are connected to or included in the switching power converter 406 as for example, described in U.S. Patent Application no. 13/289,845, entitled, "Controlled Energy Dissipation in a Switching Power Converter," and filed on
November 4, 2011 and U.S. Patent Application no. 13/289,931, entitled "Controlled Power Dissipation In A Lighting System," and filed on November 4, 2011, both of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties. Thus, in at least one embodiment, the controller 402 actively controls power dissipation by generating one or more signals to actively and selectively control power dissipation in the electronic system 400.
[0036] Although Figure 4 depicts the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408 as located separate from the controller 402, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408 can be included as part of the controller 402. In at least one embodiment, the controller 402 is an integrated circuit, and the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408 is located external to the controller 402. Thus, dissipating power outside the controller 402 serves a dual purpose of providing dimmer 102-to- load 404 compatibility and avoiding generating excess heat in the controller 402.
[0037] Figure 5 depicts a lighting system 500, which represents one embodiment of the electronic system 400 of Figure 4. The lighting system 500 includes a switching power converter 501 and a controller 502, which represents one embodiment of controller 402.
Controller 502 includes an auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 that generates the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL to transfer excess energy from the primary-side winding 418 to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 during a flyback phase of the switching power converter 501. The auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 represents one embodiment of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 408. The auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 is "actively controllable" because the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 controls when the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 generates and does not generate power. In at least one embodiment, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 504 is incorporated into controller 502; although, whether the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 504 is incorporated as part of the controller 502 or separate from the controller is a matter of design choice.
[0038] The controller 502 is configured to control the switching power converter 501 so that that during the transfer of energy to the auxiliary-winding 506, the switching power converter 501 does not transfer energy to secondary-winding 422. Thus, the switching power converter 501 isolates the secondary transformer winding current is from an auxiliary- winding current IAUX- By isolating the energy delivered to the secondary-winding 506, in at least one embodiment, the controller 502 can transfer excess energy to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 without affecting in any significant way the energy transferred to the one or more LEDs 508. The LED(s) 508 represent one embodiment of the load 404. A diode and resistor- capacitor filter circuit 510 provides a path for voltage perturbations.
[0039] The switching power converter 501 is configured in a flyback configuration so that when FET 512 conducts (switch 502 represents one embodiment of the primary-side current control circuit 416) the primary-side current iP, and the primary-side current iP ramps up through the primary-side winding 418. The dot convention of primary- side winding 418 and the diode 420 prevent flow of the secondary-side current is from the secondary- winding 506 when the primary current ip is drawn into the primary- side winding 418. When the controller 502 generates the switch control signal CSi to stop the FET 512 from conducting the primary- side current ip, the primary-side current ip falls to 0, and the voltage across the primary-side winding 418 reverses (also referred to as the "flyback phase"). During the flyback phase, the secondary- side current is quickly rises and charges capacitor 424. Capacitor 424 provides an output voltage VLD and current to the LED(s) 508. The resistor 538 conducts the primary-side current iP and develops a voltage VIP SENSE that is directly proportional to the primary- side current iP. In at least one embodiment, the controller 502 utilizes the voltage VIP SENSE to, for example, detect a peak value of the primary-side current ip to determine when the controller 502 deasserts the control signal CSi. The term "deassert" refers to transitioning a signal from a logical 1 to a logical 0. The term "assert" refers to transitioning a signal from a logical 0 to a logical 1. In at least one embodiment, asserting the control signal CSi refers to generating a pulse of the control signal CSi, and deasserting the control signal CSi refers to ending the pulse. The manner of generating the control signal CSi is a matter of design choice. In at least one embodiment, the control signal CSi is generated as described in U.S. patent application no. 12/919,086, entitled "Primary-Side Control of a Switching Power Converter With Feed Forward Delay
Compensation", inventors Zhaohui He, et al., and filing date June 1, 2012, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
[0040] To cause the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 to receive energy from the primary- side winding 418, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 asserts the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL while a value of a reflected voltage VREF s across the secondary-winding 422 is greater than a value of a reflected voltage VREF A across the auxiliary- winding 506. As subsequently explained in more detail, when the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL is asserted while the reflected voltage VREF s is greater than the reflected voltage VREF A, the transfer of excess energy is isolated to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504. An asserted auxiliary power dissipation circuit control signal AUXCNTL has a value of VDD, which shifts the voltage across capacitor 524 and reverse biases the Zener diode 526. The Zener breakdown voltage Vzo of Zener diode 526 is greater than the threshold voltage of the FET 528. Thus, when the Zener diode 526 is reverse biased, the gate voltage VG rises to near VDD + Vzo, such as +12V, and the FET 528 conducts. When the FET 528 conducts, a low impedance current path for auxiliary current IAUX is available through diode 522, FET 528, and diode 530. At time t0, (see Figure 8) control signal CSi is a logical one, and FET 512 conducts the primary current iP through the primary- winding 418.
[0041] The lighting system 500 includes a Zener diode 514 and capacitor 516 to respectively dissipate a portion of the excess energy as heat and store a portion of the excess energy for subsequent use. As subsequently described in more detail, the capacitor 516 dissipates a portion of the excess energy via charging to a Zener breakdown voltage Vzi set by the breakdown voltage Vzi of Zener diode 514. When the voltage VDD exceeds the Zener breakdown voltage Vzi, the Zener diode 514 conducts, and any portion of excess energy received after the capacitor 516 charges to the Zener breakdown voltage VZi is dissipated by the Zener diode 514 as heat to prevent the voltage VDD from rising above the Zener breakdown voltage Vzi.
[0042] The auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 asserts the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL to control the energy transfer to the Zener diode 514 by generating a positive voltage pulse of the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL. The particular implementation of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 is a matter of design choice. In at least one embodiment, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 generates the pulse of the control signal AUXCNTL during each cycle of the input voltage VIN, which is a half line cycle of the supply voltage VSUPPLY (Figure 4), for which excess energy is to be transferred to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504. As long as a reflected voltage for the auxiliary winding 506 is smaller than the reflected voltage for the secondary-winding 422, energy can be transferred to the auxiliary- winding 506 during the flyback phase by turning on FET 512. U.S. Patent Application no. 13/715,451 , entitled "Isolation of Secondary Transformer Winding Current During Auxiliary Power Supply Generation", and filed on December 14, 2012 describes exemplary embodiments of generating the signal AUXCNTL. The dotted line 532 indicates that the voltage VDD can optionally be provided to the controller 502 as an auxiliary supply voltage. Thus, in at least one embodiment, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 can also function as an auxiliary power supply.
[0043] The auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 also includes resistors 534 and 536 configured as a voltage divider to sample the reflected voltage VREF _Α· The voltage divider of resistors 534 and 536 has a relatively high impedance and conducts a negligible amount of current. The zero voltage detection (ZVD) signal represents the voltage across resistor 536, and the signal ZVD is used by the controller 502 to detect a zero crossing in the input voltage ViN.
[0044] In at least one embodiment, when the controller 502 detects the zero crossing of the input voltage VIN via the signal ZVD, the dimmer 102 (e.g., as shown in Figure 4) stops conducting. When the dimmer 102 stops conducting, there is no need for a hold current.
Accordingly, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 deasserts the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL to stop excess energy transfer corresponding to the hold current.
[0045] The switching power converter 501 does not deliver all energy to the LED(s) 508. The primary-side winding 418 delivers energy to both the secondary- winding 422 and the auxiliary- winding 506. Thus, in at least one embodiment, to precisely determine the amount of energy the switching power converter 501 transfers to the LED(s) 508, in at least one embodiment, the controller 502 ensures that the times when charge is delivered to the secondary- winding 422 and to the auxiliary-winding 506 are known and mutually exclusive. The auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 and the actively controllable auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 allow the controller 502 to isolate the energy transferred to the LED(s) 508 from the energy transferred to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504. By isolating the energy deliveries, the amount of energy transferred to the LED(s) 508 is not affected by the amount of energy transferred to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504, and the controller 502 can, thus, determine the amount of energy the switching power converter 501 delivers to the LED(s) 508. In at least one
embodiment, the lighting system 500 achieves an isolation between transfer of energy to the secondary-side winding 422 and to the auxiliary- winding 506 by ensuring that a value of a reflected voltage VREF s across the secondary-winding 422 is greater than a value of a reflected voltage VREF A across the auxiliary- winding 506 when transferring energy to the auxiliary- winding 506 and, conversely, by providing a high impedance current path for the auxiliary current IAUX when transferring energy to the secondary- winding 422.
[0046] To isolate the energy transfer between the secondary- winding 422 and the auxiliary- winding 506, in at least one embodiment, the controller 502 controls mutually exclusive times for the transfer of energy from the primary- winding 418 of the transformer 414 to the secondary- winding 422 and to the auxiliary- winding 506 for the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504. For example, during a first period of time, the controller 502 controls the transfer of energy from the primary- winding 418 of the transformer 414 to the secondary- winding 422. During a second period of time, the controller 502 actively controls transfer of energy from the primary- winding 418 to the auxiliary- winding 506 without transferring any energy to the secondary-winding.
[0047] Since the secondary-side current is transfers energy to the LED(s) 508 only when diode 420 is forward biased. Diode 420 is forward biased only when the reflected voltage VREF s is greater than the forward bias voltage VF of diode 420 plus the load voltage VLD- The forward bias voltage VF of diode 420 is generally less than or equal to IV, such as 0.7V. The auxiliary power controller 503 controls the reflected voltage across the auxiliary- winding 506 by controlling the auxiliary power dissipation circuit control circuitry 518. In at least one embodiment, when the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 asserts the auxiliary voltage control signal AUXCNTL, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit control circuitry 518 provides a low impedance path from the auxiliary-winding 506 to the node 520. The low impedance path keeps the reflected voltage VREF A at the voltage level VDD across the capacitor 516. The auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 controls the auxiliary power dissipation circuit control circuitry 518 so that when energy is transferred from the primary- winding 418 to the auxiliary-winding 506, the reflected voltage VREF A is less than the value of the forward bias voltage VF of diode 420 plus the load voltage VLD, i.e. when the signal
AUXCNTL is asserted, VREF A < (VF + VLD). Thus, since the flyback voltage across the primary- winding 418 does not rise instantaneously, the reflected voltage VREF A will remain less than (VF + VLD) as the primary- winding 418 transfers energy to the auxiliary- winding 506. Since the reflected voltage VREF A will remain less than (VF + VLD), diode 420 will be reversed biased, and the secondary current is will not flow. Thus, no charge is transferred to the LED(s) 508 when the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 asserts the auxiliary voltage control signal AUXCNTL.
[0048] Conversely, in at least one embodiment, when the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 deasserts the auxiliary voltage control signal AUXCNTL, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit control circuitry 518 raises an impedance of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 to a value that prevents most if not all energy transfer to the auxiliary- winding 506. Thus, the primary- winding 418 transfers all energy to the secondary- winding 422. The auxiliary power dissipation circuit control circuitry 518 raises an impedance of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 by causing the FET 528 to stop conducting and become an open circuit between the diode 522 and the capacitor 516. When all energy is transferred to the secondary- side winding, the diode 420 is forward biased, and the secondary-side current is delivers all the charge from the primary-winding 418 to the secondary-winding 422 and then to the LED(s) 508. Since the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 can control mutually exclusive energy transfer to the LED(s) 508 and to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504, the controller 502 can determine very precisely the amount of charge delivered to the LED(s) 508.
[0049] When all energy is transferred to the secondary-winding 422, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 controls the auxiliary power dissipation circuit circuitry 518 so that the reflected voltage VREF A is less than the value of the forward bias voltage VF of diode 420 plus the load voltage VLD, i.e. when the signal AUXCNTL is asserted, VREF A < (VF + VLD). Thus, since the flyback voltage across the primary- winding 418 does not rise instantaneously, the reflected voltage VREF A will remain less than (VF + VLD) as the primary- winding 418 transfers energy to the auxiliary-winding 506. Since the reflected voltage VREF A will remain less than (VF + VLD), diode 420 will be reversed biased, and the secondary current is will not flow. Thus, no charge is transferred to the LED(s) 508 when the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 503 asserts the auxiliary voltage control signal AUXCNTL.
[0050] The reflected voltage VREF s is determined in accordance with Equation 1 :
Figure imgf000017_0001
Equation 1
VREF s is the reflected voltage due to the secondary-winding 422, VLD is the voltage across the LED(s) 508, and Nl is the turns ratio between the secondary-winding 422 and the primary- winding 418.
[0051] The reflected voltage VREF A when the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL is asserted is determined in accordance with Equation 2:
Figure imgf000018_0001
Equation 2
VREF A is the reflected voltage due to the auxiliary- winding 506 of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504, VDD is the voltage across the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 504 when the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL is asserted, and N2 is the turns ratio between the auxiliary- winding 506 and the primary- winding 418.
[0052] Figure 6 depicts a lighting system 600, which represents one embodiment of the electronic system 400 of Figure 4. The lighting system 600 includes a switching power converter 601 and a controller 602, which represents one embodiment of controller 402.
Controller 602 includes an auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 603 that generates the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL to transfer excess energy from the primary-side winding 418 to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 605 during a forward phase of the switching power converter 501.
[0053] The configuration of the auxiliary winding 604 in transformer 614 is not dependent on the type of DC-DC converter and the following discussion can be extended to any other DC-DC converter topology (isolated or non-isolated) as long as the auxiliary winding 604 has the same dot configuration as the primary- side winding 418.
[0054] When not transferring energy drawn by the primary-side winding 418 to the auxiliary- winding 604, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 603 drives the control signal AUXCNTL to a logical zero (e.g. 0V). When the control signal AUXCNTL is thereby deasserted, the gate voltage VG drops and turns the FET 528 OFF (i.e. non-conductive). Turning the FET 528 OFF prevents any significant energy transfer to the auxiliary-winding 604 (except for the negligible current used to generated the ZVD signal). When the controller 602 generates a pulse of the control signal CSi, the primary-side current ip ramps up in the primary-side winding 418. When the primary-side current iP ramps up, the auxiliary current IAUX also ramps up, which transfers energy from the primary-winding 418 to the auxiliary- winding 604.
[0055] To determine when to stop the energy transfer, a comparator 607 compares a reference voltage VI with a primary-side current iP sense voltage VIP SENSE developed across the sense resistor 538. The reference voltage VI equals a target current ITARGET times RSENSE, i.e. VI = IREF ' RSENSE- "RSENSE" represents the resistance of resistor 538. Thus, comparison of voltage VI against voltage VIP SENSE essentially compares the primary-side current iP against the target current ITARGET. When the primary-side current iP reaches the target value ITARGET, the comparator 605 transitions the comparator output signal CO from a logical 1 to a logical 0. The controller 602 then deasserts the control signal CSi to turn the FET 512 OFF. Generating a logical zero value of the control signal AUXCNTL stops the excess energy transfer, and turning the FET 512 OFF stops the primary-side current ip.. The excess energy transfer mechanism is discussed with reference to Figures 6 and 7.
[0056] The value of the reference voltage VI is a matter of design choice. The value of the reference voltage VI sets the state change point for the comparator 607. Thus, increasing the value of the reference voltage VI increases the excess energy transfer time and, thus, increases the amount of excess energy transferred to the capacitor 516 and Zener diode 514 of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 605 during a cycle of the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL. Conversely, decreasing the value of the reference voltage V I decreases the excess energy transfer time and, thus, decreases the amount of excess energy transferred to the capacitor 516 and Zener diode 514 of the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 605 during a cycle of the excess energy control signal AUXCNTL. When the control signal AUXCNTL is driven high simultaneously with the control signal CSi, energy is transferred to capacitor 516. The impact of turning on control signal AUXCNTL and the detection of a peak value of primary current IP is next discussed. In at least one embodiment, the controller 602 generates the control signal CSi as described in conjunction with controller 502.
[0057] Figure 7 depicts a primary-side and auxiliary-side transformer model configuration 700 of the lighting system 600. Figure 8 depicts waveforms associated with the primary-side and auxiliary- side transformer model configuration 700. Referring to Figures 7 and 8, the primary- side winding 702 is an equivalent of the primary-side winding 418 (Figure 6) and is modeled as a magnetizing inductance 704 in parallel with an ideal transformer consisting of primary winding 706 and auxiliary- winding 708. Thus, the primary-side current iP consists of two components: (1) the magnetizing component 1M and (2) the forward component ipw (where ip = IFW + ΪΜ)·
[0058] Referring to Figures 6-8, in at least one embodiment, at time t0, auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 603 generates the control signal AUXCNTL to turn the switch 528 ON at the same time the controller 602 asserts a pulse of the control signal CSi. At time to, the auxiliary-winding current IAUX also ramps up linearly with time, and the current IAUX is reflected to the primary winding 706 as forward component iFw=iAux N2. Thus, the primary- side current ip = ΪΜ + IFW = ΪΜ + 1AUX/ 2 for the period TAux of the control signal AUXCNTL. Once sufficient excess energy has been transferred to capacitor 516 and Zener diode 514 (Figure 6), the controller 602 drives the control signal AUXCNTL low at time tl . Driving the control signal AUXCNTL causes the auxiliary current IAUX to go to zero, which in turn causes the reflected forward component iFW to go to zero. Thus, between times tl and t2, when the control signal CSi is driven low, the primary-side current iP equals the magnetizing component iM. The primary-side current ip thus ramps up with a slope governed by the magnetizing component 1M until the voltage VIP SENSE across resistor 538 reaches voltage VI . At time t2, the comparator 605 changes states indicating via signal CO to the controller 602 that the primary-side current iP sense voltage VIP SENSE has reached the reference voltage VI . The controller 602 then turns switch 528 OFF, thus causing the energy built in the transformer 614 to be transferred to the secondary winding 422 and the LED(s) 508. In at least one embodiment, the duration of period TAUX for control signal AUXCNTL can be varied by the controller 602 to determine the amount of excess energy to transfer to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 605.
[0059] In at least one embodiment, for the lighting system 600 to function properly by controlling excess energy transfer to the auxiliary power dissipation circuit 605 and providing energy to the LED(s) 508, in at least one embodiment, the auxiliary power dissipation circuit controller 603 ensures that the voltage VIP SENSE across resistor 538 does not reach the reference voltage VI while the control signals CSi and AUXCNTL are driven high. If the reference voltage VI is reached when both control signals CSi and AUXCNTL are driven high, the comparator 605 will generate a state change, even though the actual energy build up in the transformer 614 has not yet reached the desired level. This false comparator state change will cause a transfer of lesser than expected energy to the secondary winding 604 when the control signal CSi is driven low, thus, causing problems in regulating the secondary-side current is. In at least one embodiment, the lighting system 600 properly functions when the lighting system 600 complies with the following three constraints:
1. The period TAux for control signal AUXCNTL is short enough so that the primary-side current iP does not increase sufficiently to cause the sensed voltage VIP SENSE to exceed the reference voltage VI during the period TAUX-
2. The controller 602 can ignore any comparator state change detected during the period TAUX for control signal AUXCNTL and can deassert the control signal CSi at a following state change of comparator 605.
3. Choosing a large enough turns ratio N2 to ensure that the ramp up of the auxiliary winding current IAUX does not lead to a significant forward component iFw, thus reducing the chances of the voltage ViP SENSE reaching the voltage reference VI when
AUX_CNTL signal is driven high.
[0060] Thus, an electronic system and method, such as a lighting system and method, include a controller to actively control transfer of excess energy to an auxiliary-winding of an auxiliary power dissipation circuit.
[0061] Although embodiments have been described in detail, it should be understood that various changes, substitutions, and alterations can be made hereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS: 1. An apparatus comprising: a controller configured to generate an excess energy control signal to control a transfer of excess energy, drawn from a power supply through a primary-side winding of a switching power converter, to an auxiliary- winding of an auxiliary power dissipation circuit to dissipate the excess energy, wherein the excess energy comprises energy drawn through the primary-side winding of the switching power converter to provide operational compatibility between a dimmer and a load.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the controller is configured to control the transfer of excess energy to the auxiliary-winding to provide compatibility between the load and the dimmer coupled to the switching power converter in a lighting system.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the switching power converter is a flyback-type switching power converter, the controller is configured to generate the excess energy control signal during an energy transfer phase, and the energy transfer phase occurs after a primary-side winding charging phase begins and before an end of a subsequent flyback phase of the switching power converter.
4. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the switching power converter is a flyback-type switching power converter, the controller is configured to generate the excess energy control signal during a controlled power auxiliary transfer phase, and the controlled power auxiliary transfer phase occurs during a charging phase and before a subsequent flyback phase of the switching power converter.
5. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising: the auxiliary power dissipation circuit, wherein the auxiliary power dissipation circuit includes a switch coupled to the controller and having a control terminal to receive the excess energy control signal and the power dissipation circuit comprises a passive circuit coupled to the switch to dissipate the excess energy when the controller generates the excess energy control signal.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein the passive circuit comprises a Zener diode.
7. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising: the switching power converter is coupled to the controller and the load.
8. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the controller is further configured to dissipate additional excess energy in circuitry of the switching power converter other than the auxiliary power dissipation circuit.
9. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the excess energy is dissipated as power in a form of at least one member of a group consisting of heat and energy storage.
10. A method comprising: generating an excess energy control signal to control a transfer of excess energy, drawn from a power supply through a primary-side winding of a switching power converter, to an auxiliary-winding of an auxiliary power dissipation circuit to dissipate the excess energy, wherein the excess energy comprises energy drawn through the primary-side winding of the switching power converter to provide operational compatibility between a dimmer and a load.
11. The method of claim 10 further comprising controlling the transfer of excess energy to the auxiliary- winding to provide compatibility between the load and a dimmer coupled to the switching power converter in a lighting system.
12. The method of claim 10 wherein the switching power converter is a flyback-type switching power converter, the controller is configured to generate the excess energy control signal during an energy transfer phase, and the energy transfer phase occurs after a primary-side winding charging phase begins and before an end of a subsequent flyback phase of the switching power converter.
13. The method of claim 10 wherein the switching power converter is a flyback-type switching power converter, and the method further comprises generating the excess energy control signal during a controlled power auxiliary transfer phase, and the controlled power auxiliary transfer phase occurs during a charging phase and before a subsequent flyback phase of the switching power converter.
14. The method of claim 10 wherein: the auxiliary power dissipation circuit includes a switch coupled to the controller and having a control terminal, the method further comprises: generating the excess energy control signal; and during generation of the excess energy control signal, dissipating power in a
passive circuit of the power dissipation circuit.
15. The method of claim 14 wherein the passive circuit comprises a Zener diode.
16. The method of claim 10 wherein the method further comprises dissipating additional excess energy in circuitry of the switching power converter other than the auxiliary power dissipation circuit.
17. The method of claim 10 further comprising: dissipating the excess energy as power in a form of at least one member of a group
consisting of heat and energy storage.
18. A lighting system comprising: one or more light emitting diodes (LEDs); a switching power converter coupled to the LEDs; and a controller configured to (1) generate an excess energy control signal to control a
transfer of excess energy, drawn from a power supply through a primary-side winding of a switching power converter, to an auxiliary-winding of an auxiliary power dissipation circuit to dissipate the excess energy, and (2) control power conversion by the switching power converter for the LEDs, wherein the excess energy comprises energy drawn through the primary-side winding of the switching power converter to provide operational compatibility between a dimmer and the LEDs.
19. The lighting system of claim 18 wherein the switching power converter is a flyback-type switching power converter, the controller is configured to generate the excess energy control signal during an energy transfer phase, and the energy transfer phase occurs after a primary-side winding charging phase begins and before an end of a subsequent flyback phase of the switching power converter.
20. The lighting system of claim 18 wherein the switching power converter is a flyback-type switching power converter, the controller is configured to generate the excess energy control signal during a controlled power auxiliary transfer phase, and the controlled power auxiliary transfer phase occurs during a charging phase and before a subsequent flyback phase of the switching power converter.
21. The lighting system of claim 18 further comprising the auxiliary power dissipation circuit.
22. The lighting system of claim 21 wherein the auxiliary power dissipation circuit is configured to dissipate the excess energy and provide an auxiliary power supply voltage.
PCT/US2014/028299 2013-03-14 2014-03-14 Controlled electronic system power dissipation via an auxiliary-power dissipation circuit WO2014152933A1 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CN201480027678.7A CN105247958B (en) 2013-03-14 2014-03-14 Via the controlled electrical system-power dissipation of auxiliary power dissipating circuit
EP14726029.3A EP2974545A1 (en) 2013-03-14 2014-03-14 Controlled electronic system power dissipation via an auxiliary-power dissipation circuit

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US201361782253P 2013-03-14 2013-03-14
US61/782,253 2013-03-14

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2014152933A1 true WO2014152933A1 (en) 2014-09-25

Family

ID=50780847

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US2014/028299 WO2014152933A1 (en) 2013-03-14 2014-03-14 Controlled electronic system power dissipation via an auxiliary-power dissipation circuit

Country Status (4)

Country Link
US (1) US10187934B2 (en)
EP (1) EP2974545A1 (en)
CN (1) CN105247958B (en)
WO (1) WO2014152933A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US9520794B2 (en) * 2012-07-25 2016-12-13 Philips Lighting Holding B.V Acceleration of output energy provision for a load during start-up of a switching power converter
US10763752B1 (en) * 2019-06-25 2020-09-01 Chengdu Monolithic Power Systems Co., Ltd. Zero-voltage-switching flyback converter
US9729077B2 (en) * 2015-01-16 2017-08-08 Graco Minnesota Inc. Front end protection power controller
US9578699B2 (en) * 2015-02-11 2017-02-21 Cypress Semiconductor Corporation Control circuit
US10182481B2 (en) * 2016-04-26 2019-01-15 RAB Lighting Inc. Bi-level low voltage dimming controller for lighting drivers
CN109644534B (en) * 2016-08-29 2022-01-28 昕诺飞控股有限公司 Control of isolated auxiliary and DALI power supplies for sensor-ready LED drivers
TWI599264B (en) * 2016-12-05 2017-09-11 東貝光電科技股份有限公司 Flicker-free dimming circuit for non-point light source
CN107094329B (en) * 2017-05-03 2019-01-29 矽力杰半导体技术(杭州)有限公司 LED drive circuit
CN107222952A (en) * 2017-07-25 2017-09-29 中航联创科技有限公司上海分公司 LED lamp universaling coder circuit for visible light communication
US11374500B2 (en) * 2017-11-17 2022-06-28 Rompower Technology Holdings, Llc Harvesting energy from parasitic elements of a power converter
US10462863B2 (en) 2017-12-20 2019-10-29 Lumileds Llc Dimmer interface having reduced power consumption

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20110109230A1 (en) * 2009-11-11 2011-05-12 Osram Sylvania Inc. Ballast Circuit for LED-Based Lamp Including Power Factor Correction with Protective Isolation
US20120112638A1 (en) * 2010-11-04 2012-05-10 Melanson John L Thermal Management In A Lighting System Using Multiple, Controlled Power Dissipation Circuits
US20120319607A1 (en) * 2011-06-15 2012-12-20 Takuya Watanabe Lighting controlling method, lighting apparatus and lighting system

Family Cites Families (112)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4523128A (en) 1982-12-10 1985-06-11 Honeywell Inc. Remote control of dimmable electronic gas discharge lamp ballasts
US5319301A (en) 1984-08-15 1994-06-07 Michael Callahan Inductorless controlled transition and other light dimmers
US5321350A (en) 1989-03-07 1994-06-14 Peter Haas Fundamental frequency and period detector
US5055746A (en) 1990-08-13 1991-10-08 Electronic Ballast Technology, Incorporated Remote control of fluorescent lamp ballast using power flow interruption coding with means to maintain filament voltage substantially constant as the lamp voltage decreases
FR2671930B1 (en) 1991-01-21 1993-04-16 Legrand Sa CURRENT DIMMER FOR POWER LOAD, WITH REDUCED FILTER LOSSES.
US5430635A (en) 1993-12-06 1995-07-04 Bertonee, Inc. High power factor electronic transformer system for gaseous discharge tubes
US5691605A (en) 1995-03-31 1997-11-25 Philips Electronics North America Electronic ballast with interface circuitry for multiple dimming inputs
US5604411A (en) 1995-03-31 1997-02-18 Philips Electronics North America Corporation Electronic ballast having a triac dimming filter with preconditioner offset control
US5770928A (en) 1995-11-02 1998-06-23 Nsi Corporation Dimming control system with distributed command processing
US6043635A (en) 1996-05-17 2000-03-28 Echelon Corporation Switched leg power supply
DE19632282A1 (en) 1996-08-09 1998-02-19 Holzer Walter Prof Dr H C Ing Process and device for controlling the brightness of fluorescent lamps
US6111368A (en) 1997-09-26 2000-08-29 Lutron Electronics Co., Inc. System for preventing oscillations in a fluorescent lamp ballast
US6091205A (en) 1997-10-02 2000-07-18 Lutron Electronics Co., Inc. Phase controlled dimming system with active filter for preventing flickering and undesired intensity changes
US6046550A (en) 1998-06-22 2000-04-04 Lutron Electronics Co., Inc. Multi-zone lighting control system
US6433525B2 (en) 2000-05-03 2002-08-13 Intersil Americas Inc. Dc to DC converter method and circuitry
US6531831B2 (en) 2000-05-12 2003-03-11 O2Micro International Limited Integrated circuit for lamp heating and dimming control
DE60101978T2 (en) 2000-06-15 2004-12-23 City University Of Hong Kong Dimmable ECG
US7038399B2 (en) 2001-03-13 2006-05-02 Color Kinetics Incorporated Methods and apparatus for providing power to lighting devices
US6510995B2 (en) 2001-03-16 2003-01-28 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. RGB LED based light driver using microprocessor controlled AC distributed power system
US6900599B2 (en) 2001-03-22 2005-05-31 International Rectifier Corporation Electronic dimming ballast for cold cathode fluorescent lamp
US6407514B1 (en) 2001-03-29 2002-06-18 General Electric Company Non-synchronous control of self-oscillating resonant converters
US6577512B2 (en) 2001-05-25 2003-06-10 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Power supply for LEDs
JP3741035B2 (en) 2001-11-29 2006-02-01 サンケン電気株式会社 Switching power supply
IL147578A (en) 2002-01-10 2006-06-11 Lightech Electronics Ind Ltd Lamp transformer for use with an electronic dimmer and method for use thereof for reducing acoustic noise
KR100481444B1 (en) 2002-03-18 2005-04-11 원 호 이 Dimming system of the discharge lamp for energy saving
US6940733B2 (en) 2002-08-22 2005-09-06 Supertex, Inc. Optimal control of wide conversion ratio switching converters
JP4433677B2 (en) 2003-02-14 2010-03-17 パナソニック電工株式会社 Electrodeless discharge lamp lighting device
US6865093B2 (en) 2003-05-27 2005-03-08 Power Integrations, Inc. Electronic circuit control element with tap element
US7733678B1 (en) 2004-03-19 2010-06-08 Marvell International Ltd. Power factor correction boost converter with continuous, discontinuous, or critical mode selection
US7872427B2 (en) 2004-05-19 2011-01-18 Goeken Group Corp. Dimming circuit for LED lighting device with means for holding TRIAC in conduction
US20060022648A1 (en) 2004-08-02 2006-02-02 Green Power Technologies Ltd. Method and control circuitry for improved-performance switch-mode converters
US7812576B2 (en) 2004-09-24 2010-10-12 Marvell World Trade Ltd. Power factor control systems and methods
US7180250B1 (en) 2005-01-25 2007-02-20 Henry Michael Gannon Triac-based, low voltage AC dimmer
WO2006079937A1 (en) 2005-01-28 2006-08-03 Philips Intellectual Property & Standards Gmbh Circuit arrangement and method for the operation of a high-pressure gas discharge lamp
US7081722B1 (en) 2005-02-04 2006-07-25 Kimlong Huynh Light emitting diode multiphase driver circuit and method
US7102902B1 (en) 2005-02-17 2006-09-05 Ledtronics, Inc. Dimmer circuit for LED
DE102005018775A1 (en) 2005-04-22 2006-10-26 Tridonicatco Gmbh & Co. Kg Electronic ballast for e.g. fluorescent lamp, has microcontroller assigned to intermediate circuit voltage regulator, where external instructions are applied to microcontroller, and properties of regulator depend on external instructions
US7432661B2 (en) 2005-05-02 2008-10-07 Lutron Electronics Co., Inc. Electronic ballast having a flyback cat-ear power supply
CN101171890A (en) 2005-05-09 2008-04-30 皇家飞利浦电子股份有限公司 Method and circuit for enabling dimming using triac dimmer
US7184937B1 (en) 2005-07-14 2007-02-27 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Army Signal repetition-rate and frequency-drift estimator using proportional-delayed zero-crossing techniques
CN100576965C (en) 2005-11-11 2009-12-30 王际 Led drive circuit and control method
CN101379887B (en) 2005-12-20 2012-10-31 皇家飞利浦电子股份有限公司 Method and apparatus for controlling current supplied to electronic devices
US8558470B2 (en) 2006-01-20 2013-10-15 Point Somee Limited Liability Company Adaptive current regulation for solid state lighting
US7902769B2 (en) 2006-01-20 2011-03-08 Exclara, Inc. Current regulator for modulating brightness levels of solid state lighting
US8742674B2 (en) 2006-01-20 2014-06-03 Point Somee Limited Liability Company Adaptive current regulation for solid state lighting
US7656103B2 (en) 2006-01-20 2010-02-02 Exclara, Inc. Impedance matching circuit for current regulation of solid state lighting
US8441210B2 (en) 2006-01-20 2013-05-14 Point Somee Limited Liability Company Adaptive current regulation for solid state lighting
US20080018261A1 (en) 2006-05-01 2008-01-24 Kastner Mark A LED power supply with options for dimming
US7443146B2 (en) 2006-05-23 2008-10-28 Intersil Americas Inc. Auxiliary turn-on mechanism for reducing conduction loss in body-diode of low side MOSFET of coupled-inductor DC-DC converter
JP4661736B2 (en) 2006-08-28 2011-03-30 パナソニック電工株式会社 Dimmer
GB0617393D0 (en) 2006-09-04 2006-10-11 Lutron Electronics Co Variable load circuits for use with lighting control devices
US7750580B2 (en) 2006-10-06 2010-07-06 U Lighting Group Co Ltd China Dimmable, high power factor ballast for gas discharge lamps
US7864546B2 (en) 2007-02-13 2011-01-04 Akros Silicon Inc. DC-DC converter with communication across an isolation pathway
US7928662B2 (en) 2006-12-18 2011-04-19 Microsemi Corp.—Analog Mixed Signal Group Ltd. Voltage range extender mechanism
US7804256B2 (en) 2007-03-12 2010-09-28 Cirrus Logic, Inc. Power control system for current regulated light sources
US7288902B1 (en) 2007-03-12 2007-10-30 Cirrus Logic, Inc. Color variations in a dimmable lighting device with stable color temperature light sources
US7667408B2 (en) 2007-03-12 2010-02-23 Cirrus Logic, Inc. Lighting system with lighting dimmer output mapping
US7554473B2 (en) 2007-05-02 2009-06-30 Cirrus Logic, Inc. Control system using a nonlinear delta-sigma modulator with nonlinear process modeling
JP5169170B2 (en) 2007-11-26 2013-03-27 株式会社リコー Step-down switching regulator
JP2009170240A (en) 2008-01-16 2009-07-30 Sharp Corp Dimming device of light-emitting diode
GB0800755D0 (en) 2008-01-16 2008-02-27 Melexis Nv Improvements in and relating to low power lighting
US8040070B2 (en) 2008-01-23 2011-10-18 Cree, Inc. Frequency converted dimming signal generation
US8274241B2 (en) 2008-02-06 2012-09-25 C. Crane Company, Inc. Light emitting diode lighting device
US8102167B2 (en) 2008-03-25 2012-01-24 Microsemi Corporation Phase-cut dimming circuit
US7759881B1 (en) 2008-03-31 2010-07-20 Cirrus Logic, Inc. LED lighting system with a multiple mode current control dimming strategy
EP2292078A4 (en) 2008-05-15 2015-04-01 Marko Cencur Method for dimming non-linear loads using an ac phase control scheme and a universal dimmer using the method
WO2009149556A1 (en) 2008-06-13 2009-12-17 Queen's University At Kingston Dimmable single stage electronic ballast with high power factor
GB2461509A (en) * 2008-06-30 2010-01-06 Cambridge Semiconductor Ltd Switched-mode power supply transformer
US8125798B2 (en) 2008-07-01 2012-02-28 Active-Semi, Inc. Constant current and voltage controller in a three-pin package operating in critical conduction mode
US7936132B2 (en) 2008-07-16 2011-05-03 Iwatt Inc. LED lamp
US8212491B2 (en) 2008-07-25 2012-07-03 Cirrus Logic, Inc. Switching power converter control with triac-based leading edge dimmer compatibility
US8487546B2 (en) 2008-08-29 2013-07-16 Cirrus Logic, Inc. LED lighting system with accurate current control
US8228002B2 (en) 2008-09-05 2012-07-24 Lutron Electronics Co., Inc. Hybrid light source
JP5211959B2 (en) 2008-09-12 2013-06-12 株式会社リコー DC-DC converter
CN101686587B (en) 2008-09-25 2015-01-28 皇家飞利浦电子股份有限公司 Drive for providing variable power for LED array
US9167641B2 (en) 2008-11-28 2015-10-20 Lightech Electronic Industries Ltd. Phase controlled dimming LED driver system and method thereof
US8288954B2 (en) * 2008-12-07 2012-10-16 Cirrus Logic, Inc. Primary-side based control of secondary-side current for a transformer
CN101505568B (en) 2009-03-12 2012-10-03 深圳市众明半导体照明有限公司 LED light modulating apparatus suitable for light modulator
US8310171B2 (en) 2009-03-13 2012-11-13 Led Specialists Inc. Line voltage dimmable constant current LED driver
EP2257124B1 (en) 2009-05-29 2018-01-24 Silergy Corp. Circuit for connecting a low current lighting circuit to a dimmer
US8212493B2 (en) * 2009-06-30 2012-07-03 Cirrus Logic, Inc. Low energy transfer mode for auxiliary power supply operation in a cascaded switching power converter
US8222832B2 (en) 2009-07-14 2012-07-17 Iwatt Inc. Adaptive dimmer detection and control for LED lamp
US8390214B2 (en) 2009-08-19 2013-03-05 Albeo Technologies, Inc. LED-based lighting power supplies with power factor correction and dimming control
US8466628B2 (en) 2009-10-07 2013-06-18 Lutron Electronics Co., Inc. Closed-loop load control circuit having a wide output range
US8736191B2 (en) 2009-10-14 2014-05-27 National Semiconductor Corporation Dimmer decoder with adjustable filter for use with LED drivers
CA2718819C (en) 2009-10-26 2019-02-26 Light-Based Technologies Incorporated Efficient electrically isolated light sources
CN102577624B (en) 2009-10-26 2015-01-07 皇家飞利浦有限公司 Holding current circuits for phase-cut power control and method for maintaining holding current circuit
US8686668B2 (en) 2009-10-26 2014-04-01 Koninklijke Philips N.V. Current offset circuits for phase-cut power control
US9301348B2 (en) 2009-11-05 2016-03-29 Eldolab Holding B.V. LED driver for powering an LED unit from a electronic transformer
TWI434611B (en) 2010-02-25 2014-04-11 Richtek Technology Corp Led array control circuit with voltage adjustment function and driver circuit and method for the same
JP5031865B2 (en) 2010-03-23 2012-09-26 シャープ株式会社 LED drive circuit, LED illumination lamp, LED illumination device, and LED illumination system
CN102238774B (en) 2010-04-30 2016-06-01 奥斯兰姆有限公司 Angle of flow acquisition methods and device, and LED driving method and device
US20130193879A1 (en) 2010-05-10 2013-08-01 Innosys, Inc. Universal Dimmer
CN103313472B (en) 2010-05-19 2016-02-03 成都芯源系统有限公司 LED drive circuit with dimming function and lamp
US8508147B2 (en) 2010-06-01 2013-08-13 United Power Research Technology Corp. Dimmer circuit applicable for LED device and control method thereof
US8441213B2 (en) 2010-06-29 2013-05-14 Active-Semi, Inc. Bidirectional phase cut modulation over AC power conductors
EP2651188A1 (en) * 2010-07-30 2013-10-16 Cirrus Logic, Inc. Powering high-efficiency lighting devices from a triac-based dimmer
US8569972B2 (en) 2010-08-17 2013-10-29 Cirrus Logic, Inc. Dimmer output emulation
US8536799B1 (en) 2010-07-30 2013-09-17 Cirrus Logic, Inc. Dimmer detection
US8729811B2 (en) 2010-07-30 2014-05-20 Cirrus Logic, Inc. Dimming multiple lighting devices by alternating energy transfer from a magnetic storage element
CN103314639B (en) 2010-08-24 2016-10-12 皇家飞利浦有限公司 Prevent the apparatus and method that dimmer resets in advance
US8531131B2 (en) 2010-09-22 2013-09-10 Osram Sylvania Inc. Auto-sensing switching regulator to drive a light source through a current regulator
US9084316B2 (en) * 2010-11-04 2015-07-14 Cirrus Logic, Inc. Controlled power dissipation in a switch path in a lighting system
CN103190062B (en) 2010-11-04 2016-08-31 皇家飞利浦有限公司 Duty factor based on triac dimmable device detects
EP2636134A2 (en) 2010-11-04 2013-09-11 Cirrus Logic, Inc. Switching power converter input voltage approximate zero crossing determination
PL2681969T3 (en) 2010-11-16 2019-11-29 Signify Holding Bv Trailing edge dimmer compatibility with dimmer high resistance prediction
JP5666268B2 (en) 2010-11-26 2015-02-12 ルネサスエレクトロニクス株式会社 Semiconductor integrated circuit and operation method thereof
JP5834236B2 (en) 2011-05-12 2015-12-16 パナソニックIpマネジメント株式会社 Solid light source lighting device and lighting apparatus using the same
JP2013020931A (en) * 2011-06-16 2013-01-31 Sanken Electric Co Ltd Led lighting apparatus
US9060397B2 (en) 2011-07-15 2015-06-16 General Electric Company High voltage LED and driver
CN104145412B (en) 2011-12-14 2016-12-21 塞瑞斯逻辑公司 Self-adaptive current for docking with dimmer controls timing and response current controls
US9655202B2 (en) 2012-07-03 2017-05-16 Philips Lighting Holding B.V. Systems and methods for low-power lamp compatibility with a leading-edge dimmer and a magnetic transformer

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20110109230A1 (en) * 2009-11-11 2011-05-12 Osram Sylvania Inc. Ballast Circuit for LED-Based Lamp Including Power Factor Correction with Protective Isolation
US20120112638A1 (en) * 2010-11-04 2012-05-10 Melanson John L Thermal Management In A Lighting System Using Multiple, Controlled Power Dissipation Circuits
US20120319607A1 (en) * 2011-06-15 2012-12-20 Takuya Watanabe Lighting controlling method, lighting apparatus and lighting system

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US20140265916A1 (en) 2014-09-18
US10187934B2 (en) 2019-01-22
CN105247958B (en) 2017-11-24
CN105247958A (en) 2016-01-13
EP2974545A1 (en) 2016-01-20

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US10187934B2 (en) Controlled electronic system power dissipation via an auxiliary-power dissipation circuit
US8749174B2 (en) Load current management circuit
EP2636138B1 (en) Controlled power dissipation in a link path in a lighting system
US8810157B2 (en) Simplified current sense for buck LED driver
US9184661B2 (en) Power conversion with controlled capacitance charging including attach state control
US9167662B2 (en) Mixed load current compensation for LED lighting
EP2792059A2 (en) Isolation of secondary transformer winding current during auxiliary power supply generation
WO2012061769A2 (en) Controlled power dissipation in a switch path in a lighting system
EP3132530B1 (en) Systems and methods for valley switching in a switching power converter
US9635723B2 (en) Systems and methods for low-power lamp compatibility with a trailing-edge dimmer and an electronic transformer
US10104729B2 (en) LED driver circuit, and LED arrangement and a driving method
EP2534928B1 (en) Dimmer circuit for electronic loads
US20180324917A1 (en) Systems and methods for maintaining dimmer behavior in a low-power lamp assembly
AU2010286130B2 (en) Apparatus and methods of operation of passive and active LED lighting equipment
US11246202B2 (en) LED lighting driver and drive method
WO2013172259A1 (en) Switching power supply circuit and led lighting device
WO2014159456A1 (en) Integrated current controller for maintaining holding current of a dimmer circuit

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application

Ref document number: 14726029

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A1

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: DE

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2014726029

Country of ref document: EP