[0001] The present invention relates to a protective circuit in an electronic ballast used
for feeding a low-pressure electric discharge lamp, particularly a fluorescent lamp,
said circuit serving to prevent a possible hazardous situation associated with the
occurrence of rectification in said lamp.
[0002] The construction of electronic ballasts for low-pressure electric discharge lamps
is known from the applicant's patent FI 64487 and the theoretical background of such
ballasts is described in the applicant's patent FI 63314. Further related to the art
is the applicant's patent FI 63146 in which is described the construction and function
of an electronic ballast with a low-voltage control input capable of providing a luminous
output that is proportional to the input control signal level.
[0003] The state of the art is covered by the applicant's patent FI 63148 disclosing an
electronic ballast whose slightly simplified configuration is shown in Fig. 1. Over
the output terminals of a DC source, such as a rectifier circuit fed by an AC supply,
are connected two transistors forming a half-bridge. One terminal of the transformer
primary winding is connected to the common point between the transistors and the other
terminal is connected to an inductor whose other terminal is connected via a capacitor
to one electrode of the lamp. The secondary windings of the transformer are connected
to the bases of the transistors so as to control the transistors with opposite-phase
drive voltages. Thus, when one transistor is on, the other transistor held turned
off, and
vice versa. Additionally, a capacitor connected in series with the lamp electrodes acts so as
to be connected in parallel with the lamp. The function of the above-described circuit
is to both feed the lamp with high-frequency power inverted from the DC input voltage
and start the lamp.
[0004] Such feed circuits configured about a half-bridge are conventional in the electronic
ballasts of electric discharge lamps. An embodiment of such a circuit is disclosed
in the applicant's patent US 4,553,070. With regard to the state of the art, reference
is also made to the applicant's patent publications US 4,237,403, US 4,277,728 and
US 4,370,600.
[0005] To assure reliable function and long life of electronic ballasts, it is necessary
to provide them with adequate protective mechanisms against certain operating conditions
deviating from those considered normal. These abnormal conditions are encountered,
for instance, when the operating parameters of an electric discharge lamp - particularly
those of a fluorescent lamp - deviate from their nominal values. This type of situation
will normally occur with the aging of the lamp, whereby the emitter coating of the
lamp cathodes is gradually eroded which causes, among other things, degradation of
the lamp's starting properties. Such a phenomenon is called the deactivation of the
lamp. With the aging of the lamp, also its arc voltage drop will change. Furthermore,
the cathode electrodes of the lamp may break permanently due lamp aging or structural
defects. One of situations further considered abnormal is an under- or overvoltage
supply from the mains. If the lamp ballast is subject to an operating temperature
exceeding the specified limit values, this may lead to an excessive temperature rise
in the interior of the ballast, whereby the ballast may undergo a degradation of its
electric components or other materials.
[0006] The above-described erosion of the lamp cathodes generally leads to a situation in
which the lamp begins to rectify the current passing through the lamp. This is because
the erosion of the emitter coating of the cathodes does not occur at an equal rate
on both cathodes, but rather, the erosion tends to be unsymmetrical. Resultingly,
since the cathodes at the two ends of the lamps start to behave differently, it is
obvious that the rectification phenomenon of the lamp current emerges. This side-effect
is particularly awkward in the case that the erosion of one cathode causes an unsymmetrical
distribution of the voltage drop along the lamp. Then, the voltage drop is concentrated
in the vicinity of one cathode only, which means a high power loss in this portion
of the lamp. Such a high power loss heat the lamp bulb and, in extreme cases, causes
excessive heating of the lamp holders of a luminaire. Then, it is possible that a
serious hazard situation will occur, additionally involving a possible risk of fire.
[0007] Due to the above-mentioned reasons it is necessary to provide the lamp ballast with
specific protective functions capable of preventing damage to the lamp ballast. For
instance, the ballast can be forced into a protective status in which its oscillation
is stopped. In the art, this protective status is often called a standby state. For
this purpose, the ballast includes a dedicated control block serving to identify the
above-described abnormal operating conditions and to control the operating status
of the ballast in a suitable manner to protect its electronic components. Additionally,
the control block must contain elements capable of restoring the normal operating
status of the ballast when the cause of the abnormal operating conditions is removed.
[0008] In Fig. 2 is illustrated a circuit configuration for such a ballast in which the
portion covered by the above-mentioned protective circuit is schematically drawn as
block 10. This control block contains the required electronic circuit components required
for the detection of said abnormal operating conditions through the measurement of
certain electrical signals, possibly complemented with the measurement of the internal
temperature of the ballast device in the manner described in patent application no.
FI 965024 filed by the applicant.
[0009] It is an object of the present invention to provide a method of protecting the mains
ballast of a low-pressure electric discharge lamp, particularly of a fluorescent lamp,
in a situation causing current rectification in the lamp. As described above, the
risk in such a situation is a destruction of the lamp and, in extreme cases, of other
luminaire components or even the entire luminaire due to overheating. As known, the
detection of the lamp current rectification phenomenon is particularly difficult in
ballasts designed to feed two or more lamps, because the great number of components
required to implement the measurement circuits make the construction of the ballast
complicated and expensive.
[0010] The goal of the invention is achieved by virtue of the specifications defined in
the appended claim 1. Preferred embodiments of the invention are disclosed further
in the appended dependent claims.
[0011] In the following the invention is described in greater detail by making reference
to the appended drawings in which
- Figure 1
- shows schematically the construction of a state-of-the-art electronic ballast;
- Figures 2 and 3
- show alternative embodiments of the invention having the starting capacitor 11 and
the measurement point arranged at different ends of the lamp 8;
- Figure 4
- shows a prior-art ballast in which the protective circuit according to the invention
can be applied;
- Figure 5
- shows the voltage change at point A of Fig. 4 when the lamp enters the rectification
state;
- Figure 6
- shows an embodiment of the protective circuit according to the invention suitable
for use in the ballast illustrated in Fig. 4; and
- Figure 7
- shows an alternative embodiment of the protective circuit according to the invention
applied to another type of ballast.
[0012] Referring to Fig. 3, therein the circuit of Fig. 2 is shown modified so that the
capacitor 11 of the resonant circuit is connected to an alternative point of the circuit.
[0013] In Fig. 4 is shown a circuit configuration having the circuit of Fig. 3 complemented
with a second capacitor 15 of the resonant circuit that is connected between one cathode
terminal of the lamp and the positive terminal (+) of the DC power supply. Additionally,
the circuit has been complemented with voltage clipper and stabilizer diodes 17 and
18, respectively, serving to keep the voltage across the capacitor 16 within desired
limits. A similar circuit configuration is disclosed in the applicant's patent FI
65524. Furthermore, the circuit configuration of Fig. 4 is shown adapted for a two-lamp
system, whereby the circuit includes a second lamp 13 and a resonant circuit inductor
12. While the base drive circuit of transistors 1 and 2 is not shown in Fig. 4, it
can be implemented as illustrated in Fig. 3.
[0014] In a normal operating status of the ballast of Fig. 4, the voltage at point A is
a symmetrical square wave having its DC level half the voltage Us of the DC circuit,
typically at about 400 V in practical ballast applications. The waveform of voltage
Ua at point A is plotted in Fig. 5. When one of the lamps 8 or 13 fed by the ballast
begins to rectify while the other continues normal operation, the voltage at point
A increases or decreases depending on the polarity of the rectified DC voltage component.
This phenomenon is readily understood from Fig. 5 by examining the manner in which
the relative widths of the opposite-polarity halfcycles of the square wave Ua change
in various situations.
[0015] The measurement of voltage Ua at point A can be implemented, e.g., using the circuit
shown in Fig. 6. The resistive voltage dividers 19/20 and 22/23 are dimensioned so
that the base voltages and, consequently, also the emitter voltages of both transistors
26 and 27, respectively, will be equal when the voltage at point A is within normal
limits (cf. Fig. 5a). If the voltage at point A deviates from its normal value, the
transistor with the forward-biased base-emitter voltage will turn into conduction.
Then, this conducting transistor will pass current into capacitor 28. This situation
is detected by the protective circuit (standby circuit) as mentioned above in the
circuit description of Fig. 2. The window width of the voltage detection circuit can
be set to a desired value by resistor 25. Capacitor 21 serves to filter out interfering
voltage components and capacitor 24 smooths the square wave of point A into a DC voltage.
Alternatively, the reference voltage may be taken from an external fixed source such
as the ballast feed voltage.
[0016] In the function of the embodiment according to the invention it is essential that
the rectification situation is detected and this malfunction detection signal is passed
to the protective circuit block 10 of the ballast (cf. Fig. 2 and Fig. 3). Such a
protective block is necessary in an electronic ballast in all cases to protect the
ballast itself and the lamp(s) under different types of abnormal conditions for the
reasons described above. The protective block 10 halts the operation of the oscillator
circuit when the level of the monitored voltage variable, such as the DC voltage at
point A of Fig. 4, exceeds a preset threshold level. The halting of the oscillator
can be implemented by cutting off the base current of transistors 1 and 2, for instance.
A suitable circuit configuration for this purpose is disclosed, e.g., in patent EP
0 146 683. Under the control of the protective circuit according to the invention,
the ballast is steered into a protective state in which the lamps are turned off thus
preventing the occurrence of a possible hazard situation.
[0017] In Fig. 7 is illustrated an application of the invention in a ballast having its
resonant circuit implemented in the manner shown in Fig. 3. Therefore, this type of
ballast does not have two resonant circuit capacitors as shown in Fig. 4, but instead
the resonant circuit capacitor 11 is complemented with a resistor 29 connected between
one cathode of the lamp and the positive terminal (+) of the DC power supply. The
voltage waveform Ub at point B is plotted in Fig. 8. This voltage is measured by means
of a circuit consisting of resistors 30, 31, 33, 34 and 35, transistors 36 and 37,
as well as a zener diode 32. The operating principle of the circuit is similar to
that described above for the circuits of Figs. 4-6. However, a difference is therein
that the reference voltage of the circuit is formed by means of components 31 and
32 from the measurement voltage itself. By a suitable design of this circuit configuration,
the measurement voltage Ub having a normal voltage level of about 200 V is monitored
within a preset voltage window (with limit values Uyr and Uar drawn in the diagram
of Fig. 8), whereby any excursion of the measurement voltage Ub outside these limits
will turn on either transistor 36 or 37, whereby a detection signal is passed to the
protective block 10 via resistor 33. The advantage of this circuit is based thereon
that normally the ballast circuitry already contains all the circuit components except
components 34, 35, 36 and 37, whereby the extra cost due to the circuit configuration
according to the invention remains extremely modest.
[0018] The circuit embodiments according to the invention are characterized in that the
detection of lamp current rectification in an electronic ballast feeding a single-lamp
or multilamp system is accomplished by virtue of very simple and cost-efficient circuit
designs. As the protective circuit 10 is invariably included in a modern electronic
ballast for the purpose of managing different types of abnormal operating situations,
the elimination of the dangerous lamp rectification phenomenon is now attained in
a simple, reliable and cost-efficient manner.
[0019] To a person versed in the art it is obvious that the applications of the invention
are not limited by the circuit configurations illustrated in Figs. 4-6 and Fig. 7.
For instance, transistors 1 and 2 can be replaced by insulated-gate field-effect transistors
(MOSFET). Further, the rectification detection circuit block (cf. Fig. 6 and Fig.
7) may be implemented using an operational amplifiers. Also the function of the protective
circuit 10 may be varied from that described above, for instance, by implementing
the halting of the oscillator by means of alternative methods.
1. A protective circuit in an electronic ballast used for feeding a low-pressure electric
discharge lamp, particularly a fluorescent lamp, said ballast consisting of a DC supply,
a high-frequency oscillator such as a drive circuit comprising transistors (1, 2)
configured into a half-bridge and an inductor (7), connected in series with the lamp,
and a capacitor (11; 15, 16), characterized in that said protective circuit includes a detection circuit (19-27; 30-37) of lamp
rectification connected to monitor the voltage between an electrode of the lamp (8)
and said capacitor (11; 15, 16).
2. A protective circuit as defined in claim 1, characterized in that said detection circuit includes voltage divider circuits implemented with
resistors (19, 21; 22, 23) and transistors (26, 27) deriving their control signals
from said dividers.
3. A protective circuit as defined in claim 1, characterized in that said detection circuit includes at least one transistor (36, 37) deriving
its control signal from a circuit consisting of at least one resistor (30, 31) and
a zener diode (32).
4. A protective circuit as defined in any of claims 1-3, characterized in that said detection circuit is configured to halt the oscillation of the ballast
oscillator or drive circuit (1, 2) when the mutual ratio of the voltages measured
over said lamp (8) and said capacitor (11; 15, 16) exceeds preset limit values.