FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates to an apparatus and method for the dimming control of an electronic
ballast for a fluorescent lamp. In particular the invention relates to an apparatus
and method for such dimming control that generates low electromagnetic interference
and low switching stress.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] Electronic ballasts for the high-frequency operation of fluorescent lamps have been
increasingly adopted as an energy efficient solution in residential, commercial and
industrial lighting applications. Electronic ballasts have a number of advantages
including improved efficiency of the overall system, higher lumen output per watt
and longer lifetime of the fluorescent lamps. Electronic ballasts are in effect switched
mode power electronic circuits, and most modern electronic ballast designs employ
series resonant converters as the power circuits for driving the lamps.
PRIOR ART
[0003] Fig.1 shows a conventional electronic ballast design. The basic concept of this design
is to use the resonant voltage across the resonant capacitor
Cr to cause the lamp arc to strike at high frequency, typically from 25kHz to 50kHz.
Because of the high frequency of the excitation voltage the lamp Is essentially in
a continuous on-state, which provides high-quality illumination without any unwanted
flickering effect.
[0004] Fig.2 shows a conventional implementation of a half-bridge series resonant inverter
for an electronic ballast application. In this arrangement the two switches
S1 and
S2 are complementary switches (ie when
S1 is on
S2 is off, and vice versa). If the potential at point
Y is taken as the zero voltage reference point, then voltage
Vxy will have the values ±
Vdc/2 where
Vdc is the DC voltage applied to the ballast circuit either by an AC-DC converter if
the power source is AC or by a DC-DC converter if the power source is DC. The operation
of this conventional circuit will now be described for the purposes of illustration.
[0005] The two capacitors
C are much larger than the resonant capacitor
Cr and provide a stable DC voltage nominally at
Vdc/2 at the point
Y. By operating the switching frequency
fsw of
S1 and
S2 slightly higher than the resonant frequency
fr of inductor
Lr and capacitor
Cr the resonant load becomes inductive. If the current (
iLr) in the inductor
Lr is continuous,
S1 and
S2 can be turned on under zero-voltage. This zero-voltage switching is desirable because
it reduces turn-on switching loss and minimises the electromagnetic interference (EMI)
from the power switches. If additional small capacitors
Cs1 and
Cs2 are added as shown in Fig.2, switches
S1 and
S2 can also be turned off under zero-voltage as long as the inductor current (
iLr) is continuous.
[0006] Series resonant converter designs such as that shown in Fig.2 are very popular. One
reason for this popularity, for example, is that a circuit of this design can be used
for a multiple lamp system simply by connecting several sets of resonant tanks and
lamps across points X and Y. This flexibility greatly reduces the ballast cost per
lamp.
[0007] Difficulties arise with the circuit of Fig.2, however, when it is desired to provide
a method of dimming control. Most electronic ballasts employ a nominally constant
converter DC voltage and in order to control the light intensity of the fluorescent
lamp dimming control is provided. Two methods of providing dimming control are commonly
used in this type of ballast arrangement; duty cycle control and variation of switching
frequency and these will now both be described.
[0008] The first method of dimming control is by control of the duty cycle (
d) of the two switches
S1 and
S2. The ideal duty cycle is 0.5 but in practice the maximum
d should be slightly less than 0.5 so that a small deadtime when both switches are
off is provided to avoid shoot-through in
S1 and
S2. Fig.3 shows typical waveforms of the gating signals of
S1 and
S2. By controlling the turn-on and turn-off times of the two switches the voltage applied
to the series resonant circuit can be controlled. This method is not without its drawbacks
however, especially at low duty-cycles, ie at low applied voltage, as will be seen
from the following.
[0009] A major advantage of the circuit of Fig.2 is that the switches can be turned on and
off under zero-voltage conditions which substantially reduces EMI emission and switching
stress in the power switches. However as will be seen below, if the duty cycle is
too small the inductor current may become discontinuous and the zero-voltage switching
conditions will be lost and the switches will suffer switching stress, leading to
reduced reliability and increased EMI emission. This can be seen from the following
explanation of the operating modes of the power converter which are described with
reference to Fig.4 of the accompanying drawings which schematically highlight the
main current paths.
[0010] Fig.4(a) shows a first stage in which switch
S1 is ON while switch
S2 is OFF and the main current path is highlighted in bold. In a second stage shown
in Fig.4(b) the two switches are OFF while
Cs1 is charged up to
VDC and
Cs2 is discharged. When
Cs2 is discharged the anti-parallel diode of
S2 will start to conduct. Again the main current path is highlighted in bold. Fig.4(c)
shows this third stage in which the two switches
S1 and
S2 are both still OFF and the anti-parallel diode is conducting clamping the voltage
across
S2 to almost 0V and when the switch
S2 is later turned on again it is turned on under this zero-voltage condition. However,
this assumes that the inductor current is continuous. If the duty cycle is too small
the inductor current may decay to zero before the switch
S2 is turned on again giving the condition shown in Fig.4(d). If the inductor current
falls to zero before
S2 is switched on again, the voltage across
S2 is not clamped to near zero and as both switches are turned off the voltage across
S2 and thus
Cs2 will rise. When in the next stage
S2 is turned on again the energy stored in
Cs2 will be dissipated in
S2 causing high discharge current and high switching loss and stress in
S2.
[0011] In the next stage shown in Fig.4(e)
S2 is ON while
S1 is OFF and the inductor current becomes negative. As both switches once more go to
OFF, shown in Fig.4(f), the anti-parallel diode of
S1 starts to conduct clamping the voltage across
S1 to near zero (Fig.4(g)). Again, as with
S2, if the duty cycle is not too small
S1 will be switched on again before the inductor current decays to zero and so will
be switched on while still clamped to near zero voltage, with the advantages discussed
above. If the duty cycle is too small, however, the inductor current will decay to
zero before
S1 is switched on again causing the voltage across
S1 and
Cs1 to rise. When
S1 is finally turned on again the energy stored in
Cs1 is dissipated in
S1 as discussed above with regard to
S2 and with the same problems. This possibility is shown in Fig.4(h).
[0012] Thus if dimming control by variation of duty cycle is provided, soft switching is
possible provided that the inductor current is continuous. However if the duty cycle
is reduced too far then the inductor current may at points in the cycle decay to zero
and non-zero-voltage switching takes place with its attendant disadvantages of higher
EMI emission and higher switching stress.
[0013] As an alternative to dimming control by duty cycle variation, it is also known to
provide dimming control by varying the switching frequency. If the switching frequency
is increased, the inductor impedance is increased and thus the inductor current is
reduced, This allows the output of a fluorescent lamp to be controlled by varying
the switching frequency and Fig.5 shows the power of a 4-ft 40W fluorescent lamp plotted
against switching frequency. It can be seen that the lamp power, and therefore the
intensity of the emitted light, decreases with increasing switching frequency.
[0014] Dimming control by varying switching frequency has its own disadvantages however.
These include the following points:
1. If the inverter bridge is not soft-switched the switching loss of the inverter
will be increased leading to reduced efficiency.
2. In order to achieve dimming control at low lamp power operation, the switching
frequency range has to be very wide (eg from 25kHz to 65kHz) and in practice the frequency
range of the magnetic cores, the gate drive circuits and electronic control circuit
may all act to limit the range of dimming control.
3. Soft-switching is not easy to achieve over the entire switching frequency range.
In particular, at light loads soft-switching cannot be achieved and the switching
stress is large. The switching transients due to hard-switching are a major source
of EMI emissions.
4. The power range of the dimming control is limited if the switching frequency range
is small. A typical range of dimming control is from 100% load to 25% load.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0015] Viewed from one broad aspect the present invention provides apparatus for controlling
the power output of a fluorescent lamp comprising, an electronic ballast for driving
said fluorescent lamp, power supply means for providing DC power input to said electronic
ballast, and means for varying the voltage of said DC power input to said electronic
ballast.
[0016] In one embodiment the power supply may comprise an AC power input followed by an
AC-DC converter capable of providing a (i) power factor correction and (ii) variable
DC output. Such converters may comprise a diode bridge followed by one of (a) a flyback
converter, (b) a Cuk converter, (c) a SEPIC converter, (d) a Shepherd-Taylor converter,
and (e) a boost converter. Preferably this front end converter uses soft-switching.
[0017] Alternatively in another embodiment the power supply may comprise a DC power input
followed by a DC-DC converter capable of providing a variable DC output. The converter
may be a step-down or a step-up/step-down converter.
[0018] Preferably the electronic ballast comprises a half-bridge series resonant inverter.
The ballast preferably comprises two switches soft-switched at a constant frequency
slightly higher than the resonant frequency of an inductor-capacitor tank of the ballast.
The switches are preferably switched at a constant duty-cycle, preferably as close
as possible to 0.5 while providing a short deadtime therebetween to prevent shoot-through.
[0019] Viewed from another broad aspect the present invention provides a method for controlling
the power output of a fluorescent lamp driven by means of an electronic ballast in
the form of a half-bridge resonant inverter, comprising operating said ballast at
a constant duty cycle and a constant frequency and providing a variable DC power input
to said ballast.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0020] Some embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example and with
reference to the accompanying drawings, in which;-
Fig.1 is a simplified schematic drawing of a series-resonant inverter based electronic
ballast of the prior art,
Fig.2 is a schematic diagram of a half-bridge series resonant inverter based electronic
ballast of the prior art,
Fig.3 illustrates typical waveforms of gating signals for the switches of the ballast
of Fig.2,
Figs.4(a)-(h) illustrate successive operational stages of the ballast of Fig.2 with
the main current path of each stage being highlighted in bold,
Fig.5 is a plot showing expected lamp power against switching frequency in an alternative
prior art method of dimming control,
Fig.6 is a schematic diagram of an electronic ballast provided with dimming control
in accordance with a first embodiment of this invention,
Fig.7 is a view corresponding to Fig.6 of a second embodiment of the invention,
Fig.8 is a plot showing lamp power output as a function of converter voltage,
Fig.9 schematically illustrates one form of AC-DC converter that may be used in the
present invention,
Figs.10(a) and (b) illustrate alternate topologies for the converter of Fig.9,
Fig.11 schematically illustrates another form of AC-DC converter that may be used
in the present invention,
Fig.12 shows typical waveforms for the switch current and the input phase current
in the converter of Fig.11,
Fig.13 shows one form of DC-DC converter that may be used in another embodiment of
the present invention, and
Fig.14 shows an alternate form of DC-DC converter.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0021] In the present invention, dimming control is achieved by the use of a variable converter
DC voltage as the means to provide a smooth and desirable dimming control for a fluorescent
lamp system. Referring to Fig.6 it will be seen that a power converter is inserted
between the input power supply and the half-bridge circuit with the power converter
being able to produce a variable
VDC output to the half-bridge circuit. Fig.6 assumes that the power supply is AC and
so the converter is an AC-DC converter, but as shown in Fig.7 the same principle can
apply when the input power supply is DC by providing a front-end DC-DC converter with
control of the output DC voltage,
[0022] In the present invention the output DC voltage
VDC of the front-end converter is controlled in order to control the lamp power. A constant
duty-cycle (nearly 0.5) is used for the switching of the half-bridge inverter in order
to ensure a wide power range of continuous inductor current operation and thus soft-switching
operation. This has the further advantage of making switching control simple. A constant
switching frequency is used in the converter so that the resonant
L-C circuit can be optimised for any given type of lamp.
[0023] As shown in Fig.6 if the input power supply is an AC supply, the front end converter
must naturally be an AC-Dc converter. Examples of suitable AC DC converters include
(a) a diode bridge followed by a flyback converter, (b) a diode bridge followed by
a Cuk converter, (c) a diode bridge followed by a Sepic converter, (d) a diode bridge
followed by a Shepherd-Taylor converter, and (e) a diode bridge followed by a boost
converter. These five AC-DC converters can provide input power factor correction in
order to reduce voltage harmonics and current harmonics in the AC power supply. In
addition, to further reduce EMI emissions, soft-switching is preferably incorporated
into the front-end converter. This may be achieved by adding an auxiliary circuit
to the front-end converter.
[0024] A significant advantage of controlling
VDC to provide dimming control is that lamp power decreases smoothly and almost linearly
with decreasing
VDC. This can be seen from Fig.7 which shows simulated and measured lamp power values
as a function of
VDC for a 4-ft 40W lamp under a constant duty cycle and constant switching frequency.
From Fig.7 it can be seen that there is a substantially linear relationship between
lamp power and
VDC which makes dimming control very easy and convenient.
[0025] Fig.9 illustrates an embodiment comprising a front-end SEPIC (single-ended-primary-inductance-converter).
In consideration of this embodiment the half-bridge resonant electronic ballast can
be considered as the load. The SEPIC comprises one controlled switch
S and one uncontrolled switch
D. The controlled switch
S can be a MOSFET, BJT, IGBT or the like and its conduction state is determined by
the gate signal
vgate. In order to avoid needing to use an input line filter the converter is operated in
continuous conduction mode where two circuit topologies are switched alternately in
one cycle. These topologies are shown in Fig.10.
[0026] In the first topology - shown in Fig.10(a) - S is on
while D is reverse biased and the currents in the inductors
L1 and
L2 (
iL1 and
iL2) increase. When
iL1 reaches a programmed threshold value
S will be switched off. This leads to the second topology shown in Fig.10(b) where
S is off and
D conducts. The output capacitor
Co is then charged by the sum of the currents in
L1 and
L2.
[0027] The input current of the SEPIC is controlled to follow the full-rectified waveform
of the sinusoidal input voltage
vg by pulse-width modulation (PWM) control. In this technique the reference signal
iref for the current-shaping feedback loop is proportional to
vg. The input current is sensed and compared to the reference signal and an identified
error signal is amplified by a current loop amplifier
A1 the output of which is compared to a ramp function. In this way the duty ratio of
S may be adjusted in order to minimize the error between the reference current and
the sensed line current. Thus, the output voltage is in fact controlled by adjusting
the reference current
iref. This requires a multiplier circuit in the voltage feedback loop, and an error amplifier
Ke, such as a proportional-plus-integral controller, is used to process the error between
the output voltage v
out and a reference voltage
vref to give a necessary signal to one of the multiplier inputs so that
vout will follow the desired magnitude of
vref.
[0028] Fig.11 illustrates an alternative embodiment with an AC-DC front-end converter. In
this embodiment the front-end converter comprises an AC-DC flyback converter. The
input voltage to the flyback converter (enclosed in the dashed box) is the rectified
version of the AC input voltage
vs, and if the flyback converter is switched so that the flyback inductor current
iL is discontinuous, the envelope of the current pulses will follow the shape of the
rectified voltage waveform. The input L-C filter reduces the current ripple and thus
the input phase current
is is sinusoidal as shown in Fig.12. If the switching frequency is high, say 20kHz to
100kHz, the current ripple becomes negligible. In this embodiment the AC-DC converter
shapes the current into a sinusoidal curve so as to achieve a unitary power factor
(ie current is sinusoidal and in phase with the input voltage). The magnitude of the
input AC voltage may be fixed by the mains supply (220V say) but the input current
magnitude can be controlled and thus the output of the AC-DC converter may be controlled
by controlling the magnitude of the input AC current.
[0029] Where the input power supply is DC the choice of the most suitable DC-DC converter
depends on the voltage level of the input DC supply, and hence whether a step-up or
a step-down converter is necessary. Examples of possible DC-DC front-end converters
are shown in Fig.13 and Fig.14. Fig.13 shows a possible step-down (buck) converter,
while Fig.14 shows a flyback converter that may be either a step-up or step-down converter.
[0030] Thus it will be seen that in its preferred forms the present invention provides a
ballast comprising a front-end converter that can provide a variable DC voltage output.
The front-end converter can be a power-factor-corrected AC-DC converter (preferably
with soft-switching) if the input supply is AC, and a DC-DC converter if the input
supply is DC. The DC output voltage of the front-end converter is fed to a soft-switched
half-bridge inverter with an inductor-capacitor resonant circuit. The fluorescent
lamp is connected across the resonant capacitor. The two switches in the half-bridge
inverter are switched at a constant frequency slightly higher than the resonant frequency
of the inductor-capacitor tank. The two inverter switches are switched in a complementary
manner with a large constant duty cycle in order to achieve soft-switching in the
half-bridge inverter over a wide power range.
[0031] To control the brightness of the lamp to provide a dimming control, the lamp power
is simply controlled by varying the DC output voltage of the front-end converter.
This allows the inverter bridge to operate under continuous inductor current mode
regardless of the power output of the lamp, ie from nominal DC voltage for full lamp
power down to very low DC voltage for low lamp power, thereby reducing EMI emissions
from the inverter bridge over a wide power range. Together with power-factor-corrected
and soft-switched front-end AC-DC or DC-DC converter, the present invention allows
the entire ballast system to have low conducted and radiated EMI emission, low switching
losses and stress, and thus high reliability. The present invention may also be applied
to single or multi-lamp systems.
1. Apparatus for controlling the power output of a fluorescent lamp comprising, an electronic
ballast for driving said fluorescent lamp, power supply means for providing DC power
input to said electronic ballast, and means for varying the voltage of said DC power
input to said electronic ballast.
2. Apparatus as claimed in claim 1 wherein said ballast comprises a half-bridge series
resonant inverter.
3. Apparatus as claimed in claim 1 wherein said power supply means comprises an AC power
supply and wherein a power factor corrected AC-DC converter capable of producing a
variable DC output is provided between said power supply and said electronic ballast.
4. Apparatus as claimed in claim 3 wherein said AC-DC converter comprises a diode bridge
followed by one of (a) a flyback converter, (b) a Cuk converter, (c) a Sepic converter,
(d) a Shepherd-Taylor converter, and (e) a boost converter.
5. Apparatus as claimed in claim 4 wherein said converter uses soft-switching.
6. Apparatus as claimed in claim 1 wherein said power supply means comprises a DC power
supply and wherein a DC-DC converter capable of producing a DC output is provided
between said power supply means and said electronic ballast.
7. Apparatus as claimed in claim 6 wherein said DC DC converter is a step-down converter.
8. Apparatus as claimed in claim 6 wherein said DC DC converter is a step-down or step-up
converter.
9. Apparatus as claimed in claim 1 wherein said electronic ballast comprises two switches
soft-switched at a constant frequency slightly higher than the resonant frequency
of an inductor-capacitor tank of said ballast.
10. Apparatus as claimed in claim 9 wherein said switches are switched at a constant duty-cycle.
11. Apparatus as claimed in claim 10 wherein said duty cycle is slightly below 0.5.
12. A method for controlling the power output of a fluorescent lamp driven by means of
an electronic ballast in the form of a half-bridge resonant inverter, comprising operating
said ballast at a constant duty cycle and a constant frequency and providing a variable
DC power input to said ballast.