An electronic ballast for one or more F32T8 or F25T8 or F1718 fluorescent lamps has a new design tool for efficient transfer of power to the lamp or the lamps. The design tool is constructed from the ballast DC voltage and the commercially available lamp specifications by the manufacturers or from the American National Standards (ANSI). This design tool is shown below.
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0. 3. A ballast for coupling to at least one F32T8 fluorescent lamp comprising:
a) circuitry means coupled to a source of alternating current for generating a sine wave having a frequency F;
b) at least one capacitor having a capacitance c coupled in parallel to a corresponding one of said at least one F32T8 fluorescent lamp and to said circuitry means, such that F in hertz and c in farads satisfy an equation:
where W=specified wattage of the lamp in watts,
V1=applied DC voltage of the ballast in volts,
V0=a predetermined lamp voltage in volts,
R0=a predetermined lamp impedance in ohms,
K=empirical constant in a range of 1.5-10.0.
0. 16. A ballast for coupling to at least one F17T8 fluorescent lamp comprising:
a) circuitry means coupled to a source of alternating current for generating a sine wave having a frequency F;
b) at least one capacitor having a capacitance c coupled in parallel to a corresponding one of said at least one F17T8 fluorescent lamp and to said circuitry means, such that F in hertz and c in farads satisfy an equation:
where W=specified wattage of the lamp in watts,
V1=applied DC voltage of the ballast in volts,
V0=a predetermined lamp voltage in volts,
R0=a predetermined lamp impedance in ohms,
K=empirical constant in a range of 1.5-10.0.
0. 10. A ballast for coupling to at least one F25T8 fluorescent lamp comprising:
a) circuitry means coupled to a source of alternating current for generating a sine wave having a frequency F;
b) at least one capacitor having a capacitance c coupled in parallel to a corresponding one of said at least one F25T8 fluorescent lamp and to said circuitry means, such that F in hertz and c in farads satisfy an equation:
where W=specified wattage of the lamp in watts,
V1=applied DC voltage of the ballast in volts,
V0=a predetermined lamp voltage in volts,
R0=a predetermined lamp impedance in ohms,
K=empirical constant in a range of 1.5-10.0.
0. 26. A fluorescent lighting system comprising:
a. at least one F17T8 fluorescent lamp; and
b. a ballast coupled to said at least one F17T8 fluorescent lamp consisting:
1) circuitry means coupled to a source of alternating current for generating a sine wave having a frequency F;
2) at least one capacitor having a capacitance c coupled in parallel to a corresponding one of said at least one F17T8 fluorescent lamp and to said circuitry means, such that F in hertz and c in farads satisfy an equation:
where W=specified wattage of the lamp in watts,
V1=applied DC voltage of the ballast in volts,
V0=a predetermined lamp voltage in volts.
R0=a predetermined lamp impedance in ohms,
K=empirical constant in a range of 1.5-10.0.
0. 24. A fluorescent lighting system comprising:
a. at least one F32T8 fluorescent lamp; and
b. a ballast coupled to said at least one F32T8 fluorescent lamp comprising:
1) circuitry means coupled to a source of alternating current for generating a sine wave having a frequency F;
2) at least one capacitor having a capacitance c coupled in parallel to a corresponding one of said at least one F32T8 fluorescent lamp and to said circuitry means, such that F in hertz and c in farads satisfy an equation:
where W=specified wattage of the lamp in watts,
V1=applied DC voltage of the ballast in volts,
V0=a predetermined lamp voltage in volts,
R0=a predetermined lamp impedance in ohms,
K=empirical constant in a range of 1.5-10.0.
0. 25. A fluorescent lighting system comprising:
a. at least one F25T8 fluorescent lamp; and
b. a ballast coupled to said at least one F25T8 fluorescent lamp comprising:
1) circuitry means coupled to a source of alternating current for generating a sine wave having a frequency F;
2) at least one capacitor having a capacitance c coupled in parallel to a corresponding one of said at least one F25T8 fluorescent lamp and to said circuitry means, such that F in hertz and c in farads satisfy an equation:
where W=specified wattage of the lamp in watts,
V1=applied DC voltage of the ballast in volts,
V0=a predetermined lamp voltage in volts,
R0=a predetermined lamp impedance in ohms,
K=empirical constant in a range of 1.5-10.0.
0. 1. A ballast for coupling to at one fluorescent lamp comprising:
a) circuitry means coupled to a source of alternating current for generating a sine wave having a frequency F;
b) at least one capacitor having a capacitance c coupled in parallel to a corresponding one of said at one fluorescent lamp and to said circuitry means, such that F and c satisfy the equation:
where W=specified wattage of the lamp
V1=applied DC voltage of the ballast
V0=a predetermined lamp voltage
R0=a predetermined lamp impedance
K=empirical constant in the range of 1.5-10.0.
0. 2. A ballast for coupling to at least two fluorescent lamps comprising:
a) circuitry means coupled to a source of alternating current for generating a sine wave having a frequency F;
b) a plurality of capacitors having a capacitance c, each coupled in parallel to a corresponding one of said at least two fluorescent lamps and to said circuitry means, such that F and c satisfy the equation:
where W=specified wattage of the lamp
V1=applied DC voltage of the ballast
V0=a predetermined lamp voltage
R0=a predetermined lamp impedance
K=empirical constant in the range of 1.5-10.0,
wherein one end of each of said capacitors is coupled to a first terminal at a first end of its corresponding fluorescent lamp, and a second end of each of said capacitors is coupled to a first terminal at a second end of its corresponding fluorescent lamp, and a second terminal at said second end of said corresponding fluorescent lamp is coupled to a corresponding second terminal of a second end of an adjacent one of said at least two fluorescent lamps.
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This a continuation-in-part application of application Ser. No. 08/387,261 filed Feb. 13, 1995, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,585,700.
For efficient power transfer in an electronic ballast for gas discharge lamps such as fluorescent lamps, the product of the frequency of the voltage across the lamp and the capacitor value across the lamp is a constant.
F×C=Constant (K), where
If a frequency is selected, then there is only one value of capacitor which will transfer power to the lamp with the least power loss in the ballast circuit. Or, if a capacitor value is selected, the above equation gives the allowable frequency for efficient power transfer.
The above stated relationship and equation is a design tool for the efficient design of an electronic ballast where the circuit configuration includes a high-frequency, low loss capacitor across the lamp. Although the concept of using a capacitor across a lamp for the generation of a sine wave across a load is known, the above stated design tool is considered an invention due to the following facts:
The integrated schematic as shown in
An electronic ballast for gas discharge lamps, in general, and for F32T8, F25T8, and F17T8 fluorescent lamps, in particular, the said ballast comprising of:
The equation:
With any frequency selected, the capacitor value is fixed for efficient power transfer.
b: One side of the capacitor connected to terminal #1 of the lamp 1, and terminal #2 is connected to one side of the choke L3, whose inductance is fixed for the frequency selected for efficient power transfer.
c: The other side of said inductor L3 is connected to a DC blocking capacitor C14 which in turn is connected to switching MOS Field Effect Transistors Q2 and Q3.
d: The other side of said capacitor is connected to terminal #3, on the opposite side of the lamp 1.
e: Terminal #4 of said lamp is connected to the ballast terminal, #6.
f: The same connections apply to lamp #2, lamp #3, and so on. There is no limit to the number of lamps connected in parallel except for the power capability of the ballast.
g: The switching transistors Q2, Q3 of any type are supplied by a regulated boost power supply connected between terminals 14, 15, 16, and 17 of output voltage V1.
h: The switching transistors Q2, Q3, when of the MOSFET type, are driven by the integrated circuit IR 2151, IR 2155, or equivalent.
i: The boost power supply (L1, C1, C2, C3 and C4) receives power from one of the following power utility lines.
j: 120 v 60 Hz, 220 v 50/60 Hz, or 277 v 50/60 Hz can be used to provide the rectified output for the boost regulator which in turn corrects the power factor using an integrated circuit to shape the current wave form to follow the voltage wave form.
k: An EMI filter is connected between terminals 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 and 13 and includes a common mode choke, L1.
l: A line transient protector VZ1 is connected between terminals 18 and 19.
The black and white wires leading from the ballast are connected to a single-phase 120 v 160 Hz line through a switch (not shown), while the green wire is connected to the earth terminal (refer to schematic). The surge absorber, VZ1, clamps any unusual voltage transients exceeding 150 volts and protects the components of the ballast from damage. The clipper VZ can absorb 4500 amps without damage. Transients of this magnitude are extremely rare.
Next, the EMI filter consists of a front-end AC capacitor C1, a common mode inductor L1, two line-to-earth ground high frequency capacitors C2 and C3, and an AC capacitor C4 across the AC line just before the rectifier bridge. This entire filter will reduce the conducted emission on the AC lines as required by FCC regulations.
The rectifier bridge CR1-4 (D1-D4), provides a rectified output to the power factor correction boost regulator. The rectifier bridge is further protected by the AC polyester capacitor C5 which filters the switching noise from the power factor boost regulator. The boost regulator inductor L2 switched by the transistor Q1 provides higher DC voltage than the average input voltage. The integrated circuit U1 functions as a power factor corrector as well as a voltage regulator component.
The regulator output voltage is then switched into the resonant circuit L3 and C15 which provide sufficient sine wave peaks to ionize the lamp 1 and strike the arc. When the arc is established, the damping factor of the resonant circuit increases enough to supply the desired electrical power into the lamp, based upon the impedance of the lamp. The damping factor is a function of the capacitor C15 selected as per the stated design method described above.
The fifteen microsecond period of the sine wave and 0.0047 microfarad capacitance across the lamps conform to the invented design tool which provide the required power to the lamp and minimize the volt amperes stunted by the capacitor C15.
However, if the capacitor value is increased, for example, to 0.01 microfarad and frequency is unchanged, the new capacitor value will draw twice the current, which means much higher watts from the boost regulator for the same power consumption by the lamp. Thus, the ballast would be inefficient.
The above design tool is unique because the frequency of the lamp voltage and the capacitor value across it are interdependent for efficient power transfer to the lamp. Efficiency is the prime factor in energy saving schemes of electronic ballast. The above equation brings a new methodolgy in the design of the most efficient electronic ballast for each gas discharge lamp type.
This ballast design does not use transformants either at the 120 v 160 Hz side, or at the output side. To the best of applicant's knowledge, there does not exist and electronic ballast without input, output, or both transformers, used for F32T8, F25T8, F17T8, or other lamps not known to the applicant.
However, the concept of not using transformers at the input or output has been published. These publications nevertheless, do not specify the ballast for F32T8, F25T8, f17T8 lamps, and further do not state the efficient energy transfer as disclosed herein. In the present disclosure, the efficient energy transfer design equation is locked with transformerless configurations.
This efficient design technique combined with transformless circuitry, along with the use of integrated circuit chips to generate sinewves and correct powerfactor, has made this ballast electronic design unique. Due to the nature of the circuit design, the open circuit voltage when the lamp is not connected, is not more than 230 volts for the 120 Volts, 60 Hz ballasts for F32T8, F25T8 and F17T8 lamps. Usually, the open circuit voltage for ballasts with disconnected lamps is more hazardous in the range of 450 volts to 600 volts. The design tool is applicable to one or more lamps connected in parallel with capacitors across each lamp.
In the invented ballast, if more than one lamp is connected, one way of connecting the lamps is shown in FIG. 1B. However, since the invented design does not use isolation transformers, if one of the lamps is disconnected at one end, then there may be leakage from that end to ground thereby creating a safety hazard. In this connection, the lamp connections shown in
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Mar 13 1996 | AHMED, ZAHIR M | POWER ELECTRONICS & SYSTEMS, INC | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 015395 | /0507 | |
Mar 10 2003 | Power Electronics and Systems, Inc. | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / |
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