Inductor over-current protection using a volt-second value representing an input voltage to a switching power converter
US-9178415-B1 · Nov 3, 2015 · US
US9844107B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9844107-B2 |
| Application number | US-201414467251-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Aug 25, 2014 |
| Priority date | Aug 25, 2014 |
| Publication date | Dec 12, 2017 |
| Grant date | Dec 12, 2017 |
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Driver circuitry is coupled between a power supply and at least one LED in a solid-state lighting fixture, such that a non-isolated direct current (DC) path exists between the power supply and the at least one LED. The driver circuitry is configured to receive an AC input voltage and generate a driver output current for driving the at least one LED from the AC input voltage. By using driver circuitry that is non-isolated from the at least one LED in the solid-state lighting fixture, the efficiency of the driver circuitry may be increased, while simultaneously reducing the cost and complexity of the driver circuitry compared to conventional driver circuitry.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. Driver circuitry configured to receive an alternating current (AC) input voltage and generate a driver current for driving at least one light emitting diode (LED) in a solid-state lighting fixture such that the driver circuitry operates at an efficiency greater than about 90% when the AC input voltage is between about 185V and 528V. 2. The driver circuitry of claim 1 wherein the driver circuitry operates at an efficiency greater than about 94% at one or more points when the AC input voltage is between 185V and 528V. 3. The driver circuitry of claim 1 wherein one or more switching components in the driver circuitry are silicon carbide (SiC) switching components. 4. The driver circuitry of claim 1 wherein a non-isolated direct current (DC) path exists between an input node of the driver circuitry and the at least one LED in the solid-state lighting fixture. 5. The driver circuitry of claim 1 wherein the driver circuitry comprises: rectifier circuitry configured to receive and rectify the AC input voltage to generate a rectified voltage; power factor correction (PFC) circuitry coupled to the rectifier circuitry and configured to receive and provide PFC to the rectified voltage to generate a PFC output voltage; and DC-DC converter circuitry coupled to the PFC circuitry and configured to receive and regulate a driver output current for driving the at least one LED in the solid-state lighting fixture. 6. The driver circuitry of claim 5 wherein the PFC circuitry is a PFC boost converter. 7. The driver circuitry of claim 6 wherein the PFC boost converter is configured to operate in a continuous conduction mode (CCM). 8. The driver circuitry of claim 6 wherein the PFC boost converter comprises: a boost converter input node and a boost converter output node; a boost converter inductor coupled between the boost converter input node and an intermediate boost converter node; a boost converter switch coupled between the intermediate boost converter node and ground; a boost converter diode including an anode coupled to the intermediate boost converter node and a cathode coupled to the boost converter output node; and a boost converter capacitor coupled between the boost converter output node and ground. 9. The driver circuitry of claim 8 wherein the boost converter switch and the boost converter diode are silicon carbide (SiC) devices. 10. The driver circuitry of claim 9 wherein the boost converter switch is a field effect transistor (FET) device. 11. The driver circuitry of claim 8 wherein the DC-DC converter circuitry is a buck converter. 12. The driver circuitry of claim 11 wherein the DC-DC converter circuitry comprises: a buck converter input node coupled to the boost converter output node and a buck converter output node; a buck converter diode including an anode coupled to the buck converter output node and an output coupled to the buck converter input node; a buck converter switch coupled between the buck converter output node and ground; and a buck converter inductor coupled in series with a buck converter capacitor between the buck converter input node and the buck converter output node. 13. The driver circuitry of claim 12 wherein the buck converter diode and the buck converter switch are silicon carbide (SiC) devices. 14. The driver circuitry of claim 13 wherein the buck converter switch is a field effect transistor (FET) device. 15. The driver circuitry of claim 12 wherein the buck converter switch is coupled to control circuitry configured to selectively change the state of the buck converter switch in order to control a current at the buck converter output node. 16. The driver circuitry of claim 15 wherein the control circuitry is coupled to minimum off-time circuitry configured to limit the minimum amount of time that the buck converter switch is turned off between switching cycles. 17. The driver circuitry of claim 12 wherein the boost converter diode, the boost converter switch, the buck converter diode, and the buck converter switch are silicon carbide (SiC) devices. 18. The driver circuitry of claim 17 wherein the boost converter switch and the buck converter switch are field effect transistor (FET) devices. 19. The driver circuitry of claim 1 wherein the driver circuitry has a power factor greater than about 0.9 for an input power equal to about 500 W. 20. The driver circuitry of claim 1 wherein the driver circuitry has a total harmonic distortion less than about 20% for an input power equal to about 500 W. 21. The driver circuitry of claim 1 wherein the driver circuitry drives the at least one LED with a linear driver current. 22. The driver circuitry of claim 1 wherein the driver circuitry drives the at least one LED with a pulse width modulated (PWM) driver current. 23. Circuitry comprising: an input node coupled to a power supply; an output node coupled to at least one LED in a solid-state lighting fixture such that a non-isolated direct current (DC) path exists between the input node and the output node; and driver circuitry residing in the non-isolated DC path between the input node and the output node and configured to: receive an AC input voltage from the power supply; and generate a driver current for driving the at least one LED from the AC input voltage using one or more switching components in the driver circuitry such that the driver circuitry operates at an efficiency greater than about 90% when the AC input voltage is between about 185V and 528V. 24. The circuitry of claim 23 wherein the one or more switching components in the driver circuitry are silicon carbide (SiC) switching components. 25. The circuitry of claim 23 wherein the driver circuitry comprises: rectifier circuitry configured to receive and rectify the AC input voltage to generate a rectified voltage; power factor correction (PFC) circuitry coupled to the rectifier circuitry and configured to receive and provide PFC to the rectified voltage to generate a PFC output voltage; and DC-DC converter circuitry coupled to the PFC circuitry and configured to receive and regulate a driver output current for driving the at least one LED in the solid-state lighting fixture. 26. The circuitry of claim 23 wherein the AC input voltage signal is between about 185V and 528V. 27. The circuitry of claim 23 wherein the driver circuitry has a power factor greater than about 0.9 for an input power equal to about 500 W. 28. The circuitry of claim 23 wherein the driver circuitry has a total harmonic distortion less than about 20% for an input power equal to about 500 W.
Electricity · mapped topic
Electricity · mapped topic
Electricity · mapped topic
Circuits for reducing or suppressing harmonics, ripples or electromagnetic interferences [EMI] · CPC title
Power factor correction [PFC]; Reactive power compensation · CPC title
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