510 Pet 24
510 Pet 24
By Peter Green, Senior Engineer, International Rectier, Lighting Group, El Segundo, Calif. Controlling the ourescent lighting of a large office building is achieved through a digital system that is simple, exible and signicantly reduces energy consumption.
he goal of power management for lighting is to ensure that electric lights are switched off or dimmed at times when they are not needed. These times are when people are not present in a particular area or when sufcient or partial natural light is available. Fluorescent light sources are used predominantly in ofce environments and, by means of suitable solid-state control gear, can be dimmed to any level from 100% down to less than 5% of maximum light output or can be switched off altogether. Such control gear consists of an electronic ballast, which in North America is supplied from a 120-Vac or 277-Vac line, and provides the correct starting and running frequencies for the particular type of uorescent lamp used in a luminaire (lighting xture). These systems generally operate a lamp at frequencies from 30 kHz to 100 kHz, at which the lightoutput to power-input ratio is optimized and icker is eliminated. Electronic ballasts are often capable of driving two or more lamps and can be controlled remotely through a two-wire digital bus or other means. It is important that high-performance electronic ballasts also be designed to have a high power factor and low harmonic distortion of the ac line current. This presents an essentially resistive load to the ac line, which optimizes the utilization of power supplied by the energy provider. Installations where the overall power factor is low and the harmonic currents are high add additional strain on the generating system and may give rise to additional charges. One widely adopted control protocol is the industrystandard digitally addressable lighting interface (DALI) system now nding its way to the North American market. This system allows up to 64 individually addressed ballasts to be connected in parallel to a single two-wire, low-voltage bus. The DALI input connections to a ballast are polarity
Power Electronics Technology October 2005
independent, making installation straightforward. In a large installation, several separate DALI lines can be connected to groups of 64 ballasts controlled from a central controller capable of providing several separate DALI output buses. Of course, there are other light sources used in installations, such as incandescent, halogen and high-intensity discharge (HID), which can be controlled equally with the DALI system. However, HID lamps are generally nondimmable or have limited dimming range compared to uorescent lamps, and they are not capable of hot restrike without special auxiliary equipment. Besides DALI, some of the other control methods adopted are 0-V to 10-V control, an older but reliable analog system, although it has the disadvantage of requiring a separate pair of polarity-specic control wires to each ballast, making installation much more complicated. The concept of ballasts being controlled via a wireless connection is attractive. However, such a system would be more expensive and perhaps less reliable, because the ballast and light xtures generally are made from metal and would absorb some of the signal.
It is important that high-performance electronic ballasts also be designed to have a high power factor and low harmonic distortion of the ac line current.
Other control methods include ballasts that can be dimmed through signals superimposed on the ac power line and ballasts that can be dimmed from a traditional phase-cutting dimmer. However, this method is less reliable because there are many different types of dimmers on the market, and it is not possible to guarantee reliable dimming with every different type. Also, it is well known that this type of dimming, while being effective for resistive incandescent lamps, is inherently unsuitable for discharge lamps such as uorescent tubes. 24
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Benets of DALI
The objective of lighting power management is to minimize the amount of energy consumed in an installation rstly by harvesting as much natural light as possible and secondly by switching off lights when no personnel are present. A lighting management system would consist of a central controller connected to many dimmable uorescent ballasts controlled by a DALI bus using occupancy and light level sensors around the building (Fig. 1). It also can monitor
Fig. 1. A DALI-based lighting system can control a buildings ourescent lighting by sensing the ambient light level and whether or not a specic light is being used by a person. The digital dimming ballasts can control each light xture from full on to completely off. www.powerelectronics.com
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Fig. 2b. The ballast can be packaged in a compact form factor suitable for connecting to many uorescent lamps.
to reduce ballast output levels when the lamps are new and increase ballast output levels slowly over time to compensate for this phenomenon, and therefore maintain a constant light level regardless of the level of lumen depreciation in the lamps. This presupposes that a sufcient number of luminaires have been installed such that if they were all set to maximum brightness, the light level would be higher than necessary. Evidently, lighting control techniques can play a signicant role in the power management of large installations. One of the key components required in such a system is the DALIcontrolled electronic ballast for uorescent lamp xtures. The design of such a ballast requires the integration of several important analog and digital circuit blocks to create high-performance, high-reliability end product.
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Other microcontroller inputs are also used to determine if one or more lamps have been removed from the xture. If this happens, it is necessary for the microcontroller to monitor the event and shut down the ballast controller IC. It is also necessary for it to use the same scheme to sense when new lamps have been placed into the xture so that it can enable the IC to start up again and light the lamps. In each of the cases described, the microcontroller can send a suitable coded message on the DALI bus back to the central controller.
Fig. 5. Dimming control is based on the phase difference between the half-bridge switching voltage and the current in the resonant output circuit. The phase difference is linearly proportional to the lamp arc power, enabling lamp brightness to be adjusted by increasing the frequency to reduce the lamp power until the phase difference detected corresponds to the desired output.
through a simple RC lter to produce a dc voltage between 0 V and 5 V that is proportional to the PWM duty cycle. This enables the microcontroller to generate a dimming control voltage, which is then fed into the dimming control IC to set the required light output. This approach is simple because it requires only that a value be placed into a register in the software, which will directly control the dimming level with only one resistor and one capacitor needed to couple the two ICs together. The control IC can be enabled and disabled through its shutdown pin directly from a logic-level signal supplied from the microcontroller. When this signal is set high in software, the ballast will shut off, and when it is set low again, the ballast will go through a programmed preheat, ignition and start sequence that is provided by the IC and congured by means of a small number of external resistors and capacitors connected around it. In this way, when a DALI command is received telling the ballast to switch off, the microcontroller can determine that it is the ballast being addressed and execute the instruction. Similarly, the microcontroller can also restart the ballast when the appropriate DALI command is received. The IC also has on-board protection features such as an overcurrent shutdown that will shut it down in the event of a failed ignition. If the control IC is shut down by means of its own built-in protection features, this needs to be communicated to the microcontroller. In this case, the FMIN output of the IC, which is high during normal operation, will go low and this signal can be fed back into the microcontroller, to a port that has been set up by the software to be an input.
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Sophisticated lighting control plays a signicant role in the power management of large installations.
The software to implement the DALI is quite large but simple to understand when broken into elementary functional blocks. Fig. 6 outlines the basic flow of the software in its most simplied form. Upon entry into the program after setup, the microcontroller is held in a loop. While in this loop, the microcontroller is checking for errors, plus it is polling the communications circuitry for incoming data. If valid data is received, it is ltered to determine if the address matches the dened address for the ballast, if the group matches the dened group memberships, or if the data is a broadcast command for all ballasts to respond to. Also, the type of command is ltered into two basic choices: standard or special. Once ltered, the program immediately vectors to the appropriate command and executes. All of the commands are divided into four general categories, including arc power control commands, conguration commands, query commands and special commands. Within each category, the commands are divided again according to related functions. The arc power control commands are the most commonly used in a functioning lighting system. Within any of these commands, appropriate signals are sent to the ballast controller to adjust light level via pulse-width modulation. This includes scene level selections. Conguration commands are used to set up the ballast. Examples of such settings include setting minimum and maximum lighting thresholds, fade times and rates, groups and scene levels. Generally, data is stored in an EEPROM, where it is maintained regardless of the power conditions. Query commands are used to get feedback from the ballast. All of the settings can be queried. Even more useful, the status of the ballast is available. Information about fading, the lamp, general faults and power is available through the appropriate query command. Special commands are immune to addresses, thus all ballasts on the DALI bus respond to a special command. All the functions for nding new ballasts or ballasts that have no addresses are available. Uploading information to the ballast, typically settings, is available in the special command set. Sophisticated lighting control plays a signicant role in the power management of large installations. The DALI system is ideally suited for this task because of its exibility and simplicity. The sucessful DALI ballast is comprised of a cost-effective solution, integrating suitable analog and digital circuits, based on high-functionality integrated circuits. PETech 32
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Fig. 6. This program ow chart shows a simplied view of how the DALI system goes through the steps of executing a command. Power Electronics Technology October 2005