AN2524 Application note
54 W / T5 ballast driven by the L6585D
Introduction
This application note describes a demo board able to drive a 54 W linear T5 fluorescent lamp. The ballast control is done by the L6585D that integrates PFC and half-bridge control circuits, the relevant drivers, and the circuitry able to manage all lamp operating phases (pre-heating, ignition and run mode). Protections against main failures (lamp disconnection, anti-capacitive mode, PFC overvoltage) are guaranteed and obtained with a minimum number of external components After the circuit description, a short overview of the ballast performances is presented. Fluorescent lamps are driven more and more by electronic, rather than electromagnetic ballast primarily because fluorescent lamps can produce around 10% more light for the same input power when driven above 20 KHz instead of 50/60 Hz. Operation at this frequency also eliminates both light flickering (the response time of the discharge is too slow for the lamp to have a chance to extinguish during each cycle) and audible noise. An electronic ballast consumes less power and therefore dissipates less heat than an electromagnetic ballast. The energy saved can be estimated in the range of 20-25% for a certain lamp power. Finally the electronic solution allows better control of the filament current and lamp voltage during pre-heating with the unquestionable benefit of increasing the mean lamp life. Among electronic solutions for ballasts, ST proposes a new IC - the L6585D - that, embedding both the PFC and half-bridge control sections, allows designing a compact and reliable ballast with a minimum number of external components. Figure 1. Evaluation board
May 2007
Rev 1
1/11
www.st.com
Contents
AN2524
Contents
1 2 3 Application specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Board performances . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Protections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.1 PFC over-voltage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 PFC open loop (feedback disconnection) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Choke saturation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Ignition voltage increase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Lamp power increase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Lamp disconnection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4
Revision history . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
2/11
AN2524
Application specifications
1
Application specifications
This board has been designed in order to drive a T5 54W lamp with the following characteristics: Table 1.
Input voltage [VAC] 188 to 264
T5 54 W lamp characteristics
Mains freq. [Hz] 50 Lamp power [W] 54 Nom. Ignition voltage [V] 400 Lamp current [A] 0.455 Lamp voltage [V] 120
The board performs the lamp control in all operating phases as well as a PF pre-regulator stage. It also provides the following protections:
PFC over voltage; PFC feedback disconnection; PFC choke saturation Lamp disconnection; Half-bridge anti-capacitive mode; High filament detection Schematic and part list
Ref. BR1 R1, R2 R3, R4 R6 R9 R10, R11 R12 R13 R14 R15 R16 R17, R18 R19 R20 R22 R23 R26, R27 R30, R33 Value DF06S 3.6 M 910 K 42.2 K 13.3 K 820 K 1.2 M 47 47 K 62 k 56 k 47 0.82, 1 W 10 0.82, 1/2 W 330 680 K 240 K
Table 2.
3/11
Application specifications Table 2. Schematic and part list (continued)
Ref. R35 R36, R37 R38 R5, R8, R24, R25, R34 R7, R21, R28, R29 C1 C2, C19, C23 C3 C4 C5 C6, C7 C8 C9 C10 C11 C12 C13 C13b C14, C15 C16, C17 C18 C20 C24 C21, C22 T1 T2 F1 RT1 D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 L1 Value 1 Mohm 510 K 12 K n.c. shor t 22 F, 450 V, EPCOS B43888A5226M9 10 nF n.c. 470 nF 680 nF 1 nF, 1 KV 330 nF 470 nF, 630 V, EPCOS B32652 4.7 nF, 2 kV EPCOS B32653 1 nF, 630 V 470 pF 100 nF, 250 V shor t 100 nF, X2, 275 Vac, EPCOS 100 nF 10 F, 35 V 1 nF 330 nF n.c.
A N 25 2 4
E25, 2.1 mH, EPCOS B78313P7580A005 (T2363 51-03) 39 mH, EPCOS B82731M2601A 30 2 A fuse NTC, 16R STTH1L06 1N4148 1N4148 1N4148 BZX84C15ZTX ITACOIL, 1.3 mH
4/11
AN2524 Table 2. Schematic and part list (continued)
Ref. Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 IC1 Value
Application specifications
STP4NK50ZD STP4NK50ZD STD3NK50Z-1 BC817 L6585D
Figure 2.
Evaluation board schematic
5/11
Application specifications
A N 25 2 4
The PFC section provides the downstream half-bridge with a regulated output voltage of 429 V, defined by the feedback divider connected to the pin INV according to the following formula: Equation 1
V O U T = V R E F · 1 + R----------------- = 2.5 · 1 + 3------------------------------ = 429 V ----1 + R 2 ---.6 M + 3.6 M R6 42.2 K
where VREF is the 2.5 V reference internally connected to the non inverting input of the error amplifier. A 100 Hz ripple (twice the mains frequency) is superimposed on the regulated output voltage. The amplitude of this ripple is determined by the capacitance value of the PFC output capacitor, namely: Equation 2
PO U T V O U T = ----------------------------------------------------------------- 10 V 4 · · fL · VO U T · CO U T
where VOUT is one-half of the peak-to-peak ripple, POUT the estimated power at PFC output (58 W), fL the mains frequency, VOUT the PFC output DC voltage and COUT the bulk capacitor (22 F). To define the power that the PFC stage is able to handle, a sense resistor is connected between the Power MOSFET source and ground. Its value has been chosen supposing a global efficiency of 87%. This corresponds to an input power of 62 W leading to a choke (and Power MOSFET) peak current of 0.93 A at the minimum input voltage. The sense resistor value causes a maximum peak current of 1V/Rsns so, for a safe proper design, the saturation current of the PFC inductance must be at least equal to this value. The L6585D contains an anti-saturation circuit in order to avoid this kind of failure that could damage the PFC Power MOSFET due to high current spikes. Using the multiplier family characteristic curves (Figure 3), it is possible to fix the operating point in the worst case condition, that is minimum input voltage and maximum load (point A). As a result, a resistor of 0.82 has been chosen. Figure 3. Multiplier characteristics
VCS 4.2V 1 3.4V 0.8 A 0.6 2.8V 0.4 VCOMP 2.6V 3.2V 3V 4V 3.8V 3.6V
0.2
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
3.5
VMULT
6/11
AN2524
Application specifications The minimum switching frequency is set at 34 KHz. This value can be obtained by using the following formula: Equation 3
V I N (R M S ) · ( VO U T 2 · VI N ( R M S ) ) F S W ( M I N ) = ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ = 34 k H z 2 · L · PI N · VO U T
2
where VIN(RMS) is the min/max input voltage, L the inductance value and PIN the input power. This value must be higher than the starter frequency whose maximum value is 15 KHz. The RMS current flowing through the Power MOSFET is equal to ~270 mA and the STP3NK50 has been chosen consequently.
Half-bridge section
The lamp pre-heating and run frequency are set at: Equation 4
1.328 k F P R E = ---------------------------------------------------------------- = ------------------------------------------------ = 92.77 k H z C O S C · ( R R U N | | R P R E ) C 12 · ( R 16 | | R 15 )
Equation 5
1.328 k F R U N = ------------------------------------ = ------------------------- = 50.4 k H z C O S C · R R U N C 12 · R 16
The pre-heating time duration is defined according to the following formula: Equation 6
C5 4.63 T P R E = T C H + T D I S C H = -------- · 4.63 + R 12 · C 5 · I n ---------- 1.5 IC H
where ICH is the output current on pin TCH just after the start-up, 4.63 V and 1.5 V are the charge and discharge threshold respectively (see datasheet electrical characteristics). The frequency shift during ignition is steered by the time constant R15-C8. Figure 4 shows the lamp current during the turn-on sequence (pre-heating ignition run mode) together with the TCH and EOI signals that manage the time durations of the different phases. Figure 4. Pre-heating and ignition sequence
LAMP CURRENT
EOI
Tch
7/11
Board performances
AN2524
A RMS current equal to ~500 mA flows through each of the half-bridge Power MOSFET and two STP4NK50Z have been chosen consequently.
2
Board performances
The PFC section operates in transition mode. The results in terms of PF and THD are shown in the following table: Table 3. PF and THD values as a function of the input voltage
Vin [Vac] 188 235 264 PF 0.996 0.990 0.982 THD [%] 4.5 5.4 7.1
Figure 5.
Input current at input voltage equal Figure 6. to 188 VAC
Input current at input voltage equal to 264 VAC
3
3.1
Protections
3.1 PFC over-voltage
A resistive divider connected to the HV output bus sets the maximum allowed voltage at the PFC output at 468 V. This value can be obtained by the following formula: Equation 7
V O V = V T H O V · 1 + R----------------- = 468 V ----3 + R 4 R9
8/11
AN2524
Protections where VTHOV is the threshold of the comparator available at the CTR pin (3.4 V typ.). The device stops the PF gate driver until the VTHOV signal goes below the low threshold hysteresis (3.26 V typ.). The above comparator is helpful in stopping the PF gate driver before the PFC output voltage reaches values that could exceed the maximum bulk capacitor voltage or the mosfets breakdown.
3.2
PFC open loop (feedback disconnection)
If instead the over-voltage is due to feedback disconnection (R1+R2 fails open), these two structures work together. In fact if the VOVP threshold is crossed and simultaneously the INV voltage falls below 1.2 V, typ. (due to the fact that the E/A source capability is limited), the IC stops in a latched condition. The CTR pin offers another comparator that is triggered when the pin voltage falls below 0.75 V (typ.). This is a not latched condition that could be used for several purposes (relamp, disable...). Note that this function offers complete protection against not only feedback loop failures or erroneous settings, but also against a failure of the protection itself. Either resistor of the CTR divider failing short or open or a CTR pin floating results in shutting down the IC and stopping the pre-regulator.
3.3
Choke saturation
The current sense pin voltage is not only sent to the PWM comparator (responsible for normal Power MOSFET turn-off) but also to a second comparator, whose threshold is 1.7 V (typ.), and whose function is to detect choke saturation. The sense resistor chosen (0.82 ), limits the current saturation at 2.1 A (typ.)
3.4
Ignition voltage increase
By placing a resistor between the half-bridge low side and ground and sending its voltage to the pin HBCS it is possible to limit the maximum voltage that can be applied to the lamp during ignition phase (to limit component stress) as well as the minimum switching frequency (in order to avoid capacitive mode). With the selected value for R19 (0.82), the resulting maximum voltage is around 680 V. If the lamp fails ignition, the ballast applies to it the above voltage for a duration equal to the pre-heating time. If, after this time the lamp has not yet ignited, the IC enters low consumption mode and waits for either a re-lamp or a Mains removal before enabling a new pre-heating /ignition sequence.
9/11
Revision history
AN2524
3.5
Lamp power increase
If, during run mode, the current flowing through the lamp increases such that the voltage across the half-bridge sense resistor exceeds the low threshold of the HBCS pin (910 mV typ), the L6585D reacts by increasing the switching frequency. This implements a current control structure. The effect of the frequency increase is the lamp power limitation, so the structure acts like a rough closed loop with a negative feedback (power increase current increase switching frequency increase power limitation). There is not a switch-off in correspondence of level crossing, but a frequency correction proportional to how much the threshold level has been crossed. This protection can face the effect appearing at lamp endof-life known as symmetrical rectification.
3.6
Lamp disconnection
The circuit built by R35, R37, R38, C24, Q4 monitors the presence/integrity of the high filament of the lamp. In case of lamp disconnection, the base of the transistor Q4 is forced to ground so through the network R35-D2, the pin EOL-R is forced above the re-lamp comparator threshold. As the lamp is inserted, Q4 is turned-on and D is reverse-biased so the voltage at pin EOL-R is no longer affected.
Rectifying effect (end-of-life) reference in tracking to CTR pin; window amplitude equal to 220 mV.
By means of R30 (240 K ), the window comparator is set to:
The resistive divider built by R3+R4 and R9 sets CTR voltage under normal condition at 2.9 V. The divider R26+R27 and R31 sets the voltage at pin EOLR at 2.9 V. The rectifying effect causes a shift (either positive or negative) of the lamp voltage that, in turn, also shifts the DC component of the block capacitor (C13) voltage. As this value exits from the allowed window for a time longer than ~1s (equal to preheat time), the IC stops.
4
Revision history
Table 4.
Date 09-May-2007
Revision history
Revision 1 First issue Changes
10/11
AN2524
Please Read Carefully:
Information in this document is provided solely in connection with ST products. STMicroelectronics NV and its subsidiaries ("ST") reserve the right to make changes, corrections, modifications or improvements, to this document, and the products and services described herein at any time, without notice. All ST products are sold pursuant to ST's terms and conditions of sale. Purchasers are solely responsible for the choice, selection and use of the ST products and services described herein, and ST assumes no liability whatsoever relating to the choice, selection or use of the ST products and services described herein. No license, express or implied, by estoppel or otherwise, to any intellectual property rights is granted under this document. If any part of this document refers to any third party products or services it shall not be deemed a license grant by ST for the use of such third party products or services, or any intellectual property contained therein or considered as a warranty covering the use in any manner whatsoever of such third party products or services or any intellectual property contained therein.
UNLESS OTHERWISE SET FORTH IN ST'S TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF SALE ST DISCLAIMS ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTY WITH RESPECT TO THE USE AND/OR SALE OF ST PRODUCTS INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE (AND THEIR EQUIVALENTS UNDER THE LAWS OF ANY JURISDICTION), OR INFRINGEMENT OF ANY PATENT, COPYRIGHT OR OTHER INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHT. UNLESS EXPRESSLY APPROVED IN WRITING BY AN AUTHORIZED ST REPRESENTATIVE, ST PRODUCTS ARE NOT RECOMMENDED, AUTHORIZED OR WARRANTED FOR USE IN MILITARY, AIR CRAFT, SPACE, LIFE SAVING, OR LIFE SUSTAINING APPLICATIONS, NOR IN PRODUCTS OR SYSTEMS WHERE FAILURE OR MALFUNCTION MAY RESULT IN PERSONAL INJURY, DEATH, OR SEVERE PROPERTY OR ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGE. ST PRODUCTS WHICH ARE NOT SPECIFIED AS "AUTOMOTIVE GRADE" MAY ONLY BE USED IN AUTOMOTIVE APPLICATIONS AT USER'S OWN RISK.
Resale of ST products with provisions different from the statements and/or technical features set forth in this document shall immediately void any warranty granted by ST for the ST product or service described herein and shall not create or extend in any manner whatsoever, any liability of ST.
ST and the ST logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of ST in various countries. Information in this document supersedes and replaces all information previously supplied. The ST logo is a registered trademark of STMicroelectronics. All other names are the property of their respective owners.
2007 STMicroelectronics - All rights reserved STMicroelectronics group of companies Australia - Belgium - Brazil - Canada - China - Czech Republic - Finland - France - Germany - Hong Kong - India - Israel - Italy - Japan Malaysia - Malta - Morocco - Singapore - Spain - Sweden - Switzerland - United Kingdom - United States of America www.st.com
11/11
|