A TRIAC dimming LED driver that can control the brightness of LED arrays for a wide range of source voltage variations is proposed in this paper. Unlike conventional PWM LED drivers, the proposed LED driver adopts a TRIAC switch, which inherently guarantees zero current switching and has been proven to be quite reliable over its long lifetime. Unlike previous TRIAC type LED drivers, the proposed LED driver is composed of an LC input filter and a variable switched capacitance, which is modulated by the TRIAC turn-on timing. Thus, the LED power regulation and dimming control, which are done by a volume resistor in the same way as the conventional TRIAC dimmers, can be simultaneously performed by the TRIAC control circuit. Because the proposed LED driver has high efficiency and a long lifetime with a high power factor (PF) and low total harmonic distortion (THD) characteristics, it is quite adequate for industrial lighting applications such as streets, factories, parking garages, and emergency stairs. A simple step-down capacitive power supply circuit composed of passive components only is also proposed, which is quite useful for providing DC power from an AC source without a bulky and heavy transformer. A prototype 60 W LED driver was implemented by the proposed design procedure and verified by simulation and experimental results, where the efficiency, PF, and THD are 92%, 0.94, and 6.3%, respectively. The LED power variation is well mitigated to below ± 2% for 190 V < V s < 250 V by using the proposed simple control circuit.
Dynamically-tunable impedance matching is a key feature in numerous radio-frequency (RF) applications at high frequencies (10 s of MHz) and power levels (100s-1000 s of Watts and above). This work develops techniques that enable the design of high power tunable matching networks (TMN) that can be tuned orders of magnitude faster than with conventional tunable impedance matching techniques, while realizing the high power levels required for many industrial applications. This is achieved by leveraging an emerging technique -known as phase-switched impedance modulation (PSIM), which involves switching passive elements at the rf operating frequency -that has previously been demonstrated at rf frequencies at up to a few hundred Watts. In this paper, we develop design approaches that enable it to be practically used at up to many kilowatts of power at frequencies in the 10 s of MHz. A detailed analysis of the factors affecting the losses as well as the tradeoffs of a basic PSIM-based element is provided. Furthermore, it is shown how incorporating additional stages to the PSIM-based element, including impedance scaling and / or the addition of series or shunt passive elements, influences the losses and enables the efficient processing of high power levels given the limitations of available switches. A PSIM-based TMN that matches load impedances to 50 and delivers up to 1.5 kW of power at frequencies centered around 13.56 MHz is implemented and tested over a load impedance range suitable for various industrial plasma processes.
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