In this paper, a high-frequency dimmable electronic power supply for the highpressure sodium lamp is presented. The method includes a full bridge rectifier generating a dc-link voltage and a half bridge inverter to generate a frequency swept lamp power signal to drive the lamp while avoiding acoustic resonance. A dimming technique for a resonant circuit electronic ballast based on a variable frequency is introduced. In addition, the ability in the dimming range is demonstrated by experiments and simulation in order to verify the performance of the proposed circuit. A dimming range from 100% to 50% has been achieved. The efficiency is always higher than 89% and the ballast can accurately follow a fixed dimming plan.
The main advantages of high-frequency electronic ballasts for high-intensity discharge lamps are high luminous efficacy, small size, lightweight and longer lifetime. This is why high-intensity discharge lamps operating at high frequency are widely used. This paper proposes an approach for designing resonant circuit electronic ballasts controlled by frequency variation for high-intensity discharge lamps. The proposed technique including an AC/DC rectifier, a power factor correction circuit and a DC/AC half bridge inverter. These electronic ballasts offer a wide range of dimming controls and can avoid acoustic resonance. However, under dimming, the electric and photometric characteristics of the lamp change. In order to study these effects under the process of dimming, this work studies the lamp properties by varying both lamp power and operating frequency.
In this paper, the dimming effects on the photometric and electric characteristics of high intensity discharge lamps supplied by a low frequency square waveform are evaluated. For this evaluation an electronic ballast is presented. The ballast consists of a current source, AC/DC converter and a full-bridge inverter. The electronic supply provides to the lamp a different form of current excitation (square waves with variable short drops). Dimming control and the characteristics of low frequency operated high intensity discharge lamps are described. The lamp is represented in a simulation by its conductance model and coupled to its electronic power supply. Experimental results are shown and compared with the simulation. A dimming range from 100% to about 60% has been achieved.
The aim of this paper is to present the colorimetric and photometric results for a pulsed power supply operated high pressure sodium (HPS) lamp. Especially, we are interested in controlling the spectral response radiation of the yellow D line. This sodium D line is composed of two spectral components, one at 589.6 nm and the other at 589.0 nm. The pulsed power supply is a driver for the HPS lamp based on the application of a low frequency (50 Hz) square current waveform through the lamp with one or more pulses on each half cycle. A description is given of the physical modeling of the arc's behaviour. Experimental results obtained from our laboratory power supply for a 400 W HPS lamp supplied at 50 Hz and simulations are shown.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.