Shedding Light on HID Ballast Control
Oct 1, 2006 12:00 PM
By Tom Ribarich, Director, Lighting IC Design Center, International Rectifier, El Segundo, Calif.
News & Features From Auto Electronics
Committed to improving hybrid electric cars
New Motors for Hybrid Vehicles
Battery Firms Battle for Hybrid Hegemony
Innovative Bipolar Plates for Fuel Cells
See More Headlines
Top Articles
Exploring Current Transformer Applications
Ultracapacitor Technology Powers Electronic Circuits
Buck-Converter Design Demystified
Sensorless Motor Control Simplifies Washer Drives
PET Resources
Buyer's Guide
Conferences
Engineering Jobs
Power Electronics Events
Rent Our Lists
Spotlight on Digital Power
When the voltage across the diac reaches the diac threshold voltage (Fig. 4), the diac turns on and a current pulse flows from the buck output, through the primary winding of the ignition transformer (T
An IRS2453D full-bridge-control IC manages the lamp-drive bridge. This high-voltage IC contains all of the necessary circuitry for the full-bridge oscillator and high- and low-side gate drivers. The IC also contains a nonlatched and latched shutdown pin as well as integrated bootstrap diodes for the high-side driver supplies. The timing diagram shows the CT oscillator timing pin, the gate-driver outputs, and the resulting midpoint and lamp voltages (Fig. 5). The IC also includes an internal 1.5-µs dead time between the low-side (LO) and high-side (HO) gate-drive outputs. This dead time prevents external MOSFET shoot-through and allows for each half-bridge voltage to self-commutate for zero-voltage switching.
Protection Requirements
The HID ballast should include specific protection circuits to detect various lamp- and ballast-fault conditions and safely shutdown or reset the ballast. These fault conditions include ac-mains interrupt or brownout, lamp ignition failure, lamp warmup failure, lamp open circuit, lamp short circuit and lamp end-of-life. A summary of these conditions appear in the table along with the proper ballast response to each fault and the possible outcome if the ballast does not protect against the fault.
Voltage and current signals within the various stages can serve as detection points to realize the protection circuitry. The ac line or dc bus voltages can reset the ballast if a brownout condition occurs. Timers are typically necessary to deactivate the ballast after a predetermined time period should the lamp fail to ignite or warmup. A lamp voltage or power monitor can detect if the lamp is unstable or is reaching end of life. Regardless of the specific methods a ballast design implements to detect each fault, the protection circuits should be robust and reliable to ensure proper safety in the ballast application and to prevent catastrophic field failures should fault conditions occur.
New applications and lamp types are continuously emerging in the marketplace and each includes its own unique design challenges. International Rectifier and other manufacturers in the industry will continue to improve and simplify control methods and ICs in the field of HID lighting. Designers will need to stay on top of the rapid changes that are sure to take place in the coming years.
| Fault condition | Ballast action | Unprotected outcome |
|---|---|---|
| AC mains interrupt or brownout | Reset ballast and restrike lamp | Lamp can extinguish and remain off |
| Lamp does not ignite | Deactivate ballast if lamp does not ignite after a maximum time period | High-voltage safety hazard at output terminals |
| Lamp does not warm up | Deactivate ballast if lamp does not reach nominal power after a maximum time period | High current stress on buck and full-bridge stages can cause component failures. |
| Lamp is not connected or has a broken connection | Deactivate ballast after a maximum time period | Ballast will try to ignite lamp |
| High-voltage safety hazard at output terminals | ||
| Short circuit at ballast output terminals | Deactivate ballast after a maximum time period | High current stress on buck and full-bridge stages can cause component failures |
| Unstable lamp or end of life | Deactivate ballast after maximum time period | Lamp can extinguish, flicker, conduct in one direction, or encounter color or brightness shifting Unstable lamp can cause disruption or failure of ballast circuits |
More on Buck Converters
• Buck-Converter Design Demystified• Optimizing Voltage Selection in Buck Converters
• Power Conversion Synthesis Part 1: Buck Converter Design
• Improving Efficiency in Synchronous Buck Converters

