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Dynamic Thermal Voltage Adaptation for LED Branches in Automotive Applications

[PDF] 2025__Dynamic Thermal Voltage Adaptation for LED Branches in Automotive Applications.pdf (1.182Mb)
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URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/106109
DOI: 10.3390/s25175392
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Author
Martínez Pérez, José Ramón; Carvajal Rodríguez, Miguel Ángel; Santaella, Juan José; Escobedo Araque, Pablo; López Ruiz, Nuria; Martínez Olmos, Antonio
Editorial
MDPI
Materia
Automotive lighting
 
LED
 
Temperature
 
Date
2025-09-01
Referencia bibliográfica
Martínez-Pérez, J.R.; Carvajal, M.A.; Santaella, J.J.; Escobedo, P.; López-Ruiz, N.; Martínez-Olmos, A. Dynamic Thermal Voltage Adaptation for LED Branches in Automotive Applications. Sensors 2025, 25, 5392. https://doi.org/10.3390/s25175392
Sponsorship
Valeo-UGR Chair; MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 IJC2020-043307-I; “European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR”
Abstract
This paper presents a novel technique for thermally compensating the power output of a DC-DC converter that supplies automotive lighting/signaling systems with multiple LED branches. The method ensures stable bias voltage for the current drivers controlling each branch, maintaining consistent power consumption across a wide temperature range. This issue has been minimally addressed in existing literature, providing few solutions which are too complex for industrial production. The approach proposed is simple and involves incorporating a temperature-sensitive thermistor into the DC-DC converter’s control loop, enabling the output voltage to adjust with ambient temperature. Different control loop configurations are explored, demonstrating that a simple resistor-thermistor network can approximate the desired voltage response under diverse thermal conditions. The power dissipated in the current drivers is kept within a controlled range, improving system efficiency and reducing heat loss. Additionally, it minimizes the need for additional current drivers, lowering the cost of these systems, improving battery life of the DC-DC converter, and decreasing CO2 emissions. For the case studies analyzed, an optimized configuration with appropriate resistor values and thermistor models achieves a 75% relative reduction in power dissipation by the current driver and a 50% improvement in the relative efficiency of the LED branch system.
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