Electronic – Driving compact UV lamp with DC

electronic-ballastlamp

I'm 'testing the water' if you will on driving a Panasonic TUV PL-S 5W UV lamp with a low-voltage (12 ~ 24 V) DC supply. The lamp is rated at 34 V, 0.18 A.

Since I have a DC source, magnetic ballasts are out. I have read some app notes from ST and Infineon on electronic ballast design, yet these sources are concerned with mains-connected fluorescent lamps (i.e. the artificial sun above your cubicle).

The closest products I could find are the UC3872 and UCC2973 which seem geared towards automotive and laptop computer applications.

UC3872

Since the lamp is only rated for 34 V I would use a different transformer (1:3 for 12 V, etc.). Other than that I feel a bit clueless. Am I heading in the right direction, or are there simpler slash better paths to take?

EDIT: a dimmable feature is not needed.

Best Answer

Ignition voltage is unknown yet, may be 68V or 2x conduction voltage , so 1:6 transformer with current sensing regulating seems feasible. Unless centre tap doubles this ratio with Vpp ratio

It seems your 2 pin tube is designed for magnetic ballasts with internal switch while 4 pin versions are for electronic ballasts.

Here is a magnetic entire solution for <20$. https://m.ebay.ca/itm/UV-disinfection-lamp-electronic-ballast-PL-S-5W-9W-11W-universal-lamp-holder/182962632880?hash=item2a996c38b0%3Ag%3A6LsAAOSw0RdaMgVr&_mwBanner=1&_nkw=pl-s+ballast&rt=nc

But it’s not dimmable.