Abstract:
Uninterrupted power supply system being connected to a power source through input terminals ( 11 - 1  and  11 - 2 ) and transforming the electric power received into a level of voltage and current appropriate for feeding a telecommunications equipment through output terminals ( 12 - 1  and  12 - 2 ). A recognising means ( 14 ) examines the electrical characteristics of the received power and, as a function of the results of the analysis, configures a determined conversion path between the input terminals ( 11 - 1  and  11 - 2 ) and the output terminals ( 12 - 1  and  12 - 2 ); to which purpose it generates a set of control signals (S 1 , S 2 , S 3  and S 4 ) which, respectively, activate a set of switching means ( 15 - 1, 15 - 2, 15 - 3  and  15 - 4 ).

Description:
OBJECT OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention relates to a power supply system to feed electric power continuously to electrical and/or electronic equipment, being of special but not exclusive application in a telecommunications system. 
     The power supply system is able of receiving power from any source and configuring a conversion path for producing at its output a voltage and current appropriate for the equipment that it is feeding. 
     STATE OF THE ART 
     Telecommunication systems are presently evolving very rapidly towards telecommunication systems in which radio signals are totally or partly replacing copper wire in the connection between the subscriber and the switching system. Thus, access systems that employ wireless and/or cordless, cellular, etc. technologies appear. 
     All these systems have the special feature of locating close to the subscribers, remote units containing, for example, some equipment related with the switching system and, also, equipment related with the radio system such as transmitters and receivers, all of which must be fed with electric power to operate. 
     As a result, the remote units incorporate power supply systems that serve to provide the electric power to enable the telecommunications part to set up communications between the subscribers and a public switched telephone network (PSTN), for example. 
     These telecommunications systems are very attractive for operators, either new or already having a telecommunications network, since they do not require an exhaustive planning study to be carried out in order to implement their deployment in a geographical area where it is desired to provide telephone services, for which reason they can be put into service very quickly and easily. 
     Nevertheless, the operators and, consequently, the suppliers of telecommunication systems, encounter the impediment of not knowing the electrical characteristics of the electric power source present in each of the locations selected for each of the remote units spread over the geographical area where the telecommunications system is to be implemented. 
     Thus, the need arises to employ a power supply system able of being connected to electric power sources having differing electrical characteristics, and to produce from the received electric power a voltage and current appropriate for the electrical characteristics of the communications equipment with which each remote unit is fitted, without the personnel installing the telecommunication system having to perform any manual intervention and, in addition, the deployment designers of the telecommunications network need not reject a possible site for a remote unit due to the electrical characteristics of the power supply existing at said location. As a result, the site selection shall be made on the grounds of the suitability or not for the telecommunications equipment included in the remote unit. 
     CHARACTERIZATION OF THE INVENTION 
     To overcome the problems mentioned above, an uninterrupted power supply system is proposed which offers dimensional and electrical operating characteristics suitable for being mounted together with telecommunications equipment, forming a remote unit, which is installed in the proximity of subscribers to a telecommunications system. 
     The uninterrupted power supply system of the invention receives electric power from an electric supply source, so that a recognising means, included in said power supply system, examines the received power in order to determine its electrical characteristics and, as a function of the results of the analysis performed, routes the power received over a determined power conversion path, obtaining at the end of said path electric power in a suitable form to be fed to the telecommunications equipment included in each remote unit. 
     Thus, the uninterrupted power supply system can be connected to a broad range of electric power sources, for which reason its installation is fast and straightforward, the only requirement being to connect the power supply system directly to the electric power source. 
     As a result, the installation of the different remote units of the telecommunications system is practically independent of the electrical characteristics of the electric power source that shall supply electric power to each remote unit, respectively. 
     The uninterrupted power supply system offers a high overall efficiency, low cost and compact size, as well as satisfying all international standards relative to the harmonics content of the input current, for example EN61000-3-2. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES 
     A more detailed explanation of the invention is provided in the following description, based on the figures attached, in which: 
     FIG. 1 shows a block diagram of a preferred embodiment of an uninterrupted power supply system according to the invention. 
    
    
     DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 
     FIG. 1 shows a block diagram of the uninterrupted power supply system which receives electric power from an electric supply source, such as an AC mains line and/or a DC supply unit, through input terminals  11 - 1  and  11 - 2 , and produces across its output terminals  12 - 1  and  12 - 2  a voltage and current appropriate for a load. 
     The electric power received through the input terminals  11 - 1  and  11 - 2 , is passed through a filtering means  13  for filtering out the harmonics contained in the received current and the electromagnetic interference conducted over the power lines connected to the terminals  11 - 1  and  11 - 2 . 
     The filtered power, before being applied to a determined conversion path, is examined by a recognising means in order to determine its electrical characteristics and, on a basis of the results of the analysis, to route the filtered power to the appropriate conversion path, for completing the power transformation process and obtaining across the output terminals  12 - 1  and  12 - 2  the voltage and current required by the telecommunications equipment. 
     The uninterrupted power supply system for performing the power transformation process comprises at least a first conversion path, for example for direct current (DC), and a second conversion path, for example for alternating current (AC). 
     The power supply system also comprises a third conversion path able of storing power and supplying it to the load, in the event of an outage of the power source. 
     The third conversion path receives power coming from the output of the filtering means  13 , when a first switching means  15 - 1  is off, said first switching means being operated (off and on) by means of a first control signal S 1  generated by the recognising means  14 . 
     An end of the first switching means  15 - 1  is connected, by means of conductors, to a first node  17 - 1  located in the output of the filtering means  13 ; and its other end is connected, by means of conductors, to a charging device  16 . 
     The power that flows through the first switching means  15 - 1  is adapted for storing in a storage facility  16 - 1 , such as a battery, by means of the charging device  16 , what is known in the state of the art. 
     When an outage in the power source arises, the energy stored in the battery  16 - 1  before being fed to the load, can be adapted by boosting it in a first adapting means  16 - 2 , as is a boost switched power converter, for example, said boost power converter  16 - 2  not being described as it is known in the state of the art. 
     This connection is made under the control of the recognising means  14 , which produces a fourth control signal S 4  for activating a fourth switching means  15 - 4 , so that the battery  16 - 1  and the first adapting means  16 - 2  are directly connected to each other. An end of the fourth switching device  15 - 4  is connected to the output of the battery  16 - 1 ; another of its ends is connected to the input of the first adapting means  16 - 2 . 
     In the event of there being no need to adapt the voltage of the battery  16 - 1 , the output of the battery is connected directly to the output terminals  12 - 1  and  12 - 2 , through another end of the fourth switching means. To this purpose, the fourth control signal S 4  produced by the recognising means  14 , acts on the fourth switching means  154  in order to implement said connection. 
     The second AC conversion path receives power when a second switching means  15 - 2  is turned on, as the electric power source supplies AC power. The recognising means  14  produces a second control signal S 2  for operating the second switching means  15 - 2 . 
     An end of the second switching means  15 - 2  is connected, via a number of conductors, to the first node  17 - 1 , and its other end is connected, via a number of conductors, to a rectifying means  18 , for example a diode bridge, for rectifying the received power, producing at its output a rectified voltage that is applied directly to the load over the output terminals  12 - 1  and  12 - 2 . 
     The first DC conversion path receives power from the first node  17 - 1  when the voltage source provides DC power, this connection being established by means of a third switching means  15 - 3 , activated by a third control signal S 3  produced by the recognising means  14 . 
     The third switching device  15 - 3  is connected, via conductors, to the first node  17 - 1 ; another of its ends is connected, via conductors, to a second adapting means  19 , so that in the event of adapting being required before supplying to the load, said adapting process is performed by the second adapting means  19 , for example a boost converter. The output of this second adapter  19  is connected to the output terminals  12 - 1  and  12 - 2 . 
     However, when the characteristics of the power supplied by the DC source are appropriate for the characteristics required by the load, the recognising means  14  activates the third switching means  15 - 3 , so that a direct connection is established between the first node  17 - 1  and the output terminals  12 - 1  and  12 - 2 , which are connected to another end of the third switching means  15 - 3 . 
     As a result, the recognising means  14 , by means of the third control signal S 3 , activates the third switching means  15 - 3  so that said connection is implemented. 
     The recognising means  14  includes a control logic for analyzing the electrical characteristics of the source and comparing them with the electrical characteristics of the load and, based on the results of the analysis performed, producing the different control signals S 1 , S 2 , S 3  and S 4  for setting up the most suitable conversion path for implementing the conversion process. 
     The electrical characteristics of the load are inserted into the recognising means  14  during the process of equipping each remote unit, for example by means of a computer that is connected to a communications port (not shown) incorporated in the recognising means  14 .