Jan 23, 2026
PIR (Passive Infrared) sensors are a core energy-saving component for solar street lights, designed for low-traffic areas (sidewalks, rural lanes, park trails). They work by detecting the infrared radiation emitted by human/animal bodies (no active radiation output, hence "passive") and collaborating with the solar street light’s core control system (light control, charge-discharge controller) to achieve the classic "dim light standby, full bright when motion detected, delayed dim after motion" mode.
This design maximizes battery energy utilization (saving 60%–80% power compared to constant bright mode) and prolongs the service life of batteries and LED lamps—the PIR sensor never works alone, it is fully integrated with light control (photoresistor) and the solar charge-discharge controller (the "brain" of the light), and all power is supplied by the solar battery (charged by the solar panel during the day).
Core Components of the PIR Solar Street Light System
The PIR function relies on the synergy of 5 key parts, with the PIR sensor module consisting of a dual-element infrared probe + Fresnel lens (the core of motion detection):
Solar panel: Converts sunlight into electricity to charge the lithium battery (LiFePO4 is the mainstream for solar street lights).
Lithium battery: Stores electrical energy for night lighting.
PIR sensor module: Dual-element probe + Fresnel lens + signal amplification circuit (detects human/animal motion).
Solar charge-discharge controller: Integrates light control, PIR signal processing, power switching, and battery protection (the core of system coordination).
LED light source: Realizes power switching (dim light/full bright).
Step-by-Step Working Principle
The entire working process is divided into Daytime Charging & PIR Dormancy and Night Lighting & PIR Motion Detection, with light control as the fundamental trigger switch (to avoid PIR misoperation during the day).
Phase 1: Daytime – Solar Charging + PIR Sensor Dormancy
When the ambient illuminance (sunlight) is higher than the preset light control threshold (50–100 lux, adjustable), the photoresistor in the controller sends a "daytime" signal to the main control chip.
The controller cuts off the power supply to the LED light and PIR sensor module, putting the PIR sensor into deep dormancy (no power consumption, no motion detection) to avoid misoperation by sunlight, birds, or falling leaves.
The solar panel converts sunlight into DC power, and the controller performs constant current/constant voltage charging for the lithium battery (with overcharge, overvoltage, and short-circuit protection) to store energy for night use.
Phase 2: Night – Light Control Trigger + PIR Standby (Dim Light Mode)
When the ambient illuminance drops to the night light control threshold (5–15 lux, adjustable, e.g., after sunset), the photoresistor sends a "nighttime" signal to the controller.
The controller immediately activates the PIR sensor module (puts it into low-power standby detection) and supplies a small current to the LED light, making it enter dim light standby mode (10%–30% of the rated power, e.g., 10W for a 100W street light). This dim light provides basic safety illumination and ensures the PIR sensor is ready for detection.
At this stage, the PIR sensor module is in low-power detection state (power consumption <1mA): the Fresnel lens focuses the ambient infrared radiation on the dual-element infrared probe, and the probe continuously collects the static infrared radiation of the surrounding environment (e.g., walls, trees, roads) as the "baseline signal".
Phase 3: Motion Detection – PIR Trigger + LED Full Bright
This is the core working step of the PIR sensor, relying on the infrared temperature difference and motion change between the human/animal body and the environment:
When a person/animal (with a body temperature of ~37℃ for humans) moves into the PIR detection range (5–15m, adjustable) and angle (120°–180°, adjustable), the Fresnel lens focuses their body infrared radiation (λ=8–14μm, the most sensitive band for PIR sensors) onto the dual-element probe.
The dual-element probe detects a sudden change in infrared radiation intensity (the temperature of the human body is much higher than the ambient environment, forming a clear infrared temperature difference) and a spatial displacement signal (caused by movement). The probe converts this physical change into a weak electrical signal (μV level).
The signal amplification circuit in the PIR module amplifies the weak electrical signal and sends a "motion detected" trigger signal to the solar charge-discharge controller.
The controller immediately switches the LED power supply circuit, increasing the current to the rated full power (e.g., 100W) – the street light instantly turns to full bright for high-brightness illumination.
Phase 4: Motion Disappears – Delayed Full Bright + Restore Dim Light
To avoid frequent on/off of the street light (caused by short-term motion) and improve user experience, the PIR system has a customizable delay function:
When the person/animal moves out of the PIR detection range, the probe no longer detects infrared temperature difference and motion changes, and the trigger signal is cut off.
The controller does not switch back to dim light immediately, but maintains LED full bright for a preset delay time (30s–5min, factory adjustable or on-site settable via the controller).
After the delay time ends, the controller cuts the LED power supply current and restores the dim light standby mode, and the PIR sensor returns to low-power detection to wait for the next motion trigger.
Phase 5: Dawn – Light Control Shutdown + PIR Dormancy
When the ambient illuminance rises above the daytime light control threshold at dawn, the controller repeats Phase 1: cuts off power to the LED and PIR sensor, the PIR enters deep dormancy, and the solar panel resumes charging the battery—completing a full working cycle.
Key Design Features of PIR Sensors in Solar Street Lights (Anti-Misoperation & Customization)
Dual-element probe anti-misoperation: The dual-element design only responds to changing infrared signals (motion). Static heat sources (e.g., street lamps, hot water pipes, stationary animals) will not trigger the sensor, avoiding false full bright.
Fresnel lens for wide detection: The lens focuses scattered infrared radiation onto the probe, expanding the detection range (5–15m) and angle (120°–180°), and ensures the sensor can detect motion even at an installation height of 3–6m (standard for solar street lights).
All parameters adjustable: Detection range, detection angle, delay time, and dim light/full bright power ratio can all be set via the solar controller to adapt to different scenarios (e.g., shorten delay time in remote rural areas, expand detection range in community sidewalks).
Time control superposition (optional): Mid-to-high-end models can superimpose time control with PIR: e.g., after 2 AM (lowest traffic), the dim light power is further reduced (5% of rated power) or the delay time is shortened (30s) to save more energy for the battery.
Core Advantages of This Design for Solar Street Lights
Maximize energy saving: Avoids constant full bright, significantly reduces battery power consumption, and ensures the street light can work continuously for 3–7 rainy days (a key selling point of solar street lights).
Extend component life: Lower average working power reduces the heat generation of LED lamps and the discharge depth of lithium batteries, prolonging their service life.
Low maintenance: PIR sensor modules have no moving parts, low power consumption, and high stability (service life >5 years), matching the overall service life of solar street lights.
Cost-effective: PIR sensors are low-cost and easy to integrate into the solar controller, with no additional wiring required—suitable for mass application in low-traffic areas.
Typical Application Scenarios
PIR solar street lights are the first choice for areas with uneven and low pedestrian/vehicle flow, such as rural village roads, community footpaths, park trails, factory peripheral roads, sidewalks, and mountain roads. For high-traffic areas (municipal main roads, commercial blocks), PIR is usually replaced with microwave (radar) sensors (wider detection, anti-interference, suitable for vehicles and pedestrians).
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