Patents by Inventor Reid L. Guenther

Reid L. Guenther has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 6252714
    Abstract: A diffractive homogenizer is provided for receiving a beam of laser energy and producing a desired illumination pattern in a target plane. The homogenizer is made up of a plurality of diffractive sub-elements, each of which contributes to all or a portion of the desired image. By combining the contributions of many sub-elements to form the final image, a homogenizing effect is realized. In preferred embodiments, the sub-elements are designed to compensate for the finite spatial coherence of the incident laser beam and to control the numerical aperture distribution of the transmitted light. Each sub-element is composed of a large number of discrete pixels, each of which alters the phase of radiation passing therethrough by a selected amount. The pixel arrangement is chosen, using computer modeling and optimization techniques, such that the interference pattern created by the collective pixels in a sub-element makes up the desired image (or a portion thereof).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 24, 2000
    Date of Patent: June 26, 2001
    Assignee: 3M Innovative Properties Company
    Inventors: Reid L. Guenther, Curtis L. Shoemaker
  • Patent number: 6072631
    Abstract: A diffractive homogenizer is provided for receiving a beam of laser energy and producing a desired illumination pattern in a target plane. The homogenizer is made up of a plurality of diffractive sub-elements, each of which contributes to all or a portion of the desired image. By combining the contributions of many sub-elements to form the final image, a homogenizing effect is realized. In preferred embodiments, the sub-elements are designed to compensate for the finite spatial coherence of the incident laser beam and to control the numerical aperture distribution of the transmitted light. Each sub-element is composed of a large number of discrete pixels, each of which alters the phase of radiation passing therethrough by a selected amount. The pixel arrangement is chosen, using computer modeling and optimization techniques, such that the interference pattern created by the collective pixels in a sub-element makes up the desired image (or a portion thereof).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 9, 1998
    Date of Patent: June 6, 2000
    Assignee: 3M Innovative Properties Company
    Inventors: Reid L. Guenther, Curtis L. Shoemaker