Patents by Inventor Anthony Van Heugten
Anthony Van Heugten 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).
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Patent number: 11822154Abstract: An electro-active lens is presented which utilizes a surface relief structures and an electro-active material, with a change in refractive index facilitating the change in optical properties. A molded structure and a liquid crystal are used to form a diffractive lens. In addition to the classical approach of utilizing diffractive optics and multiple Fresnel zones to form a lens, an additional structure is placed between Fresnel zones in order to improve the diffraction efficiency across the visible spectrum and reduce chromatic aberration.Type: GrantFiled: December 17, 2021Date of Patent: November 21, 2023Assignee: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventors: Anthony Van Heugten, Harry Milton
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Patent number: 11793625Abstract: Certain exemplary embodiments can provide a system, machine, device, manufacture, circuit, composition of matter, and/or user interface adapted for and/or resulting from, and/or a method and/or machine-readable medium comprising machine-implementable instructions for, activities that can comprise and/or relate to, via a device implanted in a mammal, sensing a ciliary muscle movement and/or force and/or converting the ciliary muscle movement and/or force to a signal and/or a predetermined form of power.Type: GrantFiled: June 25, 2020Date of Patent: October 24, 2023Assignee: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventors: Anthony Van Heugten, Joel Zychick
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Publication number: 20230273443Abstract: A conventional head-mounted display (HMDs) can display a virtual image at a fixed focus (e.g., infinite focus). If the user looks at an object that appears closer than the virtual image, then accommodation by the user's eyes will cause the virtual image to appear blurry. The HMDs disclosed herein include a dynamic electro-active focusing element that changes the focus of the virtual image to account for accommodation by the user. This dynamic electro-active focusing element may include a curved layer of electro-active material, such as nematic or bi-stable (e.g., cholesteric) liquid crystal, disposed between a static concave mirror and a convex surface on a beam splitter or other optical element. Changing the refractive index of the electro-active material causes the focus of the dynamic electro-active focusing element, making it possible to shift the virtual image's focus in as the user's eyes change focus.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 8, 2023Publication date: August 31, 2023Applicant: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventor: Anthony Van Heugten
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Publication number: 20230273498Abstract: Resistive bridges can connect many ring electrodes in an electro-active lens with a relatively small number of buss lines. These resistors are usually large to prevent excessive current consumption. Conventionally, they are disposed in the same plane as the ring electrodes, which means that the ring electrodes are spaced farther apart or made discontinuous to accommodate the resistors. But spacing the ring electrodes farther apart or making them discontinuous degrades the lens’s optical quality. Placing the ring electrodes and resistors on layers separated by an insulator makes it possible for the ring electrodes to be closer together and continuous with resistance high enough to limit current consumption. It also relaxes constraints on feature sizes and placement during the process used to make the lens. And because the resistors and electrodes are on different planes, they can be formed of materials with different resistivities.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 8, 2023Publication date: August 31, 2023Applicant: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventors: Anthony Van Heugten, Harry Milton
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Publication number: 20230194897Abstract: An electro-active lens with stacked, rotated cylindrical electro-active lens elements can provide cylinder power along more axes than there are cylindrical electro-active lens elements. For instance, six stacked cylindrical electro-active lens elements, each aligned with a different lens meridian, can produce cylinder power along fifteen unique meridians when actuated up to three at a time. If these fifteen meridians are spaced at 12° increments, then the lens stack can provide cylinder power that is aligned well to correct astigmatism along any axis. Each cylindrical electro-active lens element in the stack can include a liquid crystal layer that is actuated by linear electrodes that are parallel to each other and orthogonal to both the cylindrical electro-active lens element's cylinder axis and optical axis. The electro-active lens can also include a spherical lens element that provides spherical power in addition to any net spherical power produced by the stacked cylindrical electro-active lens elements.Type: ApplicationFiled: February 21, 2023Publication date: June 22, 2023Applicant: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventor: Anthony Van Heugten
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Patent number: 11681193Abstract: Bright ambient light can wash out a virtual image in a conventional augmented reality device. Fortunately, this problem can be prevented with a variable electro-active beam splitter whose reflect/transmit ratio can be varied or switched on and off rapidly at a duty cycle based on the ambient level. As the ambient light gets brighter, the beam splitter's transmit/reflect ratio can be shifted so that the beam splitter reflects more light from the display and transmits less ambient light to the user's eye. The beam splitter can also be switched between a highly reflective state and a highly transmissive state at a duty cycle selected so that the eye spends more time integrating reflected display light than integrating transmitted ambient light. The splitting ratio and/or duty cycle can be adjusted as the ambient light level changes to provide the optimum experience for the user.Type: GrantFiled: April 8, 2021Date of Patent: June 20, 2023Assignee: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventors: Anthony Van Heugten, Anita Trajkovska-Broach, Harry Milton
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Patent number: 11668940Abstract: Certain exemplary embodiments can provide a system, machine, device, manufacture, circuit, composition of matter, and/or user interface adapted for and/or resulting from, and/or a method and/or machine-readable medium comprising machine-implementable instructions for, activities that can comprise and/or relate to, via light from a light source, rendering an image on a retina.Type: GrantFiled: December 14, 2021Date of Patent: June 6, 2023Assignee: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventor: Anthony Van Heugten
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Patent number: 11668941Abstract: A conventional head-mounted display (HMDs) can display a virtual image at a fixed focus (e.g., infinite focus). If the user looks at an object that appears closer than the virtual image, then accommodation by the user's eyes will cause the virtual image to appear blurry. The HMDs disclosed herein include a dynamic electro-active focusing element that changes the focus of the virtual image to account for accommodation by the user. This dynamic electro-active focusing element may include a curved layer of electro-active material, such as nematic or bi-stable (e.g., cholesteric) liquid crystal, disposed between a static concave mirror and a convex surface on a beam splitter or other optical element. Changing the refractive index of the electro-active material causes the focus of the dynamic electro-active focusing element, making it possible to shift the virtual image's focus in as the user's eyes change focus.Type: GrantFiled: January 18, 2022Date of Patent: June 6, 2023Assignee: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventor: Anthony Van Heugten
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Patent number: 11662642Abstract: Resistive bridges can connect many ring electrodes in an electro-active lens with a relatively small number of buss lines. These resistors are usually large to prevent excessive current consumption. Conventionally, they are disposed in the same plane as the ring electrodes, which means that the ring electrodes are spaced farther apart or made discontinuous to accommodate the resistors. But spacing the ring electrodes farther apart or making them discontinuous degrades the lens's optical quality. Placing the ring electrodes and resistors on layers separated by an insulator makes it possible for the ring electrodes to be closer together and continuous with resistance high enough to limit current consumption. It also relaxes constraints on feature sizes and placement during the process used to make the lens. And because the resistors and electrodes are on different planes, they can be formed of materials with different resistivities.Type: GrantFiled: June 16, 2022Date of Patent: May 30, 2023Assignee: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventors: Anthony Van Heugten, Harry Milton
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Publication number: 20230089097Abstract: Certain exemplary embodiments can provide a system, machine, apparatus, device, manufacture, circuit, composition of matter, and/or user interface adapted for and/or resulting from, and/or a process, method, and/or machine-readable medium comprising machine-implementable instructions for, activities that can comprise and/or relate to, generating a gradient in an index of refraction of a material.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 14, 2022Publication date: March 23, 2023Applicants: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc., Kent State UniversityInventors: Liwei LI, Anthony Van Heugten, Dwight P. Duston, Phil BOS, Douglas BRYANT
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Publication number: 20230086352Abstract: An electro-active lens provides simultaneous focusing at two different optical powers. It does this with a stack of electro-active lens elements aligned along the same optical axis that each focus light in different polarization states (e.g., horizontal and vertical polarization states). If a first and second electro-active lens elements have different optical powers, light in a first polarization state can be focused to one optical power and light in a second polarization state can be focused to a different optical power simultaneously. The electro-active lens can be switched between different single and multiple optical powers. People with presbyopia may use the electro-active lens mounted in eyewear in place of conventional bifocal glasses. The electro-active lens may also be used in a scope to improve target aiming.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 7, 2022Publication date: March 23, 2023Applicant: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventor: Anthony Van Heugten
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Patent number: 11526029Abstract: An electro-active lens provides simultaneous focusing at two different optical powers. It does this with a stack of electro-active lens elements aligned along the same optical axis that each focus light in different polarization states (e.g., horizontal and vertical polarization states). If a first and second electro-active lens elements have different optical powers, light in a first polarization state can be focused to one optical power and light in a second polarization state can be focused to a different optical power simultaneously. The electro-active lens can be switched between different single and multiple optical powers. People with presbyopia may use the electro-active lens mounted in eyewear in place of conventional bifocal glasses. The electro-active lens may also be used in a scope to improve target aiming.Type: GrantFiled: August 19, 2021Date of Patent: December 13, 2022Assignee: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventor: Anthony Van Heugten
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Patent number: 11513416Abstract: Certain exemplary embodiments can provide a system, machine, apparatus, device, manufacture, circuit, composition of matter, and/or user interface adapted for and/or resulting from, and/or a process, method, and/or machine-readable medium comprising machine-implementable instructions for, activities that can comprise and/or relate to, generating a gradient in an index of refraction of a material.Type: GrantFiled: February 12, 2021Date of Patent: November 29, 2022Assignees: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc., Kent State UniversityInventors: Liwei Li, Anthony Van Heugten, Dwight P. Duston, Phil Bos, Douglas Bryant
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Publication number: 20220342274Abstract: A conventional liquid crystal lens switches on and off so slowly that a person can perceive the lens's gradual transition from high to low optical power. This makes a conventional liquid crystal lens unsuitable for focusing virtual images quickly in an augmented, mixed, or virtual reality system. Conversely, an inventive fast-switching electroactive lens system can switch so fast (e.g., in 35 milliseconds or less) that a person perceives its optical power to change instantaneously. The system accomplishes this fast switching with using an electroactive wave plate in series with slower liquid-crystal lenses. The wave place can be switched quickly between emitting vertically or horizontally polarized light. Each lens focuses either vertically or horizontally polarized light and transmits orthogonally polarized light. By switching between polarization states, the wave plate effectively turns one lens on and the other lens off much faster than either lens could be switched by itself.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 30, 2022Publication date: October 27, 2022Applicant: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventors: Anthony Van Heugten, Yingfei JIANG
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Publication number: 20220324188Abstract: A method of manufacturing an optic includes disposing electronic circuitry on a substrate. The method also includes depositing a first resin on the first side of the electronic circuitry and curing the first resin to form a first optical segment. The method further includes depositing a second resin on the second side of the electronic circuitry and curing the second resin to form a second optical segment. The first and second optical segments encapsulate the electronic circuitry. The first resin and the second resin can include multiple droplets of resin, thereby reducing mechanical force imposed on the electronic circuitry during printing and allowing conformal contact between the resin and the electronic circuitry. Accordingly, electronic circuitry of smaller dimension can be used to form the electronic eyewear.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 21, 2022Publication date: October 13, 2022Applicant: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventors: Anthony Van Heugten, Joel D. Zychick
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Publication number: 20220317457Abstract: Transparent organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) can be used as light-emitting pixels in a near-eye display for augmented reality applications. The light from these pixels can be switchably tuned and/or steered with tunable beam-steering and focusing elements, also called tunable micro-lenses. These tunable micro-lenses are arranged in an array and mated to the array of pixels, for example, by embedding in a spectacle lens. The tunable micro-lenses use fast-switching half-wave plates to selectively focus and/or tilt light from the pixels. By switching the light from the pixels between resolvable positions/angles at a rate faster than the flicker fusion threshold (e.g., 60 Hz), the tunable micro-lenses can effectively double the apparent resolution of the near-eye display. And by switching between focusing and non-focusing states at the same rate, the tunable micro-lenses can effectively superimpose the virtual images from the pixels on the real-world image visible through the pixels.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 10, 2022Publication date: October 6, 2022Applicant: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventor: Anthony Van Heugten
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Publication number: 20220317540Abstract: Resistive bridges can connect many ring electrodes in an electro-active lens with a relatively small number of buss lines. These resistors are usually large to prevent excessive current consumption. Conventionally, they are disposed in the same plane as the ring electrodes, which means that the ring electrodes are spaced farther apart or made discontinuous to accommodate the resistors. But spacing the ring electrodes farther apart or making them discontinuous degrades the lens's optical quality. Placing the ring electrodes and resistors on layers separated by an insulator makes it possible for the ring electrodes to be closer together and continuous with resistance high enough to limit current consumption. It also relaxes constraints on feature sizes and placement during the process used to make the lens. And because the resistors and electrodes are on different planes, they can be formed of materials with different resistivities.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 16, 2022Publication date: October 6, 2022Applicant: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventors: Anthony Van Heugten, Harry Milton
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Publication number: 20220308392Abstract: A typical liquid crystal lens includes liquid crystal sandwiched between transparent substrates, which are patterned with ring electrodes. Applying a voltage across the electrodes causes the liquid crystal molecules to rotate, changing their apparent refractive index and the lens's focal length. The ring electrodes are separated by gaps and get narrower toward the lens's periphery. If the ring electrodes are too narrower, their cannot switch the liquid crystal well. To address this problem, an inventive liquid crystal lens includes a substrate with a stepped surface that defines concentric liquid crystal regions with thicknesses that increase with lens radius. Each region is switched by a different set of ring electrodes, which may be on, under, or opposite the stepped surface. Within each region, the ring electrodes get narrower farther from the lens's center. But the ring electrodes' widths also increase with liquid crystal thickness, offsetting the decrease in width that degrades lens performance.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 6, 2022Publication date: September 29, 2022Applicant: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventor: Anthony Van Heugten
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Publication number: 20220291526Abstract: An electro-active lens provides simultaneous focusing at two different optical powers. It does this with a stack of electro-active lens elements aligned along the same optical axis that each focus light in different polarization states (e.g., horizontal and vertical polarization states). If a first and second electro-active lens elements have different optical powers, light in a first polarization state can be focused to one optical power and light in a second polarization state can be focused to a different optical power simultaneously. The electro-active lens can be switched between different single and multiple optical powers. People with presbyopia may use the electro-active lens mounted in eyewear in place of conventional bifocal glasses. The electro-active lens may also be used in a scope to improve target aiming.Type: ApplicationFiled: August 19, 2021Publication date: September 15, 2022Applicant: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventor: Anthony Van Heugten
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Publication number: 20220244539Abstract: Certain exemplary embodiments can provide a system, machine, device, manufacture, circuit, composition of matter, and/or user interface adapted for and/or resulting from, and/or a method and/or machine-readable medium comprising machine-implementable instructions for, activities that can comprise and/or relate to, via light from a light source, rendering an image on a retina.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 14, 2021Publication date: August 4, 2022Applicant: e-Vision Smart Optics, Inc.Inventor: Anthony Van Heugten