EDGE-LIT WAVEGUIDE ILLUMINATION SYSTEMS EMPLOYING LIGHT CONVERTING LAYERS
An illumination system having a plurality of light emitting diodes (LEDs) and multiple layers of optical elements used to distribute light emitted by the LEDs. The optical elements may include a planar optical waveguide, a plurality of non-imaging lenses, a two-dimensional pattern of light extraction elements, a reflective surface, a light diffusing layer. The illumination system may further have a plurality of luminescent centers distributed in a volume of a planar layer of an optically transmissive material or one or more light converting elements used for converting light.
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 16/723,867 filed on Dec. 12, 2019, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 15/838,061 filed on Dec. 11, 2017, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 14/969,898 filed on Dec. 15, 2015, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 12/764,867 filed on Apr. 21, 2010, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,256,007, which claims priority from U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 61/214,331 filed on Apr. 21, 2009, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, and from U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 61/339,512 filed on Mar. 6, 2010, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENTNot Applicable
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the InventionThe present invention relates to a optical reflecting devices and more particularly to an apparatus for collecting or distributing radiant energy, into or from an optical waveguide.
2. Description of Background ArtDevices for collecting or concentrating a parallel beam of electromagnetic energy have conventionally employed reflective mirrors or refractive lenses. These devices collect energy in a broad spectrum from the entire area of the device and focus it onto a smaller area disposed at a considerable distance above or beneath the device and requires a fairly complex structure which occupies substantial volume.
Increasingly, light collection systems, including light detectors and concentrators, need to be configured for inputting light into a waveguide, such as an optical fiber or transparent rectangular plate, so it can be propagated along the waveguide by means of total internal reflection. In a conventional system, the spatially distributed light flux is input into a waveguide through one of its terminal ends using relatively large optical elements such as lenses and mirrors. Although the light guides themselves are typically slim and space efficient, the additional optics necessary for collecting or distributing the light over a large area leads to increased cost and system volume. In response to these shortcomings, the utility of the devices is hampered while numerous spatially-sensitive applications are rendered impractical.
Luminescent concentrators are also found in the industry for trapping incident radiation in a light guide by absorbing and re-radiating it in the form of scattered light at a longer wavelength using luminescent centers distributed in the volume of the light guide. However, because of the scattered nature of the reradiated light, only a portion of it can become trapped in the light guide by the total internal reflection, while the rest of the light escapes from the light guide. Furthermore, the luminescent centers can absorb or scatter already trapped light thus making the light guide less transparent and less efficient.
A holographic concentrator known in the art, utilizes a hologram layer that bends the incident light by means of diffraction so that it becomes trapped in a transparent light guide. However, at least a portion of the diffracted light is lost at each bounce from the same holographic layer guide due to re-coupling.
None of the previous efforts provides an efficient solution for light collection or concentration into a waveguide through its longitudinal face while maintaining a low system profile.
Conventional reflective mirror and refractive lens devices collimate electromagnetic energy across a broad energy spectrum from the entire area of the device and either focus it onto a smaller area disposed at a considerable distance above or beneath the device or collimate and direct it into a predetermined direction or onto a target. These devices are fairly bulky structures occupying substantial volume.
For example, in a conventional system, the primary optical element (e.g., mirror or lens) is focused at the location where the light emitting or light receiving element is disposed. Considering that the focus is usually located at a considerable distance from the primary optical element, the resulting volume formed by a three-dimensional shape enveloping the optical element's aperture and the focal point is considerably larger than the volume of the optical element itself. This increases system size, weight, and cost, while hampering utility of the system.
Many applications require the optical system to provide homogeneous irradiance distribution or another desired illumination pattern on a target. Examples are projection display systems requiring uniform light distribution from a light source on a target screen or optical collector where the light has to be collected and more evenly distributed across a light receiving device.
Numerous light processing systems require light to be input into a waveguide, propagated along the waveguide, and extracted from the waveguide to illuminate a designated target or pattern. In a conventional system, the light is extracted from a waveguide through one of its terminal ends and is further collimated by an optical system whose focus is disposed in the vicinity of the area where the light exits the waveguide. The inclusion of additional optics increases cost and system volume rendering the designs impractical in space-limited applications.
In another conventional system a planar waveguide is employed which extracts light from a lateral face of the waveguide by means of a number of light deflecting elements embedded into the waveguide or attached to its lateral face. Although this latter approach is more space efficient than the former one, the light comes out of the waveguide substantially uncollimated due to the inherent divergence of the light propagating in the waveguide which results in the substantial divergence of light extracted from the waveguide.
In addition, modern illumination systems often utilize compact and discrete light sources, such as Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs). Use of these light sources often results in unwanted glare problems, particularly in some general lighting applications or display lights. Typically, these problems are addressed by adding conventional and bulky optical systems, collimators and diffusers that at least partially negate the advantages of multiple such as compactness and energy efficiency.
Accordingly, prior illumination efforts have failed to provide an efficient solution for extracting light from a waveguide through its longitudinal face with efficient light collimation. These needs and others are met within the present invention, which provides an improved optical system for distributing light along a waveguide and extracting the distributed light from the waveguide with minimum space consumption and improved light collimation.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention solves a number of light collection and distribution problems within a compact system. Light is directed through a waveguide configured with deflection means for redirecting light to/from a collimating means.
In a first portion of the invention, apparatus and methods are described for collecting and concentrating radiant energy, more particularly, to collecting light from a distant light source and injecting the light into an optical light guide (also referenced heretofore as a “waveguide”), concentrating light guides, radiation detectors, optical couplers, solar thermal and photovoltaic concentrators, and day lighting systems. In at least one embodiment, the present invention describes a collector which provides light collection in response to collecting incident light by a collector array and injecting the light into a planar waveguide through its light conducting wall, trapping the light in the waveguide by means of at least a total internal reflection and guiding the light to a terminal end of the waveguide.
A compact light collection system including a planar waveguide and a collector array are described. The waveguide comprises a plurality of light deflecting elements optically coupled to the waveguide. The collector array comprises a plurality of mini-collectors configured to collect light from a larger area and focus the incident light onto respective light deflecting elements characterized by a substantially smaller area. Each light deflecting element is configured to receive a light beam and redirect it at an angle with respect to a surface normal angle (perpendicular to both axis) of the prevailing plane of the waveguide greater than a critical angle at which the light beam becomes trapped in the waveguide and can propagate toward the terminal end of the waveguide by optical transmission and total internal reflection (TIR).
Disposed in the radiant energy flux transformation system is a primary linear focus concentrating collector formed by a plurality of cylindrical slat-like reflectors and a secondary elongated collector. The reflectors of the primary collector generally have concave or planar transversal profiles and are positioned in a stepped arrangement with longitudinal axes being parallel to each other and to the secondary collector. The reflectors are tilted away from the direction of the source of radiant energy at a range of angles being less than 45° to reflect and direct the incident energy flux to a common focal region located below the primary collector where the concentrated flux is intercepted and further transformed by the secondary collector. In addition to efficient concentrating of radiant energy such as sunlight, the system can provide uniformity or a desired energy distribution in the concentrated flux.
A second portion of the invention describes a device and method for collimating and distributing radiant energy, more particularly, to guiding the light by an optical waveguide (light guide) and extracting the light from the waveguide with improved light collimation. More generally, it also relates to a device intercepting the divergent light from a light source and directing the light into a collimated beam such as flashlights, spotlights, flood lights, LED collimators, lanterns, headlamps, backlight or projection display systems, accent lights, various other illumination devices, optical couplers and switches, and the like. In at least one embodiment, the present invention describes an illuminator which provides light collimation by extracting light from a planar waveguide through its lateral light conducting face in response to an array of discrete light deflecting means optically coupled to the waveguide and further collimated by a matching array of light collimating means. Other objects and advantages of this invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from the following disclosure.
The invention is amenable to being embodied in a number of ways, including but not limited to the following descriptions.
At least one embodiment of the invention is configured as an apparatus for light collimation and distribution, comprising: (a) a planar waveguide having an optically transparent planar material having edges disposed between a first planar surface and a second planar surface; in which the planar waveguide is configured to receive light on one edge of the planar material, and to propagate the received light through the planar waveguide in response to optical transmission and total internal reflection; (b) a plurality of light collimating elements within a collimating array which is disposed in an optical receiving relationship with a planar surface of the planar waveguide; and (c) a plurality of light deflecting elements optically coupled to the waveguide and configured for deflecting light propagating through the planar waveguide at a sufficiently low angle, below the predetermined critical angle for total internal reflection (TIR), with respect to a surface normal direction of an exterior surface of the planar waveguide to exit the planar waveguide and enter the collimating array. Each of the plurality of light deflecting elements is in a predetermined alignment with each of the plurality of light collimating elements. The device operates in response to light received on the edge of the planar waveguide being angularly redirected, collimated, and distributed from the surface of the collimating array which is optically coupled to the planar waveguide.
In at least one implementation, the plurality of light collimating elements comprises a parallel array of elongated lenticular lenses, or parallel array of elongated focus mirrors. In at least one implementation, the plurality of deflecting elements comprises a parallel array of grooves. These elements and grooves are preferably elongated, such as in response to comprising a one-dimensional array spanning across a width equivalent to the entire waveguide surface, or a substantial portion thereof. In at least one implementation, the grooves are configured at a slope angle θ30 which is bounded by the relation
in which n1 is the refractive index of the planar waveguide and n2 is the refractive index of an outside medium.
In alternative implementations, the grooves can be configured in different ways. In at least one implementation, the plurality of light deflecting elements comprises grooves within (e.g., cut or molded into) the planar waveguide configured for redirecting the received light in response to reflection from at least one surface of the groove toward the collimating array. In at least one implementation, the light deflecting elements comprise grooves formed within each of a plurality of blocks that are attached and in optical communication with the planar waveguide, and the grooves are configured for redirecting the received light in response to reflection from at least one surface of the groove toward the collimating array. In at least one implementation, each of the grooves has a transparent surface and a reflective surface, and light received from the planar waveguide passes through the transparent surface of each of the grooves to be reflected from the reflective surface of each of the grooves toward the collimating array. In at least one implementation, the grooves comprise a prismatic groove or ridge formed in a surface of the planar waveguide disposed toward the collimating array for refractively deflecting the received light impinging on the prismatic groove to pass through the prismatic groove or ridge to exit the planar waveguide.
In at least one implementation, the plurality of light collimating elements is selected from the group consisting of imaging lenses, non-imaging lenses, spherical lenses, aspherical lenses, lens arrays, Fresnel lenses, TIR lenses, gradient index lenses, diffraction lenses, mirrors, Fresnel mirrors, spherical mirrors, parabolic mirrors, mirror arrays, and trough mirrors.
In at least one implementation, the plurality of light deflecting elements is selected from the group consisting of planar mirrors, curved mirrors, prisms, prism arrays, prismatic grooves, surface relief features, reflective surfaces, refractive surfaces, diffraction gratings, holograms, and light scattering elements.
In at least one implementation, an optical interface layer is disposed between the planar waveguide and the collimating array. In at least one implementation, the optical interface layer has a lower refractive index than the planar waveguide, and in at least one implementation, the optical interface layer comprises air. In at least one implementation, the optical interface layer is selected from the group of optical materials consisting of low refractive index monomers, polymers, fluoropolymers, low-n optical adhesives, thin films, and optical waveguide cladding materials.
In at least one implementation, at least one illumination source is optically coupled to at least one edge of the planar waveguide. In at least one implementation, one or more illumination sources is optically coupled to the edges of one or more cutouts within the planar waveguide.
In at least one implementation, both the collimating array and the planar waveguide have a round or sectorial shape, such as obtainable in response to revolving a cross section of the collimating array and the planar waveguide around an axis.
In at least one implementation, the collimator array comprises point focus lenses, or mirrors, having a shape selected from the group consisting of round, rectangular, square, and hexagonal.
In at least one implementation, the planar waveguide comprises a rectangular plate having a first terminal edge, a second terminal edge, a first side wall, a second side wall, the first planar surface and the second planar surface. Although it should be appreciated that the rectangular plate can be bent, or otherwise slightly curved, while retaining a substantially rectangular planform. And more particularly, the combination of collimator and waveguide, along with any intermediary layers, are adapted in at least one implementation to support bent and/or rolled configurations. In at least one implementation, a mirrored surface is added to one or more of the first terminal edge, the second terminal edge, the first side wall and the second side wall. In at least one implementation, a cladding layer is added to one or more of the first terminal edge, the second terminal edge, the first side wall and the second side wall.
In at least one implementation, the planar waveguide and collimator array are adapted for being retained in a translated, a reversed and/or a rotated orientation relative to each other toward achieving a adjusting the light distribution or collimation pattern. In at least one implementation, the planar waveguide and collimator array are adapted for being retained in a movable relationship with one another toward adjusting the light distribution or collimation pattern. In at least one implementation, a coating is disposed on the exterior of said planar waveguide and/or said collimator array, such as including any of the following coatings or combination of coatings thereof: anti-reflective, protective, encapsulates, reflective, diffusive, radiation protective, scratch and stain resistant, and light filtering.
At least one embodiment of the invention is configured as an apparatus for light collimation and distribution, comprising: (a) a planar waveguide having an optically transparent planar material configured to receive light on one edge of the planar material, and to propagate the received light through the planar waveguide in response to optical transmission and total internal reflection; (b) a parallel collimating array having a plurality of elongated light collimating lenses disposed in an optical receiving relationship with a planar surface of the planar waveguide; and (c) a parallel deflecting array having a plurality of elongated light deflecting grooves within the planar waveguide which are configured for deflecting light propagating through the waveguide at a sufficiently low angle, below the predetermined critical angle for total internal reflection (TIR), with respect to a surface normal direction of an exterior surface of the planar waveguide to exit the planar waveguide and enter the parallel collimating array. Each of elongated light deflecting grooves is preferably positioned in a predetermined alignment with each of the plurality of elongated light collimating lenses. In operation, the light received on the edge of the planar waveguide is angularly redirected, collimated, and distributed from the surface of the parallel collimating array which is optically coupled to the planar waveguide.
At least one embodiment of the invention is configured as a method for distributing radiant energy comprising: (a) receiving radiant energy into an edge of an optical waveguide having edges disposed between a first planar surface and a second planar surface; (b) propagating the radiant energy by optical transmission and total internal reflection in an optical material disposed between the first planar surface and the second planar surface along the length of the optical waveguide; (c) deflecting the radiant energy at a plurality of deflecting elements distributed along the first planar surface and/or second planar surface of the optical waveguide to a sufficiently low angle, below the predetermined critical angle for total internal reflection (TIR) which is with respect to a surface normal direction of the first planar surface or second planar surface of the optical waveguide, causing the radiant energy to exit the surface of the optical waveguide through the first planar surface and/or the second planar surface; and (d) collimating the radiant energy exiting the optical waveguide at a plurality of focal zones in response to the radiant energy passing through a plurality of radiation collimating elements.
At least one embodiment of the invention is configured as an apparatus for collecting light, comprising: (a) a plurality of light collecting elements within a collector array configured for collecting received light; (b) a planar waveguide having edges disposed between a first planar surface and a second planar surface, in which the planar waveguide is disposed in an optical receiving relationship with the collector array and configured to propagate the received light by optical transmission and total internal reflection; and (c) a plurality of light deflecting elements optically coupled to the planar waveguide with each of the plurality of light deflecting elements disposed in energy receiving relationship within the planar waveguide to at least one of the plurality of light collecting elements. Each of the light deflecting elements is configured to redirect incident light at a sufficiently high angle, above the predetermined critical angle for total internal reflection (TIR) with respect to a surface normal direction with respect to the first planar surface or the second planar surface of the planar waveguide, to redirect and propagate the received light within the planar waveguide by optical transmission and TIR.
In different embodiments and implementations the light collecting and light deflecting elements can differ. In at least one embodiment, the light collecting elements comprise a parallel array of elongated focus mirrors. In at least one embodiment, the light collecting elements comprise a parallel array of elongated lenticular lenses. In at least one embodiment, the light deflecting elements comprise a parallel array of elongated grooves. In at least one embodiment, the light deflecting elements comprise grooves within the planar waveguide configured for redirecting the received light in response to reflection from at least one surface of the groove toward the collector array. In at least one embodiment, the light deflecting elements comprise grooves formed within each of a plurality of blocks that are attached and in optical communication with the planar waveguide, and the grooves are configured for redirecting the received light in response to reflection from at least one surface of the groove toward the collecting array. In at least one implementation, the grooves are configured at a slope angle θ30 which is bounded by the relation
in which n1 is the refractive index of the planar waveguide and n2 is the refractive index of an outside medium.
In at least one embodiment, the light deflecting elements are selected from the group of optical elements consisting of planar mirrors, curved mirrors, prisms, prism arrays, prismatic grooves, surface relief features, reflective surfaces, refractive surfaces, diffraction gratings, holograms, and light scattering elements. In at least one embodiment, the light collecting elements are selected from the group of optical elements consisting of imaging lenses, non-imaging lenses, spherical lenses, aspherical lenses, lens arrays, Fresnel lenses, TIR lenses, gradient index lenses, diffraction lenses, mirrors, Fresnel mirrors, spherical mirrors, parabolic mirrors, mirror arrays, and trough mirrors.
In at least one implementation, an optical interface layer is added between the planar waveguide and the collector array, which preferably comprises a lower refractive index (e.g., air, or other material) than the planar waveguide. In at least one implementation, the optical interface layer is selected from the group of optical materials consisting of low refractive index monomers, polymers, fluoropolymers, low-n optical adhesives, thin films, and optical waveguide cladding materials.
In at least one implementation, the planar waveguide comprises a substantially rectangular plate having a first terminal edge, a second terminal edge, a first side wall, a second side wall, a first planar surface and a second planar surface. In at least one implementation, a mirrored surface, or a cladding layer, is added on one or more of the first terminal edge, the second terminal edge, a first side wall or a second side wall.
In at least one implementation, at least one optically responsive electronic device is coupled to at least one of the first terminal edge or the second terminal edge of the planar waveguide. In at least one implementation, the electronic device can be optically coupled to a cutout within the planar waveguide. In at least one implementation, any optional cladding or protective coatings are removed from the light harvesting area, such as from the first or second terminal edge, and/or the first or second side wall, to facilitate light transport and harvesting in the harvesting area.
In at least one implementation, both the collector array and the planar waveguide have a round or sectorial shape obtainable by a revolution of a cross section of the collector array and the planar waveguide around an axis.
In different implementations the collector array can be differently configured. In at least one implementation, the collector array comprises point focus lenses, or mirrors, which may have a shape such as round, rectangular, square, hexagonal, and so forth.
In at least one implementation, the planar waveguide and the collector array are adapted for being retained in either a planar configuration or in bent and/or rolled configurations.
In at least one implementation, the planar waveguide and collector array are adapted for being retained in a translated, a reversed and/or a rotated orientation relative to each other toward adjusting the acceptance angle or for tracking the source of light. In at least one implementation, the planar waveguide and collector array are adapted for being retained in a movable relationship with one another adjusting the acceptance angle or for tracking the source of light. In at least one implementation, a coating is disposed on the exterior of said planar waveguide and/or said collector array, such as including any of the following coatings or combination of coatings thereof: anti-reflective, protective, encapsulates, reflective, diffusive, radiation protective, scratch and stain resistant, and light filtering.
At least one embodiment of the invention is configured as an apparatus for collecting light, comprising: (a) a parallel collecting array having a plurality of elongated light collecting structures configured for collecting received light; (b) a planar waveguide having edges disposed between a first planar surface and a second planar surface, in which the planar waveguide is disposed in an optical receiving relationship with the collector array and configured to propagate the received light by elements of optical transmission and total internal reflection; and (c) a parallel deflecting array having a plurality of light deflecting groove structures optically coupled to the planar waveguide with each of the plurality of light deflecting structures disposed in light receiving relationship within the planar waveguide to at least one of the light collecting groove structures. Each of the plurality of light deflecting groove structures is configured to redirect incident light at a sufficiently high angle, above the predetermined critical angle for total internal reflection (TIR) with respect to a surface normal direction of an exterior surface of the planar waveguide, to redirect and propagate the received light within the planar waveguide by optical transmission and TIR.
At least one embodiment of the invention is configured as a method for collecting radiant energy comprising: (a) concentrating a radiant energy received upon a plurality of focal zones in response to a plurality of radiation concentrator elements; (b) directing the radiant energy from the plurality of focal zones through a first planar surface into an optical waveguide having edges disposed between a first planar surface and a second planar surface; (c) deflecting the radiant energy at a plurality of deflecting elements positioned to receive the radiant energy from the focal zones, and to deflect the radiant energy into the planar waveguide at angles exceeding the critical angle of total internal reflection in the waveguide, which is with respect to a surface normal direction of the first planar surface or second planar surface of the optical waveguide; and (d) propagating the radiant energy through the optical waveguide by optical transmission and total internal reflection.
The present invention provides a number of beneficial elements which can be implemented either separately or in any desired combination without departing from the present teachings.
An element of the invention is an apparatus and method of collecting light over a given area and traveling in a first direction, into a waveguide region directed in a second direction which can have any desired angular relationship with the first direction.
Another element of the invention is the inclusion of distributed deflecting means within the interior of the waveguide.
Another element of the invention is the coupling of a collimation means, such as a lens array, to the waveguide either directly, or with an interposing material or air layer.
Another element of the invention is the use of reflective or refractive deflecting means operating within the waveguide.
Another element of the invention is the use of deflecting elements attached to the waveguide.
Another element of the invention is the use of deflecting elements attached cut into the waveguide.
Another element of the invention is the use of deflecting elements which extend from the waveguide.
Another element of the invention is the use of deflecting means having at least one reflective or refractive, surface for redirecting the light in relation to the waveguide.
Another element of the invention is the use of deflecting means comprising a facet containing both a reflective and transmissive surface for redirecting the light in relation to the waveguide.
Another element of the invention is the use of deflecting means comprising a facet containing both a reflective and transmissive surface for redirecting the light in relation to the waveguide.
Another element of the invention is the use of deflecting means which may be on the same, or opposite, side of the waveguide as the collimating means.
Another element of the invention is the use of a linear array of deflecting and/or collimating means which span the surface of the device, or a portion thereof.
Another element of the invention is the use of separate deflecting and/or collimating means which are optically coupled to a specific deflecting and/or collimating means.
Another element of the invention is a collimating means operating in response to refraction and/or reflection to direct light into or from the adjacent waveguide.
Another element of the invention is a light collimating or distribution device configured for performing light collimation on either side of the waveguide device.
Another element of the invention is a light collimating and/or distribution device which can be formed in a point form, linear form, annular form, as well as portions and combinations thereof.
Another element of the invention is a collimating and/or distributing device configured with an attached optically responsive device (e.g., sensor) or optical illumination device.
A still further element of the invention is a light collection and/or distribution device which can be utilized in a wide range of light collecting, light sensing, and light distribution applications.
Further elements of the invention will be brought out in the following portions of the specification, wherein the detailed description is for the purpose of fully disclosing preferred embodiments of the invention without placing limitations thereon.
The invention will be more fully understood by reference to the following drawings which are for illustrative purposes only:
Referring more specifically to the drawings, for illustrative purposes the present invention is embodied in the apparatus generally shown in the preceding figures. It will be appreciated that the apparatus may vary as to configuration and as to details of the parts, and that the method may vary as to the specific steps and sequence, without departing from the basic concepts as disclosed herein. Furthermore, elements represented in one embodiment as taught herein are applicable without limitation to other embodiments taught herein, and in combination with those embodiments and what is known in the art.
1. Collector EmbodimentsA wide range of applications exist for the present invention in relation to the collection of electromagnetic radiant energy, such as light. Therefore, for the sake of simplicity of expression, without limiting generality of this invention, the term “light” will be used herein although the terms “electromagnetic energy” or “radiant energy” would also be appropriate.
In order to be able to compare and contrast the present invention with typical collectors,
Collector array 5 comprises a plurality of light focusing means 6 arranged in a planar array. Each focusing means 6 is configured to receive an impinging beam of light, as may emanate from a distant light source (not shown), on its receiving surface in a pre-determined acceptance angle and to focus this incident light onto a smaller focal area so that collector array 5 forms a plurality of foci. The light source can be of any known type, including but not limited to sunlight, incandescent lamps, heat emitting bodies, light emitting diodes, lasers, light/heat scattering or radiating surfaces and the like. The incident beam can also be formed by an optical system providing a suitable angular and/or spatial energy distribution in the beam. For example, a light collimating device can be used to produce a generally parallel beam of light that will impinge onto focusing means 6. In another example, if the energy source is the sun, the incident light is a quasi-parallel beam of light in a broad spectrum of electromagnetic spectrum. Collector array 5 is configured to have an entrance aperture facing the light source and an opposing exit aperture facing waveguide 4.
Focusing means 6 may comprise any desired optical structure adapted for collecting or concentrating the impinging light. Any known optical system or collector of radiant energy or light which collects the energy from a larger area and focuses it to a smaller focal area can be used for the purpose of this invention. By way of example and not limitation, focusing means 6 can be selected from the group of optical elements consisting essentially of spherical or aspherical refractive lenses, Fresnel lenses, TIR lenses, gradient index lenses, diffraction lenses, lens arrays, mirrors, Fresnel mirrors, mirror arrays and the like. For the purpose of this invention and from the practical standpoint, the terms “focal area” or “focus” of focusing means 6 should be understood broadly and generally refers to an area within the envelope of the focused beam where said area has a cross section substantially smaller than the cross section of respective focusing means 6. Accordingly, the focal area can include areas at a relatively small distance from the “ideal” focus of focusing means 6 and where the focused beam can be convergent (before focus) or divergent (after focus).
In accordance with this invention, it is preferred that an effective focal length of each focusing means 6 is substantially shorter than the dimensions of walls 10 and 11 in order to achieve better compactness of system 2. For the purpose of this invention, the term “effective focal length” generally refers to the distance between focusing means 6 and its focus. This term should also be understood broadly and it also includes the cases when the focal length of the same focusing means 6 can change depending on the optical properties of the material filling up the space between said focusing means 6 and the focus. In other words, the location of the effective focal area may be different (thus focal length differs) when a different material separates lens 6 and its focal area. By way of example, for the same parameters of focusing means 6, its focal distance can be longer in high refractive index material (e.g., polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA)) than in the air due to the difference in refractive indexes.
Waveguide 4 is positioned in close proximity and generally parallel to collector array 5 and is disposed in an energy receiving relationship, through transparent wall (face) 10, with respect to collector array 5. The energy receiving relationship is meant to mean any relationship between waveguide 4 and collector array 5 which enables light to pass from collector array 5 into waveguide 4. For this purpose, wall 10 of waveguide 4 is configured to transmit a substantial portion of light incident onto the waveguide from collector array 5.
Waveguide 4 can be formed by any optically transmissive body having a generally planar configuration and suitable for the purpose of conducting electromagnetic radiation toward a terminal end or a pre-determined portion of the waveguide by means of reflection of the propagating light from the opposing walls. By way of example, it can be an optically transparent planar plate or a slab having a rectangular or circular shape. Referring back to
The thickness, or height, of waveguide 4 is selected to be substantially less than its lateral dimensions (length and width) so that the surface area of either planar wall 10 or 11 is substantially greater than the area of at least one of the terminal walls 35 and 36. Further, waveguide 4 is configured to be able to conduct light along and between at least its light conducting walls 10 and 11 and generally toward at least one of the terminal walls 35 and 36. A light harvesting area can be associated with either of terminal walls 35 or 36 for collecting and converting the light in whatever type of energy which is useful in the application. By way of example, waveguide 4 can be configured so that a light ray propagating in waveguide 4 at a normal angle to walls 10 and 11 greater than a certain angle can be generally guided in one direction toward the opposing face 36 by means of light conduction through the body of waveguide 4, including bouncing of the light from faces 10 and 11.
If used at optical frequencies, waveguide 4 can be made from a dielectric, highly transparent material such as glass, PMMA, or polycarbonate. In order to enhance its optical guiding ability, the material of waveguide 4 can be selected to have high index of refraction, and can be surrounded by a material with lower index of refraction.
It will be appreciated that the larger the incident angle from the surface normal direction, the smaller is the fraction of light transmitted through the medium. Finally, at a sufficient angle from the normal, a point of total internal reflection occurs, which is referred to as the TIR angle. At angles equal to or exceeding the TIR angle, all of the incident light is reflected back into the medium. Accordingly, the structure can guide optical waves in response to total internal reflection, characterized by a critical angle of TIR, so that when a ray of light propagating within waveguide 4 strikes a medium boundary (such as wall 10 or 11) at an angle larger than the critical angle of TIR with respect to the normal of the boundary surface plane, the ray is reflected back into the media of waveguide 4 so it can propagate further in said waveguide. Walls 10 and 11 should normally be smooth or polished so as to avoid or minimize parasitic light scattering when undergoing TIR from said walls. When appropriate, wall 11 can be adapted with a mirrored surface to enhance light guiding properties of waveguide 4. Additionally, the other walls of waveguide 4 can be made similarly smooth and capable of reflecting light by means of TIR or specular reflection so that the light is kept within the waveguide even when it reaches either of the side walls. Wall 36 can also be made specularly reflective in order to reflect any light arriving at it from the inside of waveguide 4 back into the waveguide. TIR reflectivity for either wall of waveguide 4 can be provided, for example, by making contact by the wall with a lower refractive index medium, such as the air, or by applying a layer of a low-n cladding material to the wall. A specular reflectivity can be obtained in any desired manner, including but not limited to the use of metallization, application of reflective films or other types of mirror finishing to further enhance the ability of the waveguide to conduct light.
In accordance with at least one preferred embodiment, waveguide 4 should be optically separated from collector array 5 by at least one optical interface 8 that provides trapping of the light propagating in the waveguide after it has been deflected by deflecting means 14. The primary function of interface 8 is to allow light to enter waveguide 4 from a variety of incidence angles and reject (by reflection) the light coming back out of waveguide 4.
A suitable optical interface 8 can be created by various mechanisms. For example, when the total internal reflection is used for trapping the light in waveguide 4, interface 8 may comprise a physical boundary or wall of the body of waveguide 4 which is surrounded by outside media with lower refractive medium such as air. Alternatively, it can be an interface between two media having different refractive indices so that the refractive index increases along the optical path from focusing means 6 toward waveguide 4. Interface 8 can be implemented by separating waveguide 4 from the body of collector array 5 or from bodies of individual focusing means 6 by means of a thin layer of air, a layer of lower refractive index dielectric medium or any other boundary between a higher refractive index medium and a lower refractive index medium. In a more specific example, interface 8 can be implemented from an interface between glass, PMMA or polycarbonate (high refractive index) and a low refractive index polymer or air. Alternatively, a layer of cladding material can be provided between waveguide 4 and collector array 5 in which case, embodiment 2 of
Waveguide 4 comprises a plurality of light deflecting means 14 associated with wall 11 and optically coupled to waveguide 4. The term “optically coupled” is directed to mean any relationship between two optical components which enables light to pass from one optical component to the other. Deflecting means 14 can be any suitable optical device used to receive the light beam in a pre-determined acceptance angle from one direction and deflect at least a substantial portion of the incident beam from its original direction to a different direction. By means of example, deflecting means 14 can include a reflective surface or a refractive element or face disposed at an angle to the incident light beam. Similarly, deflecting means 14 can be selected from the group of deflecting means consisting essentially of planar mirrors, curved mirrors, mirror array, prisms, prism arrays, one or more reflective or refractive surfaces, diffraction gratings, holograms, light diffusing or scattering elements, and so forth.
The location of deflective means 14 in waveguide 4 and the position of the waveguide itself with respect to collector array 5 are interoperably selected with each deflecting means 14 disposed at or near the focus of one or more focusing means 6 (see
Each deflecting means 14 is configured to receive the light beam which is focused by focusing means 6 and redirect it into waveguide 4 at a different angle with respect to the angle of incidence. It is essential that at least a substantial portion of the redirected beam proscribe an angle with respect to surface normal of walls 10 and 11 greater than a pre-defined critical angle θC, so that the redirected radiation becomes trapped in and propagated through waveguide 4 toward one or more of its terminal ends.
TIR is one such convenient mechanism for trapping light in waveguide 4 in which case critical angle θC can be selected to be the critical TIR angle. It will appreciated by those skilled in the art of optics, that TIR can be defined as the reflection of electromagnetic radiation from an interface between a first and second optical medium in response to an incident angle measured with respect to surface normal of the interface. The first optical medium being more optically dense, and accordingly having a higher index of refraction. It will also be appreciated that in response to TIR almost lossless internal reflections are provided.
According to Snell's law of optics, when light passes through a boundary between a first refractive medium and a second refractive medium, n1 sin ϕ1=n2 sin ϕ2 where n1 and n2 are the refractive index of the first medium and the second medium, respectively, with ϕ1 and ϕ2 being the angle of incidence and the angle of refraction, respectively. Furthermore, the critical angle of TIR θC is the value of ϕ1 for which ϕ2 equals 90°. Accordingly, θC=arcsin(n2/n1·sin ϕ2)=arcsin(n2/n1), which makes θC approximately 42.155° for an exemplary case of the interface between PMMA (acrylic) with the reflective index n1 of about 1.49 and air with n2 of about 1.
As discussed above, the condition of TIR at wall 10 can be achieved by providing the refractive index of waveguide 4 which is greater than the refractive index of the outside media contacting waveguide 4 at wall 10. Wall 11 can also be configured to contact an outside media having a lower refractive index than the refractive index of waveguide 4 to allow for reflecting the light trapped in waveguide 4 by means of TIR. Alternatively, or in order to improve the reflection of light from wall 11 in a broad range of angles and/or wavelengths, wall 11 can be mirrored to provide for specular reflection. Mirrored surface of wall 11 can be obtained by depositing a reflective layer using any known means, such as, for example, silvering, aluminizing or laminating with a mirrored film.
In operation, as illustrated in
where S is the area of wall 10 and SOUT is the area of wall 35. In an exemplary case of a 5 mm thick rectangular waveguide 4 having dimensions of wall 10 of about 20 cm by 10 cm and dimensions of wall 35 of about 10 cm by 0.5 cm, CG will be approximately equal to
This means that the average light intensity at wall 35 will be approximately 40 times greater than the average light intensity impinging on the entrance aperture of collector array 5 or wall 10 of waveguide 4. The concentrated light received at wall 35 can be further directed, extracted from waveguide or converted to any desired form of energy or signal. For this purpose, wall 35 can be configured as transparent and/or can be associated with a light detector or energy conversion device. Alternatively, the wall can be configured to allow for ejecting the concentrated light out of waveguide 4 through walls 10 or 11. For this purpose, wall 35 can be mirrored and inclined at an angle with respect to a surface normal direction of either wall 10 or 11 (for example at an angle of about 45 degrees) thus allowing the light arriving at wall 35 from the inside of waveguide 4 to be reflected from wall 35 and extracted from waveguide 4 toward a perpendicular to plane 9.
By way of a further example and taking an illustrative case of a generally parallel beam emanated by a distant source subtending a relatively small finite angle (such as the beam produced by sunlight or a distant light emitting device), collector array 5 can be designed as a planar lens array.
For the purpose of illustrating the present invention, the lens array is selected to be a densely packed lenticular lens array in which each collecting means 6 is represented by a cylindrical lens. Each lens is designed to have a point of focus located outside of the lens array itself, preferably at a pre-determined distance from the lens array, such as at a deflector positioned on an opposing side of a waveguide having a given refractive index. Accordingly, when positioned with one side representing the entrance aperture perpendicular to the incident beam, the planar array of collecting means 6 provides a plurality of foci on the opposite side, the foci being spaced apart from each other in accordance with the spacing of individual lenses in the lens array. With the lens array being planar and individual lenses having an identical optical configuration, the plurality of foci of individual reflecting means 6 provides a common focal plane disposed at a distance from lens array 5.
Referring to
A variety of methods can be utilized for incorporating the prismatic grooved structures within wall 11 to create the surface relief micro-structures or texture described. By way of example, the structures can be fabricated using a technique for direct material removal including mechanical scribing, laser scribing, micromachining, etching, grinding, embossing, imprinting from a master mold, photolithography, and a plurality of known methods and combinations thereof for structuring optical materials. In addition, the faces of prismatic grooved structures can be optionally polished, as desired, to obtain any desired level of polished smooth surface. Alternatively, waveguide 4 can be fabricated to incorporate embedded grooves, such as by means of casting, injection molding, compression molding, or similar processes and combinations of molding and machining processes thereof.
Alternatively, waveguide 4 can incorporate a layer of transparent material, such as a plastic film or thin transparent plate, attached to face 11 and the prismatic grooved structures can be formed in that layer. Various mechanisms, including optical lithography, can be used to create the required pattern in a light-sensitive chemical photo resist by exposing it to light (typically UV) either using a projected image or an optical mask with the subsequent selective removal of unwanted parts of the thin film or the bulk of a substrate.
In a further alternative, the transparent material can be overmolded onto waveguide 4 in the respective areas and prismatic grooved structures can be formed in the over mold. By way of example, and not limitation, a negative replica of the grooves can be formed by diamond cutting/machining, laser micromachining, ion beam etching, chemical etching, or similar techniques followed by imprinting of it in the overmold. In the illustrated case, deflecting means 14 is formed by prismatic grooved structures in face 11 to extend end-to-end across one face of waveguide 4 and to be optically coupled with waveguide 4 directly through its surface, without the need of any additional optical interfaces or layers and their attendant optical losses.
Waveguide 4 is preferably positioned parallel to collector array 5, and is shown directly underneath it in the figure, so that the plurality of deflecting means 14 is disposed in the focal plane of the lens array. In at least one embodiment a thin cushion layer, or space, is provided between collector 5 and waveguide 4. The thickness of waveguide 4 and the cushion space are so selected in relevance to the focal length of individual lenses of collector array 5 that each deflecting means 14 is located in a focal area of the respective collecting means 6 so that each lens representing collecting means 6 can focus the incident light onto the reflective face of the respective prismatic groove representing deflecting means 14. Thus, the array of collecting means 6 is configured to have a matching array of deflecting means 14 positioned in the vicinity of the focal plane of the lens array. However, it should be understood that deflecting means 14 can be positioned with any predefined offset from the focus or they can also be positioned in a convergent or divergent beam provided that light collecting system 2 has the same basic arrangement. Each deflecting means 14 is adapted with a first face for deflecting light received from collecting means 6, while a second face (shown as a vertical step in the figure) can be adapted as desired to enhance the characteristics of light passing through waveguide 4. By way of example and not limitation, the second face of deflecting means 14 can be sloped (not shown), at any desired angle, such as even reaching the base of the preceding deflecting means, or any intermediate position, so as to reduce backscatter and maximize light transmission through the waveguide.
In at least one embodiment of
Referring yet further to
For the sake of illustrative clarity, only four focusing means 6 and four matching deflecting means are shown in
In addition, the thickness of collector array 5 and waveguide 4 is exaggerated in
In reference to the example embodiment of
Waveguide 4 is spaced apart from collector array 5 and thus is separated from the collector array by a layer of air or other media with a low refraction index compared to the material of waveguide 4. Walls 10 and 11 are thus disposed in direct contact with air and can conduct light by optical transmission and TIR. Accordingly, each prismatic groove is disposed along the focal line of a respective linear lens and has a sloped reflective face that is capable of intercepting the focused light beam from the lens and redirecting the light beam into waveguide 4 at an angle allowing for TIR on walls 10 and 11.
In
In similar manner, a ray R2 impinging onto the receiving surface of focusing means 6 is directed to the same focal area and to the same light deflecting means 14. Ray R2 enters focusing means 14 at a different angle than ray R1 but is further redirected into waveguide 4 so that ray R2 also propagates in the medium of waveguide 4 at an angle greater than θC that permits for a total internal reflection from walls 10 and 11. Similarly, rays R′1 and R′2 focused on a different reflecting means 14 by the respective collecting means 6 are also reflected into waveguide at angles allowing for propagating the reflected rays in waveguide 4 by means of TIR.
It should be understood that while the figure depicts only two example rays, focusing means 6 is configured to collect any rays impinging onto its receiving aperture in a pre-defined acceptance angle and any desirable spectral range. While only parallel rays impinging onto the receiving aperture of collector array 5 are shown in
Upon incidence onto face 26 at point P1 an angle θ1, ray R1 reflects at an angle θ2 with respect to a surface normal direction 15 to wall 10. The corresponding portion of ray R1 propagating from wall 10 to light deflecting means 14 is denoted as a ray segment 17. A ray segment 18 represents a continuation of the ray R1 when it is internally redirected/deflected by deflecting means 14 back into waveguide 4 but at a different angle so that segment 18 forms an angle θ2 with respect to a normal to wall 10. The slope of face 26 is selected so as to result in angle θ2 being greater than angle θ1 and equal to or greater than angle θC. As discussed above, angle θC can be defined from the following expression for a critical TIR angle:
θC=arcsin(n2/n1),
where n1 and n2 are the refractive indices of waveguide 4 and the lower refractive index medium adjacent to wall 10 of waveguide 4, respectively.
When ray R1 is reflected by face 26 and further strikes wall 10 from the inside of waveguide 4 at point P1, it makes an angle of incidence with respect to the surface normal direction of interface wall 10. Obviously, the angle of incidence is equal to θ2 due to the parallelism of walls 10 and 11 and surface normal direction 15 to wall 10 is also a normal to wall 11 for the same reason. Since angle θ2 is greater than angle θC, the condition of TIR is automatically met for wall 11. Therefore, ray R1 does not pass through wall 10 and is totally internally reflected back into waveguide 4 maintaining the same angle θ2 with respect to a normal to walls 10 and 11. As a result, ray R1, after being deflected by light deflecting means 14, will become trapped in waveguide 4 and will continue to propagate in waveguide 4 by bouncing from walls 10 and 11 due to TIR. The above condition can be achieved by providing a suitable angle between a normal to sloped reflective face 26 and surface normal direction 15 so as to allow for sufficient bend angles for rays focused by focusing means 6.
Referring further to
Ray R2 propagates in waveguide 4, as indicated by a ray segment 31 and impinges onto face 26 at an angle of incidence θ41. Segment 31 makes an angle θ4 with respect to surface normal direction 15. A ray segment 32 represents a continuation of ray R2 when it is reflected from face 26 back into waveguide 4. Angle θ41 is greater than angle θ29 of
Reflective face 26 can be inclined at an even more acute angle with respect to surface normal direction 15 in which case it can reflect a portion or all incident focused beam by means of TIR in which case no mirror coating may be required for face 26. Referring to
By taking an above exemplary case of waveguide 4 being made from PMMA (n1≈1.49) with air cladding (n2≈1), the desired range for slope angle θ30 is obtained as: 42.16°≤θ30≤47.84° which provides a slope angle width of about 5.7° for obtaining the maximum light coupling efficiency employing prismatic grooved features for deflecting means 14.
In a more general case, and when first angular aperture A1 is less than 2θC, a practical range of useful slope angles θ30 can be defined as follows: A1/4+θC/2≤θ30≤90°−A1/4−θC/2. If slope angle θ30 is outside of this range, a portion of the light beam redirected by the respective prismatic groove 14 may exit from waveguide 4 through one of its light conducting walls 10 or 11 and that decoupled light will be lost.
It should be appreciated that although
In
The foregoing embodiments of the present invention are described upon the case where deflecting means 14 are of a reflective type. However, this invention is not limited to this and can be applied to the case when light deflecting means 14 is of a refractive type and the light passes through a portion of light deflecting means 14 rather than being reflected from it. One such example is deflecting means 14 comprising a prism with a different refractive index embedded into waveguide 4 or attached to either its walls 10 or 11.
Furthermore, one or more embodiments of system 2 within the present invention can be configured to collect light rays in a preselected spectral domain and/or only those rays that are propagating in waveguide 4 in a predetermined range of acceptance angles. For example, the deflecting means may comprise a reflective or transmissive hologram designed to deflect only a specific wavelength or a relatively narrow range of wavelengths into waveguide 4 while allowing the other wavelengths to pass without deflection.
Alternatively, in at least one embodiment of the invention, deflecting means 14 can comprise one or more layers of a dichroic material which causes the incident light to be split up into distinct beams of different wavelengths and allows only selected beam(s) to be trapped in waveguide 4 while rejecting the rest of the spectral energy. In a further example, light deflecting means 14 can be designed so that any rays impinging onto its active aperture within an acceptance angle of up to a pre-determined value (e.g., up to 30 degrees) will be trapped in waveguide 4. The remainder of the rays are deflected at angles smaller the TIR angle θC with respect to surface normal direction 15 and these latter rays can therefore be allowed to escape from waveguide 4. According to the above deflective means a combination or reflection and refraction is provided which efficiently redirects light focused by the respective focusing means 6.
Additionally, wall 11 of waveguide is shown optionally provided with a cladding layer 20 which also has a low refractive index so that waveguide 4 is encapsulated and protected from the outside media by a low-n material similar to conventional light guides. This can help avoid light spillage from waveguide 4 toward improving the efficiency of system 2. Cladding materials suitable for layer 20 can include any of the low-n materials mentioned above for layer 19. Alternatively, layer 20 can be formed by a plastic reflective film or by metallization of wall 11 to improve reflectivity or reduce light spillage through wall 11. Another example of a suitable protective backsheet material for layer 20 can be Polyvinyl fluoride (PVF), a fluoropolymer which is commercially available as a film from DuPont and is sold under the Tedlar® brand.
Similarly, any or all side walls 40 and 41 or end walls 35 and 36 of waveguide 4 can be encapsulated or otherwise covered by a protective or reflective layer and allowed to reflect light propagating in waveguide 4 back into the waveguide by means of TIR or specular reflection. It will be appreciated that layer 20 or encapsulation layers of any of the transversal ends of waveguide 4 do not have to be optically transparent and can include opaque, light scattering or reflective materials. Yet further, system 2 can incorporate any other suitable layers, such as reflective or anti-reflective coatings, diffusers, radiation protective coatings or films, scratch and stain resistant coatings, light filtering films and the like. By way of example, waveguide 4, collector array 5 or any of their portions can be coated by dip coating, spin coating, vacuum metallization, applying a thin film using low-n adhesives, and so forth. Embodiments of the collector device discussed above can further comprise one or more light sources and/or light detectors or energy converters.
In
Referring further to
The foregoing embodiments are described upon the case where deflecting means 14 are arranged to trap incident light in waveguide 4 and direct the light in waveguide 4 toward a terminal end of the waveguide or walls by means of at least TIR. However, this invention is not limited to this but can be applied to the case where deflecting means 14 are configured to direct the light trapped in waveguide 4 toward a different pre-determined area within the waveguide.
By way of example and not limitation the photoresponsive element can be coupled to the waveguide element by a thin layer of optical adhesive or a photovoltaic encapsulant, such as silicone, EVA resin, or the like can be provided between waveguide 4 and photovoltaic cell 45 to promote adhesion and optical contact between cell 45 and waveguide 4. For efficient light removal, the refractive index of the adhesive or encapsulant should preferably be close to or greater than the refractive index of the material of waveguide 4. This matching of refractive indices will ensure that no TIR occurs in the area where cell 45 is attached to wall 11 and the light striking that area is allowed to escape from waveguide 4 and enter into cell 45.
Referring again to
Yet further, although the foregoing embodiments of system 2 are discussing a planar configuration, the invention is not limited to planar light collection devices. It can also be applied to a case when collector array 5 and waveguide 4 are made of a flexible material which is configured for bending and can be shaped, for example, in a cylindrical configuration. It will be appreciated, however, that in response to an excessively tight bend radius, for a given thickness of waveguide, that the internal light reflections can reach below the critical angle required to achieve total internal reflections, thus leading to a loss of light.
In
In
By way of example and not limitation, each of the separate deflection grooves shown in
The foregoing embodiments are described upon the case when collector array 5 is of a refractive type. However, this invention is not limited to this but can also be applied to the case when collector array 5 is of a reflective type. By way of example, collector array 5 can be formed by a dense planar array of micro-mirrors in which case each focusing means 6 can be represented by a concave reflector which has a mirrored surface and is configured to focus an incident beam of light onto a respective deflecting means 14. Each mirror can have a spherical shape, parabolic shape or any other shape resulting in collection of the incident light to a substantially smaller area than the aperture area of the mirror. In another example, each mirror in collector array 5 can be formed by a micro-array of planar reflectors inclined at suitable angles, such as a Fresnel mirror, so as to result in efficient focusing of the incident radiation.
In operation, incident ray R1 enters waveguide 4 first, and passes through the waveguide into collector array 5. Ray R1 is further focused by the mirror surface of an individual focusing means 6 and is directed to the face 26 of a prismatic groove of a respective deflecting means 14. Face 26 is inclined with respect to a surface normal direction to walls 10 and 11 and it redirects ray R1 into waveguide 4 at an angle with respect to a normal to walls 10 and 11 greater than critical angle θC, so that ray R1 further propagates in waveguide 4 by means of at least TIR toward terminal end 35. Accordingly, rays R2, R′1 and R′2 are also injected into waveguide 4, trapped in waveguide 4 by means of TIR and directed generally toward the same direction. Similarly to the light collection system of
In
The present invention is also not limited to the case when collector array 5 and waveguide 4 are disposed in a stationary position with respect to each other and can also be applied to the case when collector array 5 and waveguide 4 can be disposed in any one of a translated, a reversed, and/or a rotated orientation relative to each other toward achieving different light concentration or altering the acceptance angle. Furthermore, collector array 5 and waveguide 4 can be made movable with respect to each other to provide for fine tuning the acceptance angle or for tracking the source of light.
2. Illuminator EmbodimentsThe present invention teaches both optical collector embodiments as described above, and optical illumination devices which are discussed below.
Referring to
If used at optical frequencies, waveguide 4 can be made from any highly transparent material such as glass, PMMA or polycarbonate. Other transparent materials or substances, such as a liquid or a silicone rubber can also be used for making at least a portion of the body of waveguide 4. In order to enhance its optical guiding ability, the material of waveguide 4 can have a relatively high index of refraction, and can be surrounded by a material with lower refractive index. In such a case, the structure can guide optical waves by means of TIR and can be characterized by a critical angle θC so that when a ray of light propagating within waveguide 4 strikes a waveguide boundary at an angle larger than θC with respect to the normal to the boundary surface, the ray is reflected back into waveguide 4. Faces 10 and 11 should normally be smooth or polished so as to avoid or minimize parasitic light scattering when undergoing TIR reflections from the faces. When appropriate, face 11 can be configured with a mirrored surface to enhance light guiding properties of waveguide 4.
Additionally, side edges of waveguide 4 (faces 40 and 41 in
In accordance with a preferred embodiment, waveguide 4 comprises a plurality of light deflecting elements optically coupled to waveguide 4. The term “optically coupled” is meant herein to describe any relationship between a first optical component and a second optical component which enables light to pass from the first optical component to the second optical component. Reference to optically coupled does not preclude various forms of optical losses. Also, it should be appreciated that this term also includes implementations in which the first and second optical components are separated by one or more optical interfaces or layers at which the light may undergo respective optical losses (e.g., parasitic reflections, Fresnel reflections, attenuation, and so forth) and/or changing of its direction of propagation (e.g., refraction at the interface between two media having different refractive indexes). For the purpose of demonstrating a preferred mode of the present invention, the light deflecting elements are represented by surface relief features associated with face 11, more specifically, parallel v-shaped prismatic grooves 14 made in face 11, as shown in
As previously described, prismatic grooves 14 can be produced by any of a variety of known methods of creating surface relief such as micro-structures and/or texture. These structures can be fabricated using a technique for direct material removal including mechanical scribing, laser scribing, micromachining, etching, grinding, embossing, imprinting from a master mold, photolithography, other known mechanisms, and combinations thereof. If required, the faces of prismatic grooves 14 can be further polished to obtain a very smooth surface. It will be appreciated that waveguide 4 can also be made with grooves already embedded into it by means of casting, injection molding, compression molding or the like processes, such as might arise in a mass production environment.
Alternatively, waveguide 4 can incorporate a layer of transparent material, such as a plastic film or thin transparent plate, attached to face 11 and the prismatic grooves 14 can be formed in that layer. Optical lithography can be used to create the required pattern in a light-sensitive chemical photo resist by exposing it to light (typically UV) either using a projected image or an optical mask with a subsequent selective removal step of unexposed parts of a thin film or the bulk of a substrate.
In another alternative, the transparent material can be overmolded onto waveguide 4 in the respective areas and prismatic grooves 14 can be formed in the overmold. A negative replica of prismatic grooves 14 can be made by diamond cutting/machining, laser micromachining, ion beam etching, chemical etching, or any similar material removal technique followed by imprinting in an overmold process. In the illustrated case, prismatic groves 14 or tapered prismatic voids in face 11 extend end-to-end from face 40 to face 41 and are optically coupled to waveguide 4 directly through the surface of waveguide 4, preferably without the use of additional optical interfaces or layers which are subject to associated losses.
Referring again to
Lens array 5 is positioned in a close proximity and generally parallel to waveguide 4 and disposed in an energy receiving relationship with respect to waveguide 4. Energy receiving relationship is meant to mean any relationship between waveguide 4 and collector array 5 which enables light exiting waveguide 4 to enter into the collector array. According to a preferred embodiment, collector array 5 is positioned to receive light emerging from waveguide 4 through its face 10. For this purpose, lens array 5 is aligned with respect to waveguide 4 so that its face 12 is disposed in a close proximity and parallel to face 10 of waveguide 4 forming a sandwich structure. Face 12 of lens array 5 is configured to transmit a substantial portion of light emerging from face 10 of waveguide 4 into lens array 5.
The number and placement of individual lenslets in lens array 5 are selected so that each lens 6 corresponds to a prismatic groove 14, extends parallel to the prismatic groove 14 and is aligned with respect to the prismatic groove 14 along a perpendicular to face 10 of waveguide 4.
Each prismatic groove 14 is configured to intercept a portion of the light beam propagating through waveguide 4 by its active area (also referenced heretofore as an entrance aperture of prismatic groove 14) and redirect the portion of the light beam toward face 10 of waveguide 4 and at a greater angle with respect to face 10 so that the condition of TIR is not met for the redirected light and it can exit from waveguide 4 and subsequently enter lens array 5.
Each lenslet in lens array 5 is configured to receive a divergent beam of decoupled light emerging from waveguide 4 after being redirected by a matching prismatic groove 14 and collimate the divergent beam into a quasi-parallel beam propagating perpendicular to plane 9 and away from optical device 2.
Naturally, one of the best modes illustrating the present invention may employ such an arrangement of optical device 2 in which each prismatic groove 14 is disposed at or near the focus of the respective lens 6 and the receiving aperture of prismatic groove 14 is substantially smaller than the entrance aperture of the respective lenslet 6. Prismatic grooves 14 can be made sufficiently spaced apart from the respective lenses 6 to allow for efficient light collimation. For the purpose of this invention and from the practical standpoint, the terms “focal area” or “focus” of lens 6 should be understood broadly and generally refers to a relatively small area within the envelope of a focused beam that the lens 6 would have produced if illuminated by a generally parallel input beam of light. The focal area generally has a cross section substantially smaller than the cross section of respective lens 6. Accordingly, the focal area can also include areas at a relatively small distance from the “ideal” focus of lens 6 and also where the focused beam can be convergent (before focus) or divergent (after focus).
In accordance with this invention, it is preferred that an effective focal length of each lens 6 is substantially shorter than the dimensions of faces 10 and 11 in order to achieve better compactness of device 2. For the purpose of this invention, the term “effective focal length” generally refers to the distance between lens 6 and its focus. This term should also be understood broadly and it also includes the cases when the focal length of the same lens 6 can change depending on the optical properties of the material filling up the space between lens 6 and the focus. Accordingly, the location of the effective focal area, and thus focal length, may be different if a different material separates lens 6 and its focal area. By way of example, for the same parameters of lens 6, its focal distance can be longer in PMMA material than in the air due to the difference in refractive indexes.
In accordance with preferred embodiments, waveguide 4 should be optically separated from lens array 5 by at least one optical interface that allows for propagating the light in waveguide 4 by means of TIR without escaping into array 5. A suitable optical interface 8 can be created by various means. For example, interface 8 can be a physical boundary or wall of the body of waveguide 4 which is surrounded by outside media with lower refractive medium, such as air. Alternatively, it may comprise an interface between two media having different refractive indices so that the refractive index decreases along the optical path from waveguide 4 toward lens array 5. By way of example and not limitation, an interface of this type can be obtained by separating waveguide 4 from the body of lens array 5 (or from bodies of individual lenses 6) by introduction of a thin layer of air, lower refractive index material, or any other boundary between higher and a lower refractive index material. In a more specific example, interface 8 can comprise an interface between glass, PMMA or polycarbonate (high refractive index) and a low refractive index polymer or air. By way of example, waveguide 4 can be partially or entirely surrounded by ambient air. Alternatively, a layer of cladding material can be provided between waveguide 4 and lens array 5 in which case, the optical device can form a monolithic system while maintaining the same basic structure and operation. In at least one preferred embodiment of the present invention, waveguide 4 spaced apart from lens array 5 so that a layer of ambient air is disposed therebetween with interface 8 formed by face 10 being the boundary between waveguide 4 and layer of ambient air.
In operation, the optical device illuminator can be better understood from a cross sectional schematic representation of the device and its components, as well as from analyzing the paths of individual light rays in the device.
First, turning to the prior art,
In comparison to the above, an embodiment of optical device 2 as
In at least one preferred implementation of
According to Snell's law of optics, when light passes through a boundary between a first refractive medium and a second refractive medium, n1 sin ϕ1=n2 sin ϕ2, where n1 and n2 are the refractive index of the first medium and the second medium, respectively, with ϕ1 and ϕ2 being the angle of incidence and the angle of refraction, respectively. Furthermore, the critical angle of TIR ϕC is the value of ϕ1 for which ϕ2 equals 90°. Accordingly, θC=arcsin(n2/n1·sin ϕ2)=arcsin(n2/n1), which makes θC approximately 42.155° for an exemplary case of the interface between PMMA with the reflective index n1 of about 1.49 and air with n2 of about 1.
Prismatic grooves 14 are formed in face 11 where the size of individual prismatic grooves 14 and their number are selected so that they can be spaced from each other by a distance which is generally substantially larger than the receiving aperture of each prismatic groove. Prismatic grooves are shown as identical structures and approximately evenly spaced along face 11 in
Each prismatic groove 14 is configured to have a light receiving aperture comprising a sloped reflective face that is positioned to intercept a portion of the light propagating along waveguide 4 and redirect the portion of light toward face 10 at such an angle so as to result in the portion of light passing through face 10 and into lens array 5. This can be achieved by the following. At least one face of each prismatic groove 14 is made reflective. The face of prismatic groove 14 is also exposed to the light propagating along waveguide 4 and positioned at an angle with respect to the prevailing direction of the light propagation in waveguide 4. As a result, the light incident onto the exposed face of prismatic groove 14 is redirected from its original propagation path in waveguide 4 and is directed onto face 10 of waveguide 4 generally at an angle with respect to face 10 which exceeds the TIR angle, thus allowing the redirected light to exit (decouple) from waveguide 4.
Upon exiting from waveguide 4, the redirected light enters lens array 5 and is collected by lens 6 matching the respective prismatic groove 14. Since prismatic groove 14 is disposed at or near the focus of the respective lens 6 in a matching groove-lens pair, the light collected by lens 6 is collimated into a generally parallel beam propagating along the optical axis of lens 6. When each of the lenses 6 forming lens array 5 has an optical axis perpendicular to the lens array 5 and the matching prismatic groove 14 is disposed on the optical axis, lens array 5 will form an array of collimated beams propagating away from it and perpendicular to its surface. Thus, the optical illuminator device receives a generally uncollimated light incident on its side edge, distributes the light through the body of waveguide 4 and emits a highly collimated parallel beam of light from the device's frontal surface.
More particularly, the operation of the optical illuminator device can be illustrated by exemplifying the paths of individual light rays. Referring again to
Similarly, a different ray R102 emitted by source 145 and entering waveguide 4 at a skew angle with respect to waveguide faces 10 and 11 propagates along waveguide 4 by bouncing from its faces until it strikes a different prismatic groove 14 at face 11. Ray R102 is also redirected back toward face 10 at an incidence angle which is smaller than θC that allows ray R102 to decouple from waveguide 4 and enter the respective lens 6 which further collimates R102 generally into the same direction as ray R101. It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that additional rays randomly entering face 35 within a pre-determined range of angles will be initially trapped in waveguide 4 and propagated toward face 36, and then in response to striking a prismatic groove 14 the rays are deflected out of the waveguide and collimated by the lens array 5.
It should be understood that, while only few rays are shown in
Only four prismatic grooves 14 and four matching lenslets 6 are shown in each of
Additionally, it will be appreciated that face 36 can be mirrored and/or inclined at an angle with respect to face 10 so that the light rays reaching face 35 will be directed back into waveguide 4 as their propagation direction will be reversed which will increase the light extraction/decoupling efficiency. For this purpose, the second face of each prismatic groove 14 can be made reflective and positioned at a suitable angle to intercept the reversed rays and decouple them in the manner described above. Also, as described above, various faces of waveguide 4 participating in TIR can be selectively mirrored and/or provided with a cladding layer to promote reflection and protection of the device from the environment. Mirroring can be obtained by depositing a reflective layer using any known means, such as, for example utilizing a coating, such as silver, aluminum, or laminating with a reflective film, or other known techniques and combinations for increasing the efficiency of light reflection.
The size of prismatic grooves 14 is exaggerated for clarity in the illustrations discussed above. However, it should be understood that the individual grooves 14 should preferably be substantially smaller in size than the width of each respective lenslets 6 toward improving collimation efficiency. Furthermore, it should be understood that the dimensions of the prismatic grooves 14 is also exaggerated for clarity with respect to the dimensions of waveguide 4 as well, while a specific application may require a micro-scale size of prismatic grooves 14 whereas lens array 5 may comprise a large number of micro-lenses which can be very small compared to the dimensions of the array.
Ray R110 can propagate in waveguide 4 when its refraction angle θr permits for TIR at faces 10 and 11. Therefore, a maximum refraction angle θr max can be defined as 90−θC. From Snell's law the equation n sin θin max=n1 sin θr max, is obtained where n is the refractive index of the medium adjacent to face 35 of waveguide 4 and θin max is a maximum incidence angle that waveguide 4 will accept. Since sin θin max=sin(90°−θC)=cos θC n sin θin max=n1 cos θC is obtained which can be further transformed to the following.
Furthermore, since
obtain the following relationships:
where the expression n sin θin max can be defined as a numeric aperture NA of waveguide 4.
An imagery cone having an angular size of 2θin max (±θin max from a normal to face 35 of waveguide 4) can be defined as an acceptance cone of waveguide 4 for the purpose of illustrating this invention and the angle 2θin max can be referenced as an acceptance angle of waveguide 4.
In
Face 26 represents the working aperture of prismatic groove 14 and is configured to redirect ray R110 from its original direction of propagation in waveguide 4 into a different direction at which ray R110 can be extracted from waveguide 4. In order to achieve this, face 26 is inclined at a slope angle θ30 with respect to face 11. Accordingly, face 26 makes angle θ135 with a surface normal direction 15 to face 11 which is also a surface normal direction with respect to face 10 due to the parallelism of faces 10 and 11. Face 26 has a planar mirrored surface which provides a low-loss specular reflection for ray R110. However, it should be understood that this invention is not limited to the planar configuration of reflective face 26. It will be appreciated that face 26 can be configured with any desired shape without departing from the teachings of the present invention, for example it may comprise any segmented or curved surface.
Ray R110 bounces from face 10 by means of TIR, at which the angle of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence, and continues propagating in waveguide 4 at angle θ101 with respect to the surface normal direction of faces 10 and 11 until it strikes face 26 at point P102. A ray segment 18 represents a continuation of ray R110 when it is internally redirected/deflected by prismatic groove 14 back into waveguide 4 so that segment 18 forms a different angle θ102 with respect to surface normal direction 15 of face 10. The slope of face 26 is selected so as to result in angle θ102 being smaller than angle θ101 and also smaller than TIR angle θC. The TIR angle θC can be defined from the following expression.
θC=arcsin(n2/n1)
When ray R110 is reflected by face 26 and further strikes face 10 from the inside of waveguide 4 at point P103 it maintains the same angle θ102 with respect to a surface normal direction of face 10. Since angle θ102 is smaller than TIR angle θC ray R110 passes through face 10 with some refraction and with relatively small Fresnel losses defined by the difference in refractive indexes n1 and n2. Ray R110 therefore becomes decoupled from waveguide 4 and can be further collected and collimated by the associated lens array.
Referring again to
It will be appreciated that when face 26 has a mirrored surface, by selecting a suitable slope angle θ30 of reflective face 26, ray R110 can be directed at any desired angle with respect to surface normal 15 or faces 10 and 11.
Toward maximizing the efficiency of light decoupling from waveguide 4 and considering a planar configuration of face 26, an optimum range of acceptable values for slope angle θ30 can be selected in response to the following reasoning. Since light rays are randomly distributed in waveguide 4, ray R110, when striking face 26, can make angles +θr in response to an approach to prismatic groove 14 from face 10, or of −θr in response to an approach to prismatic groove 14 from face 11, with respect to prevailing plane of the material. Therefore, face 26 should be positioned to decouple ray R110 incident into it at either θr or −θr with respect to the material plane. As a matter of optics, this condition can be written in the form of the following expression.
(θr+θC)/2≤θ30≤90°−(θr+θC)/2
Referring now to both
By taking the above exemplary case with waveguide 4 comprising PMMA material (n1≈1.49) with air cladding (n1≈1) and assuming angular aperture A11 of the fan of rays incident into prismatic groove 14 being 60° (±30° from the plane of the material), a desired range for slope angle θ30 can be obtained as: 36.08°≤θ30≤53.92° which provides over 22° wide useful span of slope angles for obtaining the maximum light decoupling efficiency with a minimum number of prismatic grooves 14.
Obviously, the greater aperture A11 the narrower the optimum range of angles θ30 is. In an extreme case when A11=2θr max, for instance when the light beam injected into waveguide 4 can comprise rays making angles of up to 90°−θC, with respect to the prevailing material plane, or down to θC with respect to a surface normal direction in relation to the material plane and faces 10 and 11, by making the respective substitutions to obtain the following:
(2(90°−θC)/4+θC/2≤θ30≤90°−(2(90°−θC)/4−θC/2,
which translates into: 45°≤θ30≤45° or simply θ30=45°.
In other words, face 26 should be inclined at an angle of 45° with respect to faces 10 and 11 to decouple the maximum number of rays when aperture A11=2θr max.
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that reflective faces can reflect at least a portion of the incident light by means of TIR and in which case no mirror coating may be required for face 26. Referring to
Although
The foregoing embodiments of the present invention are described upon the case where prismatic grooves 14 are formed in or associated with face 11. However, this invention is not limited to this and can be applied to the case when prismatic grooves 14 can positioned anywhere at or between faces 10 and 11, or they can be made embedded or integral to waveguide 4 or attached externally to either face 10 or 11, provided that prismatic grooves 14 are optically coupled to waveguide 4 and can intercept a portion of the light propagating in waveguide 4 and extract the light from the waveguide to allow for the subsequent collimation with lenses 6.
It should be appreciated that the illumination device can be configured to collect light rays in a preselected spectral domain and/or only those rays propagating in waveguide 4 in a predetermined range of acceptance angles. For example, prismatic grooves 14 can be replaced by a reflection or transmission hologram designed to deflect and decouple only a specific wavelength or a relatively narrow range of wavelengths from waveguide 4 while allowing the other wavelengths to further propagate through waveguide 4 by means of TIR. Alternatively, one or more layers of a dichroic material can be deposited on face 26 of prismatic groove 14 which will cause the incident light to be split up into distinct beams of different wavelengths and allow only selected beam(s) to be extracted from waveguide 4. In a further example, prismatic grooves 14 can be designed so that any rays impinging onto its active aperture within an acceptance angle of up to a pre-determined value (e.g., up to 30 degrees) will be extracted from waveguide 4. The remainder of the light rays are allowed to propagate further in waveguide 4 at angles greater than TIR angle θC with respect to normal 15 and these latter rays can therefore be allowed to remain in waveguide 4.
Additionally, face 11 of waveguide can be provided with a backsheet or cladding layer 20 which also has a low refractive index so that waveguide 4 is encapsulated and protected from the outside media by a low-n material similar to conventional light guides. This can help avoid light spillage from waveguide 4 and improve the efficiency of system 2. Cladding materials suitable for layer 20 can include any of the low-n materials mentioned above for layer 19. Alternatively, layer 20 can be formed by a plastic reflective film or by metallization of face 11 to improve reflectivity or reduce light spillage through face 11. Another example of a suitable protective backsheet material for layer 20 can be Polyvinyl fluoride (PVF), a fluoropolymer which is commercially available as a film from DuPont and is sold under the Tedlar® brand.
Similarly, any or all side faces (side walls) or terminal faces (end walls, terminal walls) of waveguide 4 can be encapsulated or otherwise covered by a protective or reflective layer and allowed to reflect light propagating in waveguide 4 back into the waveguide by means of TIR or specular reflection. It will be appreciated that layer 20 or encapsulation layers of the edges of waveguide 4 do not have to be optically transparent and can include opaque, light scattering or reflective materials. Yet further, optical illumination device 2 can incorporate any other suitable layers such as reflective or anti-reflective coatings, diffusers, radiation protective coatings or films, scratch and stain resistant coatings, light filtering films and the like. By way of example, waveguide 4, lens array 5 or any of their portions can be coated by dip coating, spin coating, vacuum metallization, applying a thin film using low-n adhesives, etc.
In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, optical illumination device 2 discussed above can comprise an elongated light source extending along terminal face 35 for inputting light into waveguide 4. Alternatively, a plurality of miniature light sources can be arranged along face 35 for this purpose.
The foregoing embodiments are described upon the case when prismatic grooves 14 are aligned pair wise with the respective lenses 6 which can be preferred for collimating the light decoupled from waveguide 4 into a highly collimated, particularly parallel, beam. However, this invention is not limited to this configuration and can also be implemented so that the optical axis of each individual prismatic groove 14 is slightly offset with respect to an optical axis of the matching lens 6. Furthermore, the amount of the offset can be varied for different prism-lens pairs over the length of waveguide 4. Particularly, prismatic grooves 14 and lenslets 6 can be positioned and aligned in accordance to a pre-selected ordered or randomized pattern. This can be useful, for example to create a non-parallel, yet collimated beam with a desired angular spread and or a particular intensity distribution. By way of example, the plurality of lenses 6 can be designed to direct the respective beams into converging directions or focus. Alternatively, these directions can be made diverging to distribute the illumination pattern within a pre-determined angle (a diverging conical light pattern). The respective beams of light can be spaced apart, overlapped, or mixed in any suitable manner so as to provide the desired operation or light distribution in space or on a target.
Referring again to
Although the foregoing embodiments of the illuminator are discussing a planar configuration, the invention is not limited to planar light collection devices. It can also be applied to a case when collector array 5 and waveguide 4 are made of a flexible material such that optical device 2 is able to bend and can be shaped, for example, in a cylindrical configuration.
It should also be understood that this invention is not limited to employing lenses 6 of an imaging type and can be applied to the case when lenses 6 can have any other suitable shape, so that an individual lens 6 can produce a convergent or divergent beam or any other light pattern. Furthermore, this invention is not limited to the use of lens array 5 of a refractive type and can also be applied to the case when lens array 5 can be replaced by a reflective mirror array. By way of example, collector array 5 can be formed by a dense planar array of micro-mirrors in which case each mirror element 6 can be represented by a concave reflector which has a mirrored surface and is configured to focus an incident beam of light onto a respective prismatic grooves 14. Each mirror can have a spherical shape, parabolic shape or any other shape resulting in collection of the incident light to a substantially smaller area than the aperture area of the mirror. In another example, each mirror in collector array 5 can, in turn, be formed by a micro-array of planar reflectors inclined at suitable angles, such as a Fresnel mirror, so as to result in efficient focusing the incident radiation.
In operation, incident ray R101 enters waveguide 4, propagates in waveguide 4 by means of TIR and enters prismatic groove 14. Face 26 is inclined with respect to a normal to walls 10 and 11 and it redirects ray R101 back into waveguide 4 at an angle with respect to a normal to walls 10 and 11 which is less than critical angle θC so that ray R101 is decoupled by prismatic groove 14 and directed to a respective micro-mirror 6. In turn, micro-mirror 6 directs ray R101 to a direction perpendicular to wall 11. Accordingly, rays R102, R′101 and R′102 propagating in waveguide 4 are also decoupled from waveguide 4 and directed generally toward the same direction. In similar manner to the system of
It should be noted that any other conventional device used to collect or collimate light can be used in place of lenses 6. Any known optical system or collector of radiant energy or light which collects the energy from it entrance aperture and directs it further with improved collimation can be used for the purpose of this invention. Illustrative of useful devices that can be used in place of lenses 6 are spherical or aspherical refractive lenses, parabolic or spherical mirrors, Fresnel lenses, Total Internal Reflection (TIR) lenses, gradient index lenses, diffraction lenses, lens arrays, mirrors, Fresnel mirrors, mirror arrays and the like.
The foregoing embodiments have been described upon the case when v-shaped prismatic grooves 14 are used for decoupling the light from waveguide 4. However, this invention is not limited to this and can be applied to the case when any suitable optical device used to receive the light beam in a pre-determined acceptance angle from one direction and deflect at least a substantial portion of the incident beam from its original direction to a different direction can be utilized in place of prismatic grooves 14. Each such optical element should be configured to intercept a portion of the light propagating within waveguide 4 and redirect it at a different propagation angle with respect to faces 10 and/or 11 at which the condition of TIR is not met and the light can exit waveguide 4 and can further be collected and collimated by respective lens 6. By means of example, an alternative to prismatic grooves 14 can include a reflective surface or a refractive element disposed at an angle to the incident light beam and optically coupled to waveguide 4. Similarly, an alternative can include planar or curved mirrors, prisms, prism arrays, diffraction gratings, holograms, and similar optical elements. Additionally, various light scattering or light diffusing elements, such as small areas of waveguide 4 painted with a white paint or provided with matte-finish, can be used in place of prismatic grooves 14 which will redirect at least a portion of light out of waveguide 4 through at least one of its faces 10 or 11 so that optical device 2 will have the same basic structure and operation.
The present invention is not limited to the case when waveguide 4 and lens array 5 are disposed in a stationary position with respect to each other and can also be applied to the case when lens array 5 and waveguide 4 can be disposed in any one of a translated, a reversed and/or a rotated orientation relative to each other in order, for example, to achieve different collimation angles or desired visual effects for the collimated light. Furthermore, lens array 5 and waveguide 4 can be made movable with respect to each other to provide for fine tuning or “focusing” the collimated beam.
Accordingly, it will be appreciated that the system of the present invention can be used for collecting and concentrating otherwise distributed light in a very space-efficient manner by using a thin planar geometry of the light collecting optics. Furthermore, the system allows for homogenizing the collected light by means of multiple lossless total internal reflections and delivering the light to an edge of a waveguide with a substantial concentration and low loss.
Additionally, the device of this invention can be used for collimating otherwise divergent light in a very space-efficient manner by using a thin planar geometry of the collimating optics. Furthermore, the device allows distributing light emitted by a highly localized light source across a much larger area and creating a broad yet highly collimated light beam without the glare typically associated with bright point sources such as high-power LEDS, incandesced lamps and the like.
As can be seen, therefore, the present invention can be implemented in various ways, which can include, but which are not limited to, one or more of the following embodiments, modes and features described herein:
1. An apparatus for light collimation and distribution, comprising: a planar waveguide having an optically transparent planar material having edges disposed between a first planar surface and a second planar surface; in which said planar waveguide is configured to receive light on one edge of said planar material, and to propagate the received light through said planar waveguide in response to optical transmission and total internal reflection; a plurality of light collimating elements within a collimating array which is disposed in an optical receiving relationship with a planar surface of said planar waveguide; and a plurality of light deflecting elements optically coupled to said waveguide and configured for deflecting light propagating through said planar waveguide at a sufficiently low angle, below the predetermined critical angle for total internal reflection (TIR), with respect to a surface normal direction of an exterior surface of said planar waveguide to exit said planar waveguide and enter said collimating array; wherein each of said plurality of light deflecting elements is in a predetermined alignment with each of said plurality of light collimating elements; wherein light received on the edge of said planar waveguide is angularly redirected, collimated, and distributed from the surface of said collimating array which is optically coupled to said planar waveguide.
2. The apparatus of embodiment 1, wherein said plurality of light collimating elements comprises a parallel array of elongated lenticular lenses.
3. The apparatus of embodiment 1, wherein said plurality of light collimating elements comprises a parallel array of elongated focus mirrors.
4. The apparatus of embodiment 1, wherein said plurality of light deflecting elements comprises a parallel array of elongated grooves.
5. The apparatus of embodiment 1, wherein said plurality of light deflecting elements comprises a parallel array of elongated grooves; wherein said grooves are configured at a slope angle which is bounded by the relation in which is the refractive index of the planar waveguide and is the refractive index of the collimator array.
6. The apparatus of embodiment 1, wherein said plurality of light deflecting elements comprises grooves within said planar waveguide configured for redirecting the received light in response to reflection from at least one surface of said groove toward said collimating array.
7. The apparatus of embodiment 1: wherein said light deflecting elements comprise grooves; and wherein said grooves are formed within each of a plurality of blocks that are attached and in optical communication with said planar waveguide, and said grooves are configured for redirecting the received light in response to reflection from at least one surface of said groove toward said collimating array.
8. The apparatus of embodiment 1: wherein said light deflecting elements comprise grooves; and wherein each of said grooves has a transparent surface and a reflective surface, and light received from the planar waveguide passes through the transparent surface of each of said grooves to be reflected from the reflective surface of each of said grooves toward said collimating array.
9. The apparatus of embodiment 1: wherein said light deflecting elements comprise grooves; and wherein each of said grooves comprise a prismatic groove or ridge formed in a surface of said planar waveguide disposed toward said collimating array for refractively deflecting the received light impinging on said prismatic groove to pass through said prismatic groove or ridge to exit the planar waveguide.
10. The apparatus of embodiment 1, wherein said plurality of light collimating elements is selected from the group of optical elements consisting of imaging lenses, non-imaging lenses, spherical lenses, aspherical lenses, lens arrays, Fresnel lenses, TIR lenses, gradient index lenses, diffraction lenses, mirrors, Fresnel mirrors, spherical mirrors, parabolic mirrors, mirror arrays, and trough mirrors.
11. The apparatus of embodiment 1, wherein said plurality of light deflecting elements is selected from the group of optical elements consisting of planar mirrors, curved mirrors, prisms, prism arrays, prismatic grooves, surface relief features, reflective surfaces, refractive surfaces, diffraction gratings, holograms, and light scattering elements.
12. The apparatus of embodiment 1, further comprising an optical interface disposed between said planar waveguide and said collimating array; wherein said optical interface is characterized by a drop in refractive index in the direction of light propagation from said planar waveguide toward said collimating array.
13. The apparatus of embodiment 1, further comprising: an optical interface layer disposed between said planar waveguide and said collimating array; wherein said optical interface layer is selected from the group of optical materials consisting of low refractive index monomers, polymers, fluoropolymers, low-n optical adhesives, thin films, and optical waveguide cladding materials.
14. The apparatus of embodiment 1, further comprising: an optical interface layer disposed between said planar waveguide and said collimating array; wherein said optical interface layer has a lower refractive index than said planar waveguide.
15. The apparatus of embodiment 1, further comprising: an optical interface layer disposed between said planar waveguide and said collimating array; wherein said optical interface layer comprises air.
16. The apparatus of embodiment 1, further comprising at least one illumination source coupled to at least one edge of said planar waveguide.
17. The apparatus of embodiment 1, further comprising at least one illumination source optically coupled to edges of a cutout within said planar waveguide.
18. The apparatus of embodiment 1, wherein both said collimating array and said planar waveguide have a round or sectorial shape obtainable by a revolution of a cross section of said collimating array and said planar waveguide around an axis.
19. The apparatus of embodiment 1, wherein said collimator array comprises point focus lenses.
20. The apparatus of embodiment 1: wherein said collimator array comprises point focus lenses; and wherein said point focus lenses have a shape selected from the group consisting of round, rectangular, square, and hexagonal.
21. The apparatus of embodiment 1, wherein said collimator array comprises point focus mirrors.
22. The apparatus of embodiment 1: wherein said collimator array comprises point focus mirrors; and wherein said point focus mirrors have a shape selected from the group of shapes consisting of round, rectangular, square, and hexagonal.
23. The apparatus of embodiment 1, wherein said planar waveguide comprises a rectangular plate having a first terminal edge, a second terminal edge, a first side wall, a second side wall, said first planar surface and said second planar surface.
24. The apparatus of embodiment 1, further comprising: a mirrored surface; wherein said planar waveguide comprises a rectangular plate having a first terminal edge, a second terminal edge, a first side wall, a second side wall, said first planar surface and said second planar surface; and wherein said mirrored surface is on one or more of said first terminal edge, said second terminal edge, said first side wall and said second side wall.
25. The apparatus of embodiment 1, further comprising: a cladding layer; wherein said planar waveguide comprises a rectangular plate having a first terminal edge, a second terminal edge, a first side wall, a second side wall, said first planar surface and said second planar surface; and wherein said a cladding layer is disposed upon one or more of said first terminal edge, said second terminal edge, said first side wall and said second side wall.
26. The apparatus of embodiment 1, wherein said planar waveguide and said collimator array are adapted for being retained in either a planar configuration or in bent and/or rolled configurations.
27. The apparatus of embodiment 1, wherein said planar waveguide and said collimator array are adapted for being retained in a translated, a reversed and/or a rotated orientation relative to each other toward achieving a adjusting the light distribution or collimation pattern.
28. The apparatus of embodiment 1, wherein said planar waveguide and said collimator array are adapted for being retained in a movable relationship with one another toward adjusting the light distribution or collimation pattern.
29. The apparatus of embodiment 1, further comprising: a coating on the exterior of said planar waveguide and/or said collimator array; wherein said coating is selected from the group of coatings consisting of anti-reflective, protective, encapsulates, reflective, diffusive, radiation protective, scratch and stain resistant, and light filtering.
30. An apparatus for light collimation and distribution, comprising: a planar waveguide having an optically transparent planar material configured to receive light on one edge of said planar material, and to propagate the received light through said planar waveguide in response to optical transmission and total internal reflection; a parallel collimating array having a plurality of elongated light collimating lenses disposed in an optical receiving relationship with a planar surface of said planar waveguide; and a parallel deflecting array having a plurality of elongated light deflecting grooves within said planar waveguide which are configured for deflecting light propagating through said waveguide at a sufficiently low angle, below the predetermined critical angle for total internal reflection (TIR), with respect to a surface normal direction of an exterior surface of said planar waveguide to exit said planar waveguide and enter said parallel collimating array; wherein each of said plurality of elongated light deflecting grooves is in a predetermined alignment with each of said plurality of elongated light collimating lenses; wherein light received on the edge of said planar waveguide is angularly redirected, collimated, and distributed from the surface of said parallel collimating array which is optically coupled to said planar waveguide.
31. A method for distributing radiant energy comprising: receiving radiant energy into an edge of an optical waveguide having edges disposed between a first planar surface and a second planar surface; propagating the radiant energy by optical transmission and total internal reflection in an optical material disposed between the first planar surface and the second planar surface along the length of the optical waveguide; deflecting the radiant energy at a plurality of deflecting elements distributed along the first planar surface and/or second planar surface of the optical waveguide to a sufficiently low angle, below the predetermined critical angle for total internal reflection (TIR) which is with respect to a surface normal direction of the first planar surface or second planar surface of the optical waveguide, causing the radiant energy to exit the surface of the optical waveguide through the first planar surface and/or the second planar surface; and collimating the radiant energy exiting the optical waveguide at a plurality of focal zones in response to the radiant energy passing through a plurality of radiation collimating elements.
32. An apparatus for collecting light, comprising: a plurality of light collecting elements within a collector array configured for collecting received light; a planar waveguide having edges disposed between a first planar surface and a second planar surface; said planar waveguide is disposed in an optical receiving relationship with said collector array and configured to propagate the received light by optical transmission and total internal reflection; and a plurality of light deflecting elements optically coupled to said planar waveguide with each of said plurality of light deflecting elements disposed in energy receiving relationship within said planar waveguide to at least one of said plurality of light collecting elements; wherein each of said plurality of light deflecting elements is configured to redirect incident light at a sufficiently high angle, above the predetermined critical angle for total internal reflection (TIR) with respect to a surface normal direction with respect to the first planar surface or the second planar surface of said planar waveguide, to redirect and propagate the received light within said planar waveguide by optical transmission and TIR.
33. The apparatus of embodiment 32, wherein said plurality of light collecting elements comprises a parallel array of elongated focus mirrors.
34. The apparatus of embodiment 32, wherein said plurality of light collecting elements comprises a parallel array of elongated lenticular lenses.
35. The apparatus of embodiment 32: wherein said plurality of light deflecting elements comprises a parallel array of elongated grooves.
36. The apparatus of embodiment 32: wherein said plurality of light deflecting elements comprises a parallel array of elongated grooves; wherein said grooves are configured at a slope angle θ30 which is bounded by the
relation in which n1 is the refractive index of the planar waveguide and n2 is the refractive index of an outside medium.
37. The apparatus of embodiment 32, wherein said plurality of light deflecting elements comprises grooves within said planar waveguide configured for redirecting the received light in response to reflection from at least one surface of said groove into the plane of the planar waveguide.
38. The apparatus of embodiment 32, wherein said plurality of light deflecting elements comprises grooves formed within each of a plurality of blocks that are attached and in optical communication with said planar waveguide, and said grooves are configured for redirecting the received light in response to reflection from at least one surface of said groove into the plane of the planar waveguide.
39. The apparatus of embodiment 32, wherein said plurality of light deflecting elements is selected from the group of optical elements consisting of planar mirrors, curved mirrors, prisms, prism arrays, prismatic grooves, surface relief features, reflective surfaces, refractive surfaces, diffraction gratings, holograms, and light scattering elements.
40. The apparatus of embodiment 32, wherein said plurality of light collecting elements is selected from the group of optical elements consisting of imaging lenses, non-imaging lenses, spherical lenses, aspherical lenses, lens arrays, Fresnel lenses, TIR lenses, gradient index lenses, diffraction lenses, mirrors, Fresnel mirrors, spherical mirrors, parabolic mirrors, mirror arrays, and trough mirrors.
41. The apparatus of embodiment 32, further comprising: an optical interface disposed between said planar waveguide and said collector array; wherein said optical interface is characterized by a drop in refractive index in the direction of light propagation from said planar waveguide toward said collimating array.
42. The apparatus of embodiment 32, further comprising: an optical interface layer disposed between said planar waveguide and said collector array; wherein said optical interface layer is selected from the group of optical materials consisting of low refractive index monomers, polymers, fluoropolymers, low-n optical adhesives, thin films, and optical waveguide cladding materials.
43. The apparatus of embodiment 32, further comprising: an optical interface layer disposed between said planar waveguide and said collector array; wherein said optical interface layer has a lower refractive index than said planar waveguide.
44. The apparatus of embodiment 32, further comprising: an optical interface layer disposed between said planar waveguide and said collector array; wherein said optical interface layer comprises air.
45. The apparatus of embodiment 32, wherein said planar waveguide comprises a rectangular plate having a first terminal edge, a second terminal edge, a first side wall, a second side wall, said first planar surface and said second planar surface.
46. The apparatus of embodiment 32, further comprising: a mirrored surface; wherein said planar waveguide comprises a rectangular plate having a first terminal edge, a second terminal edge, a first side wall, a second side wall, said first planar surface and said second planar surface; and wherein said mirrored surface is on one or more of said first terminal edge, said second terminal edge, said first side wall and said second side wall.
47. The apparatus of embodiment 32, further comprising: a cladding layer; wherein said planar waveguide comprises a rectangular plate having a first terminal edge, a second terminal edge, a first side wall, a second side wall, said first planar surface and said second planar surface; and wherein said cladding layer is disposed on one or more of said first terminal edge, said second terminal edge, said first side wall and said second side wall.
48. The apparatus of embodiment 32, further comprising: at least one optically responsive electronic device; wherein said planar waveguide comprises a rectangular plate having a first terminal edge, a second terminal edge, a first side wall, a second side wall, said first planar surface and said second planar surface; and wherein said at least one optically responsive electronic device coupled to at least one of said first terminal edge and said second terminal edge of said planar waveguide.
49. The apparatus of embodiment 32, further comprising: at least one photovoltaic cell; wherein said planar waveguide comprises a rectangular plate having a first terminal edge, a second terminal edge, a first side wall, a second side wall, said first planar surface and said second planar surface; and wherein said at least one photovoltaic cell is coupled to at least one of said first terminal edge and said second terminal edge of said planar waveguide.
50. The apparatus of embodiment 32, further comprising at least one optically responsive electronic device coupled to edges of a cutout within said planar waveguide.
51. The apparatus of embodiment 32, further comprising: at least one light harvesting area configured for outputting collected received light; wherein the area of said light harvesting area is smaller than the area of the collector array; wherein said planar waveguide comprises a rectangular plate having a first terminal edge, a second terminal edge, a first side wall, a second side wall, said first planar surface and said second planar surface; and wherein any cladding layer or protective layers disposed upon said light harvesting area on one or more of said first terminal edge, said second terminal edge, said first side wall and said second side wall, is removed for harvesting the light.
52. The apparatus of embodiment 32, wherein both said collector array and said planar waveguide have a round or sectorial shape obtainable by a revolution of a cross section of said collector array and said planar waveguide around an axis.
53. The apparatus of embodiment 32, wherein said collector array comprises point focus lenses.
54. The apparatus of embodiment 32: wherein said collector array comprises point focus lenses; and wherein said point focus lenses have a shape selected from the group consisting of round, rectangular, square, and hexagonal.
55. The apparatus of embodiment 32, wherein said collector array comprises point focus mirrors.
56. The apparatus of embodiment 32, wherein said planar waveguide and said collector array are adapted for being retained in either a planar configuration or in bent and/or rolled configurations.
57. The apparatus of embodiment 32, wherein said planar waveguide and said collector array are adapted for being retained in a translated, a reversed and/or a rotated orientation relative to each other toward adjusting the acceptance angle or for tracking the source of light.
58. The apparatus of embodiment 32, wherein said planar waveguide and said collector array are adapted for being retained in a movable relationship with one another toward adjusting acceptance angle or for tracking the source of light.
59. The apparatus of embodiment 32, further comprising: a coating on said planar waveguide and/or said collector array; wherein said coating is selected from the group of coatings consisting of anti-reflective, protective, encapsulates, reflective, diffusive, radiation protective, scratch and stain resistant, and light filtering.
60. An apparatus for collecting light, comprising: a parallel collecting array having a plurality of elongated light collecting structures configured for collecting received light; a planar waveguide having edges disposed between a first planar surface and a second planar surface; said planar waveguide is disposed in an optical receiving relationship with said collector array and configured to propagate the received light by elements of optical transmission and total internal reflection; and a parallel deflecting array having a plurality of light deflecting groove structures optically coupled to said planar waveguide with each of said plurality of light deflecting groove structures disposed in light receiving relationship within said planar waveguide to at least one of said light collecting structures; wherein each of said plurality of light deflecting groove structures is configured to redirect incident light at a sufficiently high angle, above the predetermined critical angle for total internal reflection (TIR) with respect to a surface normal direction of an exterior surface of said planar waveguide, to redirect and propagate the received light within said planar waveguide by optical transmission and TIR.
61. A method for collecting radiant energy comprising: concentrating a radiant energy received upon a plurality of focal zones in response to a plurality of radiation concentrator elements; directing the radiant energy from said plurality of focal zones through a first planar surface into an optical waveguide having edges disposed between a first planar surface and a second planar surface; deflecting the radiant energy at a plurality of deflecting elements positioned to received the radiant energy from the focal zones, and to deflect the radiant energy into the planar waveguide at angles exceeding the critical angle of total internal reflection in said waveguide, which is with respect to a surface normal direction of the first planar surface or second planar surface of the optical waveguide; and propagating said radiant energy through said optical waveguide by optical transmission and total internal reflection.
Although the description above contains many details, these should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention but as merely providing illustrations of some of the presently preferred embodiments of this invention. Therefore, it will be appreciated that the scope of the present invention fully encompasses other embodiments which may become obvious to those skilled in the art, and that the scope of the present invention is accordingly to be limited by nothing other than the appended claims, in which reference to an element in the singular is not intended to mean “one and only one” unless explicitly so stated, but rather “one or more.” All structural, chemical, and functional equivalents to the elements of the above-described preferred embodiment that are known to those of ordinary skill in the art are expressly incorporated herein by reference and are intended to be encompassed by the present claims. Moreover, it is not necessary for a device or method to address each and every problem sought to be solved by the present invention, for it to be encompassed by the present claims. Furthermore, no element, component, or method step in the present disclosure is intended to be dedicated to the public regardless of whether the element, component, or method step is explicitly recited in the claims. No claim element herein is to be construed under the provisions of 35 U.S.C. 112, sixth paragraph, unless the element is expressly recited using the phrase “means for.”
Claims
1. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system, comprising:
- a planar optical waveguide having a rectangular shape, a light input edge configured for receiving light, a front surface configured for both receiving and distributing light, an opposing back surface extending parallel to the front surface and configured for both receiving and distributing light, a length dimension greater than a thickness dimension by at least 40 times, and a width dimension greater than the thickness dimension by at least 20 times;
- a plurality of light extraction surface structures distributed over an area of the planar optical waveguide according to a two-dimensional pattern;
- a plurality of luminescent centers distributed in a volume of a planar layer of an optically transmissive material which is approximately coextensive with the planar optical waveguide;
- a plurality of light emitting diodes arranged along the light input edge and configured to emit monochromatic light towards the light input edge;
- a sheet of reflective material approximately coextensive with the planar optical waveguide and positioned on a back side of the planar optical waveguide;
- a light diffusing layer approximately coextensive with the planar optical waveguide; and
- a prismatic surface portion extending generally parallel to the planar optical waveguide and including a continuous series of grooves disposed side by side and each having a triangular cross-section,
- wherein the luminescent centers are configured to absorb light in a first wavelength and re-radiate at least some of the energy of the absorbed light as scattered light in a second wavelength which is longer than the first wavelength, and wherein the planar layer is configured to emit at least a portion of light re-radiated by the luminescent centers.
2. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 1, comprising a parallel array of linear cylindrical lenses formed in the front surface and longitudinally extending between two opposite edges of the planar optical waveguide, wherein an area of each of the linear cylindrical lenses is greater than an area of each of the light extraction surface structures, and wherein the optical waveguide is configured to distribute light from the parallel array of linear cylindrical lenses.
3. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 1, comprising a parallel array of linear cylindrical lenses formed in the front surface and longitudinally extending between two opposite edges of the planar optical waveguide, wherein an area of each of the linear cylindrical lenses is greater than an area of each of the light extraction surface structures, wherein the optical waveguide is configured to distribute light from the parallel array of linear cylindrical lenses, and wherein a focal length characterizing at least one of the linear cylindrical lenses is less than a thickness of the planar optical waveguide.
4. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 1, wherein the planar optical waveguide is formed from a flexible material and retained in a bent or curved configuration.
5. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 1, wherein at least one of the plurality of light extraction surface structures comprises a surface cavity having a curved wall, which is configured to deflect light using both total internal reflection and refraction.
6. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 1, wherein at least some of the light extraction surface structures have randomized positions within the two-dimensional pattern, and wherein the planar optical waveguide is configured to emit a uniform flux of light from the front surface.
7. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 1, wherein the planar layer is sandwiched between two films of a different optically transmissive material and forms a monolithic structure with the two films.
8. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 1, wherein the planar layer is sandwiched between two optically transmissive films having a different refractive index than the planar layer, and wherein the planar layer and the optically transmissive films form a monolithic structure.
9. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 1, wherein at least some of the plurality of light extraction surface structures comprise a surface groove aligned parallel to an edge of the planar optical waveguide.
10. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 1, wherein at least one of the plurality of light extraction surface structures is configured to deflect at least some light using total internal reflection and direct the deflected light towards the front surface at an angle of less than 42 degrees with respect to a normal to the back surface.
11. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 1, wherein at least one of the plurality of light extraction surface structures comprises a light scattering material and has a textured surface.
12. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 1, further comprising one or more photoresponsive elements disposed in an energy receiving relationship with respect to the planar optical waveguide.
13. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 1, wherein at least one of the light emitting diodes is a side-emitting LED attached to a planar finless heat sink, which is oriented parallel to the planar optical waveguide and comprises a layer of a metallic material, and wherein a light emitting surface of the side-emitting LED is oriented perpendicular to a prevalent plane of the planar finless heat sink.
14. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 1, further comprising a reflective film laminated to an edge of the planar optical waveguide which opposite to the light input edge.
15. A light converting illumination system, comprising:
- a plurality of light emitting diodes;
- a planar two-dimensional array of non-imaging lenses configured to distribute light emitted by the light emitting diodes;
- a planar light converting layer extending parallel to the planar two-dimensional array of non-imaging lenses, the planar light converting layer having a rectangular shape, a first wall, an opposing second wall extending parallel to the first wall, a length dimension greater than a thickness dimension by at least 40 times, and a width dimension greater than the thickness dimension by at least 20 times;
- a plurality of luminescent centers distributed in a volume of the planar light converting layer and configured to absorb light in a first wavelength and re-radiate at least some of the energy of the absorbed light as scattered light in a second wavelength which is longer than the first wavelength; and
- a sheet of reflective material approximately coextensive with the two-dimensional array of non-imaging lenses,
- wherein the planar light converting layer is configured to emit at least a portion of light re-radiated by the luminescent centers.
16. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system, comprising:
- a planar optical waveguide having a rectangular shape, a light input edge configured for receiving light, a front surface configured for both receiving and distributing light, an opposing back surface extending parallel to the front surface and configured for both receiving and distributing light, a length dimension greater than a thickness dimension by at least 40 times, and a width dimension greater than the thickness dimension by at least 20 times;
- a plurality of light extraction surface structures distributed over an area of the planar optical waveguide according to a two-dimensional pattern;
- a plurality of light emitting diodes arranged along the light input edge and configured to emit light towards the light input edge;
- a sheet of reflective material approximately coextensive with the planar optical waveguide and positioned on a back side of the planar optical waveguide;
- a light diffusing layer approximately coextensive with the planar optical waveguide;
- a prismatic surface portion extending generally parallel to the planar optical waveguide and including a continuous series of grooves disposed side by side and each having a triangular cross-section; and
- a planar finless heat sink oriented parallel to the planar optical waveguide and comprising a layer of a metallic material,
- wherein at least one of the light emitting diodes is a side-emitting LED attached to the planar finless heat sink and having a light emitting surface which is oriented perpendicular to a prevalent plane of the planar finless heat sink.
17. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 16, comprising a parallel array of linear cylindrical lenses formed in the front surface and longitudinally extending between two opposite edges of the planar optical waveguide, wherein an area of each of the linear cylindrical lenses is greater than an area of each of the light extraction surface structures, wherein the optical waveguide is configured to distribute light from the parallel array of linear cylindrical lenses, and wherein a focal length characterizing at least one of the linear cylindrical lenses is less than a thickness of the planar optical waveguide.
18. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 16, wherein the planar optical waveguide is formed from a flexible material and retained in a bent or curved configuration.
19. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 16, further comprising one or more light converting elements disposed in an energy receiving relationship with respect to the planar optical waveguide.
20. An edge-lit light converting waveguide illumination system as recited in claim 16, wherein at least some of the light extraction surface structures have randomized positions within the two-dimensional pattern, and wherein the planar optical waveguide is configured to emit a uniform flux of light from the front surface.
Type: Application
Filed: Oct 27, 2020
Publication Date: Mar 4, 2021
Inventor: SERGIY VASYLYEV (ELK GROVE, CA)
Application Number: 17/080,839