A LENS PLATE AND A LIGHTING UNIT WHICH INCLUDES THE LENS PLATE
20230313968 · 2023-10-05
Inventors
- Yun Li (Shanghai, CN)
- Jun Lu (Shanghai, CN)
- Hang LI (SHANGHAI, CN)
- Andrew CHRISTANTO (SHANGHAI, CN)
- Ximei LIAN (SHANGHAI, CN)
- Weihua MIAO (SHANGHAI, CN)
- Shengfeng LI (SHANGHAI, CN)
- Shelley Sj CAO (SHANGHAI, CN)
- Xueqin Lin (Shanghai, CN)
Cpc classification
G02B3/0056
PHYSICS
F21Y2103/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V5/007
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G02B3/0075
PHYSICS
F21S8/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G02B3/0068
PHYSICS
F21Y2105/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21Y2115/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F21V5/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A lens plate has an array of lenslets. A first surface comprises a plurality of individual cells, each cell delimiting one side of a respective lenslet of the array. A second opposite surface comprises a set of grooves, each groove delimiting a second, opposite side, of a sub-array of the lenslets of the array of lenslets. The array of lenslets is a circular array comprising a plurality of concentric rings. Each ring comprises a plurality of straight segments, and each segment comprises multiple said lenslets arranged in a row. The lens plate design thus combines grooves on one side which cover multiple lenslets and a cellular lens structure on the opposite side.
Claims
1. A lighting unit comprising: an array of LEDs mounted on a carrier; and a lens plate disposed over the carrier, wherein each of the LEDs faces a groove of the lens plate; the lens plate comprising an array of lenslets, comprising: a first surface comprising a plurality of individual cells, each cell delimiting one side of a respective lenslet of the array of lenslets; and a second surface comprising a set of grooves, each groove delimiting a second, opposite side, of a sub-array of the lenslets of the array of lenslets; wherein the array of lenslets is a circular array comprising a plurality of concentric rings, each ring comprising a plurality of straight segments, and each segment comprising multiple said lenslets arranged in a row; wherein: at least some of the LEDs are offset from center of an associated cell; or for at least some of the cells, a plurality of LEDs are associated with a shared associated cell with the LEDs at different positions along a groove direction.
2. The lighting unit of claim 1, wherein each cell of the lens plate intersects with neighboring cells, and wherein each cell is positioned aligned with a respective groove, along an optical axis of the lens plate, the optical axis is in a normal direction through the lens plate between the first and second surfaces.
3. The lighting unit of claim 1, wherein the first surface of the lens plate is a light output surface and the second surface is a light input surface.
4. The lighting unit of claim 1, wherein the lenslets each occupy an area of less than 8 mm×8 mm.
5. The lighting unit of claim 1, wherein the segments of the lens plate are arranged substantially in a circumferential direction of the rings.
6. The lighting unit of claim 1, wherein the segments of the lens plate are arranged substantially in a radial direction of the rings.
7. The lighting unit of claim 1, wherein profiles of the cells of the lens plate are substantially the same.
8. The lighting unit of claim 1, wherein each of the cells of the lens plate has a convex surface facing both circumferential and radial directions of the lens plate.
9. (canceled)
10. (canceled)
11. The lighting unit of claim 1, wherein each of the LEDs faces a corresponding lenslet of the lens plate, wherein the array of LEDs has a same number of LEDs as the number of lenslets of the lens plate.
12. The lighting unit of claim 1, wherein the LEDs of the array of LEDs are associated with a subset of the array of lenslets of the lens plate.
13. The lighting unit of claim 10, wherein the LEDs of the array of LEDs are associated with one of: a sub-set of the segments of lenslets; a sub-set of the rings of lenslets; or all of the segments of lenslets but with each segment of LEDs having LEDs associated with only a subset of the lenslets of a corresponding segment of lenslets.
14. A luminaire comprising the lighting unit of claim 1 and a LED driver.
15. The luminaire of claim 12 comprising a high bay luminaire.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0047] For a better understanding of the invention, and to show more clearly how it may be carried into effect, reference will now be made, by way of example only, to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0085] The invention will be described with reference to the Figures.
[0086] It should be understood that the detailed description and specific examples, while indicating exemplary embodiments of the apparatus, systems and methods, are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention. These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the apparatus, systems and methods of the present invention will become better understood from the following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings. It should be understood that the Figures are merely schematic and are not drawn to scale. It should also be understood that the same reference numerals are used throughout the Figures to indicate the same or similar parts.
[0087] The invention provides a lens plate having an array of lenslets. A first surface comprises a plurality of individual cells, each cell delimiting one side of a respective lenslet of the array. A second opposite surface comprises a set of grooves, each groove delimiting a second, opposite side, of a sub-array of the lenslets of the array of lenslets. The lens plate design thus combines grooves on one side which cover multiple lenslets and a cellular lens structure on the opposite side.
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[0089] Different lens plates are designed for different LED boards with a different number and layout of LEDs.
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[0093] In this design, there are grooves underneath and ridges over the top. The LEDs need to be arranged in rows with a same pitch as the pitch of the grooves/ridges. In the lengthwise direction, the position and number of LED will not impact the light distribution. As a result, this lens plate design may be used for different designs of LED board, with a different LED quantity, as long as the pitch of the LEDs in the crosswise direction is kept the same.
[0094] However, it is impossible for such a lens, which may be considered to be a 2D lens, to control the light output shape in the lengthwise direction. It is only suitable for some light distributions. It is difficult to achieve some beam shapes such as a narrow beam or a very wide beam.
[0095] The invention combines a groove structure at one side of the lens plate with a cell structure on the other side of the lens plate. This achieves almost all the required beam shapes, while maintaining a certain level of flexibility in the selection of the quality of LEDs on the LED board. A cell structure has individual cells, with a cross sectional shape that varies along the length direction.
[0096] A first way to provide flexibility to apply the lens plate to different LED boards is to design the lenslets as small as possible. Within a given form factor, more lenslets can then be integrated, so the maximum number of LEDs on the LED board increases. It is not necessary to provide LEDs beneath every lenslet. Thus, when the required quantity of LEDs on the LED board is less than the maximum number, the same lens plate may be used, and depending on the number of LEDs required, the LEDs can be positioned beneath a sub-set of the lenslets. A regular distribution of the used/unused lenslets across the area of the lens plate may be used to maintain light output uniformity. In this way, a certain level of freedom is achieved for the LED quantity.
[0097] For example, a minimum size of lenslet may be calculated to achieve a desired etendue.
[0098] The etendue for a flat surface with uniform divergence angle is given by:
E=πA sin.sup.2(θ.sub.1/2)
[0099] The value θ.sub.1/2 is the half angle of the light beam and the value A is the area of light emission. These parameters are shown in
[0100] For one example, the LED area may be 3 mm×3 mm=9 mm.sup.2.
[0101] The LED etendue is then given by:
E.sub.LED=π*9*sin.sup.2(90.sup.0)=28.3 mm.sup.2 steradian.
[0102] The lenslet requires the same etendue.
[0103] Hence, the lenslet etendue is given by:
E.sub.LENSLET=E.sub.LED=πA.sub.LENSLET sin.sup.2(θ.sub.LENSLET/2)
[0104] For a narrow beam, θ.sub.LENSLET=60.sup.0.
[0105] This gives A=28.3/π/(sin.sup.2(60.sup.0/2))=36 mm.sup.2.
[0106] This shows that the required linear size of the lenslet in this example is 6 mm to preserve the light output from an LED of area 3 mm×3 mm and when generating a narrow beam. This is just one example, to show the approximate minimum lenslet size that is appropriate for a real example of LED board.
[0107] The invention provides a lens plate design with a first surface comprising a plurality of individual cells, each cell delimiting one side of a respective lenslet of the array of lenslets and a second surface comprising a set of grooves, each groove delimiting a second, opposite side, of a sub-array of the lenslets of the array of lenslets. Thus, the groove extends along the path of multiple lenslets.
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[0109] The top example shows lenslets for producing a narrow beam, and the middle example shows lenslets for producing a very wide beam.
[0110] In both examples, each lenslet is defined by an individual cell 61. Each cell 61 in this example intersects with neighboring cells. By this is meant there is no spacing between lenslets in at least one direction. For example, the narrow beam lenslets in the top image contact each other in the row direction, and the very wide beam lenslets in the second image contact each other in both the row and column directions. The cells are thus as tightly packed as they can be at least in one direction, so that there is a large set of lenslet positions. This means that a LED board may be used with LEDs at a sub-set of those lenslet positions. This gives flexibility in the choice of the quantity of LEDs to be used with the lens plate.
[0111] The bottom example has ridges instead of individual cells. It is shown because the lens plate design may use the same second surface and hence it may also share tooling parts with the designs for the top two images.
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[0113] The cells of the first surface combine with the grooves of the second surface to define a desired function for the lenslet, such as a narrow beam, wide beam or very wide beam lens function.
[0114] Each of the individual cells is aligned with a respective groove 64, along an optical axis of the lens plate (i.e. in a normal direction through the lens plate, perpendicular to a general plane of the first and second surfaces). Thus, the grooves and cells are on opposite sides of the lens plate, and the optical axis is in the normal direction through the lens plate between the two surfaces.
[0115] The first surface is the light output surface (e.g. the top surface) and the second surface is the light input surface (e.g. the bottom surface), typically for receiving light from a LED. Each of the cells has a convex outer surface. This provides a focusing function.
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[0117] The rows and the grooves are preferably straight, so that the second surface has a constant cross sectional shape along the length of the lens plate. The lens plate is for example injection molded. The use of straight grooves allows for easier alignment between the top and bottom mold parts and thus enables simpler tooling. The lens plate is also less sensitive to the positioning over an LED board.
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[0119] The plot 80 shows the light distribution pattern for the lengthwise direction and for the widthwise direction (as they substantially overlap).
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[0121] The plot 90 shows the light distribution pattern for the lengthwise direction and for the widthwise direction (as they substantially overlap).
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[0123] The plot 100 shows the light distribution pattern for the lengthwise direction and for the widthwise direction (as they substantially overlap).
[0124] The designs of
[0125] As mentioned above, a further lens plate design may again use the same grooved second surface, but with of rows of ridges forming the first surface extending along the length of the lens plate, with a respective groove beneath each ridge. This defines for example a cylinder lens design, which shares the design of the second surface with the lens plate designs of the invention.
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[0130] The lens plate design of the invention, based on a lenslet size of 6 mm×6 mm, achieves all the basic optical performance requirements.
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[0133] The top image shows a LED board 160 with the full capacity of 225 LEDs. The second image shows the use of alternate rows of the lenslets, so there are three rows of 45 LEDs, hence 135 LEDs.
[0134] The third image shows the use of only two rows of the lenslets, so there are two rows of 45 LEDs, hence 90 LEDs.
[0135] The bottom image shows the use of only one row of lenslets, so there is one row of 45 LEDs.
[0136] In these last three examples, the LEDs of the array of LEDs are associated with a sub-set of the rows of lenslets.
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[0138] The top image shows the use of alternate columns of the lenslets, so there are 23 columns of five LEDs, hence 115 LEDs.
[0139] The second image shows the use of even further spaced columns (one in every three) of the lenslets, so there are 15 columns of five LEDs, hence 75 LEDs.
[0140] In these first two examples, the LEDs of the array of LEDs are associated with a sub-set of the columns of lenslets.
[0141] The last six examples show LED board layouts where the LEDs are associated with all of the rows and columns of lenslets but with each row of LEDs having LEDs associated with only a subset of the lenslets of a corresponding row of lenslets.
[0142] The number of LEDs in these six examples are 189, 180, 167, 150, 113 and 75.
[0143] The pattern of unused lenslets (and hence also the pattern of used lenslets) is preferably as uniform as possible along the length. To achieve this, it follows a repeating pattern, and the length of the repetition is as short as possible. Each row of LEDs preferably has the same number of LEDs so the pattern of unused LEDs is distributed evenly between the rows.
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[0145] The lens plate can thus be designed for this LED board by imposing a size limitation 10.5 mm×7.5 mm for the lenslets.
[0146] The resulting design is for example as shown in
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[0148] All three rows of lenslets are used in all five examples.
[0149] The top image shows the maximum capacity of 192 LEDs (corresponding to
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[0151] Some designs do not meet the desired Unified Glare Rating (UGR) requirements specified in the tables. In particular, it is difficult for a very wide lens beam to achieve an output with a desired UGR. This can, if desired, be compensated by the luminaire design.
[0152] In the examples above, the LEDs are each aligned with a center of a corresponding lenslet. However, there may be a deliberate offset of the LED, along a direction of the groove of the second surface, with respect to the center of the lenslet.
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[0155] The top image shows the LEDs 162 aligned with the center of each lenslet. The light intensity distribution basically corresponds to the very wide beam distribution of
[0156] The middle image shows the LEDs 162 moved away from the center of each lenslet and the junction between cells 61, in particular shifted by 2 mm. The light intensity distribution shows an asymmetrical beam in the (vertical) plane including the length direction of the line of lenslets. Thus, the shifting of the LED position along the groove steers the beam output along the groove direction. The light intensity distribution remains symmetrical in the plane including the width direction across the lenslets.
[0157] The bottom image shows the LEDs 162 positioned at the junction line, hence shifted by 5.5 mm. The light intensity distribution shows a double asymmetrical beam in the (vertical) plane including the length direction of the line of lenslets. Thus, the shifting of the LED position along the groove to the junction creates two beams, one through each of the adjacent lenslets, in the groove length direction. The light intensity distribution remains symmetrical in the plane including the width direction across the lenslets (because the arrangement is still symmetrical in the width direction).
[0158] The LEDs may all have the same relative positions, but different relative positions may be combined to provide a desired overall output beam pattern. A same LED board may thus be used with a same lens plate to achieve different light intensity distributions.
[0159] The examples above all have a lenslet above (at most) one LED. There may instead be multiple LEDs along the groove direction of a single lenslet.
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[0161] The top image shows two LEDs 162a, 162b along the groove 64 beneath a single lenslet cell 61. The light intensity distribution shows a widened beam in the (vertical) plane including the length direction of the line of lenslets. Thus, the use of two LEDs position along the groove creates a wide beam in the length direction.
[0162] The middle image shows a single LED 162 but offset from the center of the lenslet. Similar to the middle image of
[0163] The bottom image shows the central placement of the LED with respect to the cell 61 and thus shows the symmetrical distribution as discussed above.
[0164] The examples above all have the grooves running along the length of the light strip.
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[0166] More generally, there is one or more first sub-arrays (270a, 270c) of grooves (64), and one or more second sub-arrays (270b, 270d) of grooves (64). The grooves of each sub-array are parallel to each other, but the grooves of the first sub-array(s) are perpendicular to the grooves of the second sub-array(s).
[0167] The invention generally, and also the approach of
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[0170] The examples above all show cells which intersect with neighboring cells, at least along the line of cells. This is shown in
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[0172] The examples above all show square or rectangular lens plates. The lens plate may have any outer shape, and
[0173] The top image is a perspective view, the middle image is a top view of the cells 61 and the bottom image is a bottom view of the grooves 64.
[0174] The grooves are maintained as straight lines, and in this example, this is achieved based on an arrangement of the grooves into sub-arrays in the manner shown in
[0175] The examples above all have grooves and the associated cells formed in straight lines. However, they may instead also follow curved paths. For example, the lens plate may be circular with rings of cells and corresponding rings of grooves.
[0176] For a strip lighting approach, the length of the lens plate is for example at least 250 mm and the width is at most 50 mm. The lens plate may thus be long and thin, for example to form a high bay luminaire.
[0177] The row pitch is for example in the range 5 mm to 15 mm. However, the invention may be scaled to various sizes.
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[0181] In an example of the lens plate 20, the profiles of the cells are in a same or at least similar shape. This greatly reduces the effort needed for designing the optical structure of the lens plate 20. The shape of the cells is preferably a 3D protrusion which means it has a convex surface facing different directions.
[0182] Variations to the disclosed embodiments can be understood and effected by those skilled in the art in practicing the claimed invention, from a study of the drawings, the disclosure and the appended claims. In the claims, the word “comprising” does not exclude other elements or steps, and the indefinite article “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality.
[0183] The mere fact that certain measures are recited in mutually different dependent claims does not indicate that a combination of these measures cannot be used to advantage.
[0184] If the term “adapted to” is used in the claims or description, it is noted the term “adapted to” is intended to be equivalent to the term “configured to”.
[0185] Any reference signs in the claims should not be construed as limiting the scope.