Vehicle lamp and projection lens
11448377 · 2022-09-20
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F21S41/148
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21S41/275
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21S41/25
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21S41/141
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21S41/33
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21S43/50
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F21S41/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21S41/275
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21S43/50
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21S41/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21S41/33
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A vehicle lamp is provided with a projection lens having a lens profile with a rear major surface with a convex curvature and a front surface with a concave curvature. A rear height of the rear major surface is greater than a front height of the front surface. The lamp has a plurality of light sources 36 and a reflector configured to reflect the light emitted from the plurality light of sources towards the projection lens. As the lens profile is swept along a curve length, at least one of the rear convex curvature or the front concave curvature varies. The light output from the front surface of the projection lens is generally uniform along the curve length.
Claims
1. A projection lens comprising: a lens profile having a convex rear surface and a concave front surface wherein the lens profile sweeps along a curve length to define a continuous blade wherein the convex rear surface and front concave surface are swept continuously along the curve length, wherein at a first length position of the convex rear surface has a first convex curvature, and has a second convex curvature different from the first convex curvature at a second length position oriented at least one of a sweep angle or rake angle from the first length position, wherein the rake angle is the deviation of an optical axis in a horizontal plane and the sweep angle is the deviation of the optical axis from a vertical plane, where the optical axis extends from the convex rear surface to the concave front surface.
2. The projection lens of claim 1 wherein a front surface height is less than a rear surface height along the curve length.
3. The projection lens of claim 2 wherein the front surface height is less than a profile thickness between the convex rear surface and the concave front surface.
4. The projection lens of claim 2 wherein the front height is generally constant along the curve length.
5. The projection lens of claim 1 wherein the lens profile height decreases from the convex rear surface to the concave front surface.
6. The projection lens of claim 1 wherein a profile thickness between the convex rear surface and the concave front surface is generally constant.
7. The projection lens of claim 1 wherein a profile thickness between the convex rear surface and the concave front surface varies along the curve length.
8. A projection lens comprising: a lens profile with a rear major surface with a convex curvature and a front major surface with a concave curvature, wherein as the lens profile is swept along a curve length to form a lens body where the front major surface and rear major surface are continuous along the curve length, wherein at least one of the rear convex curvature or the front concave curvature varies.
9. The projection lens of claim 8 wherein a rear height of the rear major surface is greater than a front height of the front major surface.
10. The projection lens of claim 8 wherein the curve length has at least one of a sweep angle or rake angle, wherein the rake angle is the deviation of an optical axis in a horizontal plane and the sweep angle is the deviation of the optical axis from a vertical plane, where the optical axis extends from the rear major surface to the front surface concave surface.
11. The projection lens of claim 8 wherein the convex curvature of the rear major surface varies along the curve length while the concave curvature of the concave front surface remains constant.
12. The projection lens of claim 8 wherein the front height is less than a profile thickness between the convex rear surface and the concave front surface.
13. The projection lens of claim 8 wherein light output from the front major surface of the projection lens is generally uniform along the curve length.
14. The projection lens of claim 8 wherein a profile thickness between the rear major surface and the front major surface varies along the curve length.
15. The projection lens of claim 8 wherein the lens profile height decreases from the rear major surface to the front major surface.
16. The projection lens of claim 8 wherein the front surface height is less than a profile thickness between the rear major surface and the front major surface.
17. A light blade lens comprising: a lens body having a convex rear surface to redirect and reshape a light input towards a concave front surface, wherein the concave rear surface and concave front surface are continuous and swept along a blade length to define a blade lens, wherein a front height of the concave front surface is less than a rear height of the rear concave surface, wherein a contour of at least one of the convex rear surface or the concave front surface varies along the blade length being transverse to the front and rear height.
18. The light blade lens of claim 17 wherein a profile thickness between the convex rear surface and the concave front surface varies along the blade length.
19. The light blade lens of claim 17 wherein a height of the lens body decreases from the convex rear surface to the concave front surface.
20. The light blade lens of claim 17 wherein the front height is less than a thickness between the convex rear surface and the concave front surface.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(10) As required, detailed embodiments of the present invention are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary of the invention that may be embodied in various and alternative forms. The figures are not necessarily to scale; some features may be exaggerated or minimized to show details of particular components. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention.
(11) Automotive lighting, such as headlamps or signal lamps, have increasingly styled features and design. These aesthetic designs must simultaneously meet federal automotive lighting regulations. One aesthetic design is the narrow, pencil-thin light ribbon that may be used in lamps for signal lighting functions or other lit portions of a vehicle lamp that require a thin illuminated strip of light.
(12) Traditional lamp and lens designs limit the height of the light strip without suffering major efficiency losses. These efficiency losses prevent the light strip from being too thin. In order to overcome the efficiency losses with a thin light strip, a steep increase in input flux from the light source is required, which results in higher cost of the light source components and increased thermal concerns within the lamp structure.
(13) Another challenge of thin light strip designs is providing uniform light output even when the styling requires aggressive contours along the length of the light strip. The styling may require the light strip to follow the rake and sweep contours of the vehicle, while still providing light output along a single optical axis.
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(15) As shown in
(16) A light source 36 is positioned rearward of the light blade lens 12. The vehicle lamp 10 also has a reflector 38 configured to reflect the light emitted from the light source 36 towards the lens 12. The reflector 38 may be a parabolic reflector configured to generally collimate light emitted from the light source 36 toward the lens 12. As shown in
(17) The variable lens profile 14 has a rear height RH that is greater than a front height FH. To define the longitudinal shape of the light blade lens 12, the lens profile 14 is swept along a curve length 40, as shown in
(18) As shown in
(19) In order to maintain generally uniform light output that is parallel to an optical axis 34 along the length 40, at least one lens parameter is varied along the curve length as the rake and sweep angles vary.
(20) The rear height RH and front height FH of the lens 12 are a height dimension that is orthogonal to a central plane 50 of the lens 12. The rear height RH and front height FH may also be defined between the first and second angled surfaces 22, 24, at the rear surface 16 and at the front surface 20, respectively. The first and second angled surfaces 22, 24 converge so that the front height FH is less than the rear height RH and the front height FH defines the thin lit opening of the light blade lens 12.
(21) The rear height RH may also define a rear chord of the rear curvature 30, and the front height FH may define a front chord of the front curvature 32 where a chord is a line segment joining two points on a curve.
(22) The rear and front curvatures 30, 32 may be determined by iterating design variables until desired photometric performance and lit appearance is achieved. The convex rear curvature 30 is designed to collect and re-shape a collimated beam of light reflected from a reflector 38. The concave front curvature 32 maybe designed to have a desired light distribution and/or meet regulatory light intensity distribution requirements. For example, the convex and concave curvatures 30, 32 may be based on the constraint variables FH, RH and blade thickness T. An appropriate front-side tangency control angle α may be found iteratively to define the front side curvature of the thick blade which spreads the incoming tapering beam by the appropriate amount to meet regulatory and lit appearance requirements. Ray-traces are back-traced to locate an offset (x) of the light source from the reflector based on the package constraints of the lens 12. The shape of the reflector 38 can then be created to have the appropriate focal length (f) and left-right spread (s) along the curve length 40. The radius (r) of the rear convex curvature is created at each section based on the iterative ray tracing.
(23) The convex curvature 30 extends in a height direction. The rear surface 16 may also include a plurality of tailored contours 26 extending in a length direction of the curve length, as shown in
(24) The resulting lens 12 has profile where the front height FH is less than a profile thickness T between the rear surface 16 and the front surface 20. In addition, at least one of the rear convex curvature 30 or the front concave curvature 32 varies along the curve length 40 that curves is three-dimensional space in rake and sweep angles. As shown in the embodiment illustrated in
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(26) As shown in
(27) In another embodiment, the profile thickness T between the rear surface 16 and the front surface 20 varies along the curve length 40. In another embodiment, the front height FH may be generally constant along the curve length 40 of the lens 12 while the rear height RH varies along the curve length 40.
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(29) As shown in
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(31) While exemplary embodiments are described above, it is not intended that these embodiments describe all possible forms of the invention. Rather, the words used in the specification are words of description rather than limitation, and it is understood that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Additionally, the features of various implementing embodiments may be combined to form further embodiments of the invention.