Off-axis collimation optics
10689655 ยท 2020-06-23
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F21V5/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C12N2800/22
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F21V7/0091
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G02B19/0028
PHYSICS
F21Y2115/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V5/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C12N15/70
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F21W2131/103
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C12N2750/10022
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
G02B17/086
PHYSICS
International classification
C12N15/70
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F21V5/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V5/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G02B19/00
PHYSICS
Abstract
A light funnel collimator has a central lens surface and a back reflecting surface, shaped to provide a wider background beam and a narrower hotspot beam within but off-center of the wider beam. One of the beams is on-axis of the collimator, and the other beam is off-axis. The reflector is at least partly asymmetrical relative to the axis, and provides or contributes to the off-axis beam.
Claims
1. A collimator comprising a transparent body having: a central axis; a central cavity bounded by a circumferential surface and a front lens surface, the lens surface shaped to refract light from a predetermined location on the central axis in the cavity through the body to and out through a front exit surface; an outer reflector surface shaped to reflect light from the predetermined location refracted by the circumferential surface of the cavity through the body to and out through the front exit surface; wherein the reflector surface comprises first and second parts connected by an optically inactive surface, and at least one of said first and second parts is not symmetrical about the central axis; wherein the circumferential surface, the front lens surface and the outer reflector surface are arranged to direct the light in at least two beams outside the front exit surface, one of said beams on said central axis and the other of said beams having a center diverging from said central axis; and wherein said optically inactive surface connects a radially outer end of the first part of the reflector surface to a radially inward end of the second part of the reflector surface, and wherein both first and second parts each form an angle greater than zero degrees with respect to the central axis.
2. A collimator according to claim 1, wherein: said optically inactive surface is annular; one of said first and second parts of said reflector surface is between the optically inactive surface and the front exit surface; and the other of said first and second parts of said reflector surface is between the optically inactive surface and a rear end of the central cavity.
3. A collimator according to claim 1, wherein said first and second parts of the reflector surface are on different sides of said central axis and are not symmetrical with each other under rotation about said central axis, and said optically inactive surface extends rearwards from said front exit surface.
4. A collimator according to claim 1, wherein outside the front exit surface the beam diverging from said central axis is narrower than the on-axis beam.
5. A collimator according to claim 1, wherein outside the front exit surface the beam diverging from said central axis is wider than the on-axis beam.
6. A collimator according to claim 1 that provides an on-axis beam from the front lens surface.
7. A collimator according to claim 1 that provides outside the front exit surface a beam diverging from said central axis from the front lens surface.
8. A collimator according to claim 1 that provides outside the front exit surface a beam having a center parallel to the central axis from the other of the first and second parts of the reflector surface.
9. A collimator according to claim 1, wherein the reflector surface is totally internally reflecting for light from the predetermined location.
10. A collimator according to claim 1, further comprising a source of light at the predetermined location.
11. A collimator according to claim 10, wherein the source of light is Lambertian, and is coaxial with the central axis.
12. A collimator comprising a transparent body having: a central axis; a central cavity bounded by a circumferential surface and a front lens surface, the lens surface shaped to refract light from a predetermined location on the central axis in the cavity through the body to and out through a front exit surface; an outer reflector surface shaped to reflect light from the predetermined location refracted by the circumferential surface of the cavity through the body to and out through the front exit surface; wherein the reflector surface comprises first and second parts connected by an optically inactive surface, and at least one of said first and second parts is not symmetrical about the central axis; wherein the circumferential surface, the front lens surface and the outer reflector surface are arranged to direct the light in at least two beams outside the front exit surface, one of said beams on said central axis and the other of said beams having a center diverging from said central axis; wherein said first and second parts of the reflector surface are on different sides of said central axis and are not symmetrical with each other under rotation about said central axis, and said optically inactive surface extends rearwards from said front exit surface; and wherein said optically inactive surface comprises optically inactive surface portions on opposite sides of the central axis, connecting respective edges of the first and second parts of the reflector surface.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The above and other aspects, features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the following more particular description thereof, presented in conjunction with the following drawings wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(15) A better understanding of the features and advantages of the present invention will be obtained by reference to the following detailed description of the invention and accompanying drawings, which set forth illustrative embodiments in which the principles of the invention are utilized.
(16) In the following drawings all architectures are described in more detail:
(17) Referring to
(18) In general, references to a surface of rotation, rotationally symmetric surface, or similar indicate that the surface can be generated by rotation of a generator line, which may be straight, curved, or of a more complicated shape, about an axis, but do not require that the physical surface forms a complete annulus about the axis, nor that the axial ends of the physical surface form circles coaxial with the axis. As will be explained below, many of the embodiments described can be formed with surfaces that may be either a single annulus or two or more distinct arcs, and in many of the embodiments an axial boundary may be a junction (with or without an optically inactive step) between surfaces that are rotationally symmetric about different axes.
(19) The back of photon funnel 200 is formed by a single continuous surface, represented by curves 206 and 207 in
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(21) Lens 400 in
(22) Lens 500 in
(23) Lens 600 in
(24) Lens surface 615 and reflective surface 613, which forms the rear part of the TIR back surface of light funnel 600, is rotationally symmetric around source axis 605. Rays 705 (see
(25) As may be seen from
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(27) Various methods of construction can be used to obtain a back surface of a photon funnel to provide off-axis illumination or non rotationally symmetric illumination:
(28) 1. The whole or a section of a rotationally symmetrical collimating back surface such as surface 611 is tilted (
(29) 2. In
(30) 3. For large off-axis angles or for a more complex off-axis or non rotationally symmetrical radiation pattern, a new back surface can be derived.
(31) Although specific embodiments have been described, the person skilled in the art will understand how features of different embodiments may be combined, and how features may be substituted or modified, without departing from the scope of the claimed invention.
(32) For example, although the reflectors 206, 207, 406, 407, 506, 507, 602 have each been described as a single rotationally symmetrical surface, any of them may be designed by any of the methods described with reference to any of
(33) For example, although a light source consisting of one or more LEDs in a plane has been described, other forms of light source, including light sources hereafter to be invented or developed, may be used. However, if the light source is not Lambertian, the shape of the lens and the reflecting back surface for a given beam pattern may be different. In the interests of simplicity, the LED has been approximated to a point source. Those skilled in the art will understand how a light source of non-negligible size will affect the shapes of the lens and reflector, and may limit the attainable precision of the beam pattern.
(34) For example, although in all the embodiments the lens 202, etc. is a single optical surface producing a single beam, the lens may, like the reflector 602, 613 or 1001, 1002, be divided into two or more sections producing distinct beams.
(35) The preceding description of the presently contemplated best mode of practicing the invention is not to be taken in a limiting sense, but is made merely for the purpose of describing the general principles of the invention. The full scope of the invention should be determined with reference to the Claims.