Substrate-Guided Holographic Diffuser
20200142106 ยท 2020-05-07
Inventors
- Dimitry VOLOSCHENKO (Torrance, CA, US)
- FEDOR DIMOV (TORRANCE, CA, US)
- Kevin YU (Torrance, CA, US)
- Engin ARIK (Torrance, CA, US)
Cpc classification
G02F1/133606
PHYSICS
G02B6/0053
PHYSICS
G03H1/0408
PHYSICS
G02F1/133607
PHYSICS
G03H2001/0473
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A substrate-guided holographic diffuser has a light-guide section configured to in-couple light and transmit the light within itself via total internal reflection. It can also have a brightness enhancement section that recycles non-diffracted light within the light-guide section. A hologram section that receives light from the light-guide section has a holographic structure defining acceptance conditions and is positioned relative to the internally reflected light such that the internally reflected light meets the acceptance conditions of the holographic structure. The internally reflected light is out-coupled by the holographic structure as a projected image of light scattered from a diffuser.
Claims
1. A substrate-guided holographic diffuser comprising: a light-guide plate; a single holographic diffuser comprising a volumetric type hologram attached to a surface of the light-guide plate; wherein the hologram comprises an adjusted diffraction efficiency over the surface of the light-guide plate; wherein the adjusted diffraction efficiency comprises a length-wise diffraction efficiency gradient along the length of the hologram; and wherein the length-wise diffraction efficiency of hologram was recorded by adjusting an intensity ratio for recording wave fronts while varying a combined intensity of recording light across a photo-material used for recording the hologram.
2. The holographic diffuser of claim 1 further comprising a light source.
3. The holographic diffuser of claim 2 wherein the light source comprises at least one LED or laser diode.
4. The holographic diffuser of claim 2 wherein the light source comprises multiple LEDs or laser diodes.
5. The holographic diffuser of claim 1 wherein the wave fronts comprise a collimated wave front and a diffused wave front.
6. The holographic diffuser of claim 2 where the light is coherent or not coherent.
7. The holographic diffuser of claim 1 wherein the light-guide plate is substantially transparent or entirely transparent.
8. The holographic diffuser of claim 1 wherein the hologram is recorded using multiple wavelengths of laser lights for multi-color backlighting.
9. The holographic diffuser of claim 2 wherein the light source is coupled to the holographic diffuser by fiber optics.
10. The holographic diffuser of claim 8 wherein the multiple wavelengths of laser lights comprise 447 nm (blue), 530 nm (green), and 627 nm (red).
11. The holographic diffuser of claim 9 wherein the light-guide plate and the coupling fiber optics comprise the same material.
12. The holographic diffuser of claim 2 wherein the light source provides collimated light to the light-guide plate.
13. The holographic diffuser of claim 1 wherein the light-guide plate comprises a thickness ranging from 0.3-0.6 mm.
14. The holographic diffuser of claim 1 wherein the holographic diffuser is flexible, bendable, or rigid.
15. The holographic diffuser of claim 1 wherein the holographic diffuser comprises a thickness of about 20 microns.
16. The holographic diffuser of claim 2 wherein the holographic diffuser is positioned on the face of the light-guide plate that faces the light or on the opposite face from the light.
17. The holographic diffuser of claim 1 further comprising an anti-reflective coating on a surface of the light-guide plate.
18. The holographic diffuser of claim 1 wherein the light-guide plate comprises glass, polycarbonate, acrylic, polyolefin, or mixtures thereof.
19. The holographic diffuser of claim 1 wherein the light-guide plate comprises a value of light transmission of about 92-96%.
20. The holographic diffuser of claim 1 wherein the light-guide plate comprises a brightness uniformity of at least about 15% across a surface of the holographic diffuser.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0031] Although the present invention is susceptible to embodiment in various forms, there are shown in the drawings and will hereinafter be described preferred embodiments with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered as an exemplification of the invention and is not intended to limit the invention to specific embodiments illustrated.
[0032] It is to be further understood that the title of this section of the specification, namely, Detailed Description of the Preferred Embodiments relates to a rule of the United States Patent and Trademark Office, and is not intended to, does not imply, nor should be inferred to, limit the subject matter disclosed herein or the scope of the invention.
[0033] What follows is a successful design for a substrate-guided holographic diffuser, with the optical parameters comparable to LCD backlight based on common optics, with performance in terms of light-throughput efficiency, brightness (luminance), number of components used, weight, and cost that exceeds present LCD backlights that are based on optics common in the art.
[0034] Referring to
[0035] Another embodiment of this disclosure can have a divergent light from LED module(s) coupled into the transparent substrate-guided holographic diffuser. To cover a substantial area of the light-guide is easy with a divergent, rather than collimated light from an LED (or with any other light source used in the art).
[0036] Yet another embodiment of this disclosure is to use multi-color (e.g., white LEDs or other types of light sources) efficiently coupled to substrate-guided holographic diffuser element thus providing multi-color (e.g., white) illumination either for LCD or for architectural (or other type) of lighting. Substrate-guided holographic diffuser is made to accept multi-color wavelength bands (e.g., Red, Green, and Blue) by applying a substrate-guided color holographic recording.
[0037] In another embodiment of this disclosure, holographic element is of a surface-relief (thin) type, thus providing an efficient method for mass replication of substrate-guided holographic diffuser elements for LCD backlighting and for LED (or other type of light source) illumination.
[0038] In another embodiment of this disclosure, the geometry of the substrate-guided holographic diffuser can be of a wedge shape. Such a shape can increase the system efficiency through reduction of the opposite side light loss through light recycling.
[0039] In another embodiment of this disclosure, either reflecting or retro-reflecting surfaces can be applied for a flat-shaped (or wedge-shaped) substrate-guided holographic diffuser to increase the system efficiency by reducing the opposite side light-loss through light recycling. Similarly, all of the surfaces of the substrate-guided holographic diffuser, except for the side where light injecting light sources (e.g. LEDs) are positioned, have either reflecting or retro-reflecting surfaces deposited on them.
[0040] In yet another embodiment of this disclosure, a bendable material is used for substrate-guided holographic diffuser so that a substrate-guided holographic diffuser-based backlight can be used for flexible LCD displays.
[0041] The embodiments of this disclosure also contemplate replacement of either homogeneously or non-homogeneously spatially distributed dot patterns on one side of the LCD backlight with a holographically generated surface (or volume) structure.
[0042] An optically-fabricated diffuser with substrate-guided light input is produced through holographic recording using coherent collimated and diffused laser wave fronts. The diffuser can be made either for monochrome illumination or for multi-color (e.g., white light) illumination. In the latter case, color holographic recording is implemented. The diffuser is designed to accept the light from either one light source or from a plurality of light sources placed at its edge. The diffuser can be made either from a rigid or flexible optically transparent material. The brightness enhancement property is provided in a desired direction through control of the diffusion cone angle of the diffused laser wave front during holographic recording.
[0043] Referring to
[0044] It is further understood that either reflecting or retro-reflecting surfaces 380 may be formed on one or more sides of the light-guide plate 320 so that to increase the light throughput efficiency of the substrate-guided holographic diffuser backlight through re-cycling of non-diffracted light inside the plate 320.
[0045] LEDs 340 can be placed on one or more sides of the plate 320. Hologram 350 can be positioned either on the face of the plate 320 that faces the LCD, or on the opposite face from the LCD. The hologram 350 can also be placed or formed inside of the plate 320. The hologram 350 can also be placed either parallel or at some angle with respect to the horizontal direction on
[0046] Light sources 340 can be also compact lasers (e.g., diode lasers) with corresponding light output conditioning optics, either single color (e.g., green) or multi-color (e.g., red, green, and blue).
[0047] The plate 320 can be substantially transparent in at least a portion thereof, but may be also entirely transparent. The plate 320 can be made from a number of materials. For example, the plate 320 can be made of at least glass, polycarbonate plastic, acrylic plastic, polyolefin resin, or any other plastic used in the art. Such a plate 320 is at least operative when having a thickness of the 0.3-6 mm, but can also be operative at other thicknesses.
[0048] The plate 320 is depicted in the figures as a single, unitary body of a single material. However, the plate 320 may also comprise a plurality of bodies made of a single or a plurality of materials. A person of ordinary skill in the art will be capable of using ray-tracing software to determine whether the particular configuration of materials and bodies will serve to transmit the light 330 in-coupled from the LED 340 through the plate 320, and out-coupled at the hologram 350 towards the LCD.
[0049] The in-coupled light 330 is transmitted through the plate 320 through TIR. The substrate 320 must have an index of refraction, relative to the environmental medium, sufficient to internally reflect the light. For example, in space, the index of refraction is very close to 1; in air the index of refraction is about 1.00025 to 1.00030. Those of ordinary skill in the art will be able to calculate an angle of total internal reflection. E.g., R. Guenther, Modern Optics, p. 78 (Ed. 1990). Examples of high-index of refraction materials capable of total internal reflection with many media are polycarbonate plastic, acrylic plastic.
[0050] Transparent means that the plate 320 is capable of permitting light through to allow the light out-coupling at the surface hologram 350 towards the LCD. Accordingly, the plate 320 may be color tinted or have other modifications that do not render the device inoperative. For example, any material will have some amount of diffusion from imperfections or inclusions, but the diffusion should not be so great as to prevent the acceptance, conveyance, and transmission of the light by the plate 320.
[0051] The plate 320 can be made of a bendable (flexible) material thus capable of providing backlight for a flexible type LCD. Flexible LCDs are known to those skilled in the art as capable of changing their shape upon application of the mechanical bend, twist, or splay force, without any degradation in the image quality or mechanical wholeness of the device.
[0052] The LEDs 340 can be either just bare chip LEDs or packaged LEDs that include coupling optics that facilitate efficient light coupling between the LED chip and the light-guide plate 320. LEDs can be of a white color type. Also, LEDs can be of red (R), green (G), and blue (B) color type, all packaged together so as to provide either simultaneous illumination such as it is visible to an observer as a white light, or field-sequential illumination visible to the observer also as a white light. Also, LEDs can be of a single color to provide backlight for monochrome LCDs. LED electronic drivers known to those skilled in the art are used to drive the LEDs.
[0053] In one embodiment, substrate-guided holographic diffuser 350 is formed as a thick Bragg-type volumetric holographic optical element. This means that it diffracts the light into a single diffraction order. Hence, its diffraction efficiency can be very high (theoretically up to 100%). This results in a very high light throughput of the optical system (theoretically up to 100%), experimentally up to 80% can be achieved. The material for volumetric holographic recording of such an optical element can be, e.g., DuPont HRF700X318 photopolymer, either laminated or spin-coated onto the plate 320.
[0054] The substrate-guided holographic diffuser 350 can be integrally formed as an optically fabricated light-guiding element and a diffuser with a controlled diffusion cone angle in one, thus allowing to those skilled in the art to use substrate-guided holographic diffuser as an efficient single-component backlight for LCDs, and as an LED lighting component for architectural, office, street, etc. lighting.
[0055] One step in fabricating a Substrate-Guided Holographic Diffuser is to define the geometry of the holographic recording. The worker of ordinary skill in the art will need to take into account the consequences of some choices that he or she may make.
[0056] Referring further to
[0057] Wave front 460 is a diffused light generated by a diffuser (e.g., ground glass) 430 when collimated laser light 410 is incident upon it. Lambertian diffusers are discussed in more detail below. The distance I between the Lambertian diffuser 430 and the surface of the photo-material 450 controls the recorded (and later reconstructed) diffusion cone angle. It is desirable to have the thickness d of the plate 420 as thin as possible, so that a very thin LCD backlight can be made. Thicknesses as small as 0.3 mm are possible. Packaging requirements for the illuminating LED module may constrain how thin the thickness of the plate 420 can be.
[0058] Laser wave fronts 470 and 460 interfere in the photo-material 450 (thickness, e.g., 20 m), thus creating an interference pattern which, on post-processing of the photo-material, becomes a hologram (H,
[0059] In another embodiment of this disclosure wave front 460 is a diffused light generated by a light-control diffuser (e.g., Luminit LSD-type diffuser, or Engineered Diffuser made by RPC Photonics, Inc.) 430 with an appropriate diffusion cone angle when collimated laser light 410 is incident upon it (
[0060] It is further understood for those skilled in the art that adjusting of the diffraction efficiency across the light guide is desirable. A collimated light beam 570 on each bounce in the light guide (
[0061] Attention needs to be paid to the choice of the collimated vs. divergent wave front in laser recording and in subsequent LED illumination. Light beams 470 in
[0062] It is further understood that holographic recording of the surface 450 depicted on
[0063] In another embodiment of this disclosure, recording of a transmissive-type holographic optical element is brought about through directing both recording wave fronts 660 and 670 onto the recording material from its one side,
[0064] Wave front 660 is a diffused light generated by a Lambertian diffuser (e.g., ground glass) 630 when collimated laser light 610 is incident upon it (
[0065] In another embodiment of this disclosure wave front 660 is a diffused light generated by a light-control diffuser (e.g., Luminit LSD-type diffuser, or Engineered Diffuser made by RPC Photonics, Inc.) 630 with an appropriate diffusion cone angle when collimated laser light 610 is incident upon it (
[0066] Attention needs to be paid also to the emission cone angle of the backlight unit. A possibility to control this angle provides a great advantage and flexibility in design of efficient backlit LCDs. In addition, control of the emission cone angle is very important for LED-lighting applications. Emission cone angle of the holographic diffuser is related to the brightness enhancement factor (or, Gain factor G), as described below.
[0067] Brightness enhancement (or, Gain factor G) of a holographic diffuser is the ratio of the normal luminous intensity for the diffuser (a non-Lambertian source) to the gain factor for a Lambertian source. Luminous intensity for a Lambertian source is defined as J=J.sub.0 cos , where J is a luminous intensity in Cd. Non-Lambertian sources are described as J=J.sub.0 cos.sup.n , n>1. It is possible to show that
The Half-Width-Half-Maximum (HWHM) angle can be determined from cos.sup.n .sub.1/2=0.5=J/J.sub.0. Table 1 shows the relationship between various angular distributions and their corresponding values of Gain [Ref. 25].
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Luminous Intensity vs. Gain n HWHM, .sub.1/2 FWHM, 2.sub.1/2 G 1 60 120 1 2 45 90 1.5 3 37.5 75 2 4 33 66 2.5 5 29.5 59 3 6 27 54 3.5
[0068] The light-control diffuser is based on the principle that the higher the Gain, the narrower the angular light distribution will be,
[0069] In the embodiments described above one color only (e.g., green) was used for holographic recording and subsequent reconstruction using the same color LED light. Thus, the substrate-guided holographic diffuser can be made for monochrome illumination (one color) as desired for monochrome LCDs. In this case, just one laser wavelength is used in recording shown on
[0070] In another embodiment, the substrate-guided holographic diffuser can be made also for color illumination as desired for backlighting multi-color LCDs (e.g., two-color or full-color LCDs). The red (R), green (G), blue (B) color lasers that can be used for color recording might have, e.g., the following wavelengths: 647 nm, 532 nm, 457 nm. The R/G and B/G intensity ratios to get the right D65 White (x=0.31, y=0.33 of the 1931 CIE Chromaticity Diagram, (
[0071] Thus, white light holographic recording is brought about. The bandwidth of the recorded holographic structure has, at least, full width at half maximum (FWHM) 20 nm for each of the RGB colors. The optimal color substrate-guided holographic diffuser solution is narrow-band emission LEDs (FWHM 20 nm) of corresponding center emission wavelengths so that all of the emitted light is effectively coupled from the LEDs to the holographically-recorded diffuser 350.
[0072] In another embodiment, holographically-formed substrate-guided holographic diffuser replaces conventional homogeneous (or non-homogeneous) imprinted dot pattern (as shown in prior art
[0073] It should be further understood to those skilled in the art that brightness (luminance) of the substrate-guided holographic diffuser is controlled by the luminous output of the LED modules 340, which can provide either a constant value of their luminous output (and, consequently, the constant value for the substrate-guided holographic diffuser brightness), or a variable value of their luminous output (and, consequently, a variable value for the substrate-guided holographic diffuser brightness). The said constant or variable luminous output of the LED modules is controlled by LED electronic drivers in a way known to those skilled in the art. The brightness (luminance) uniformity of the substrate-guided holographic diffuser is defined as a maximum deviation from the average brightness over a plurality of points evenly distributed all over the surface of the substrate-guided holographic diffuser. Brightness (luminance) at each said point is measured experimentally using equipment known to those skilled in the art (e.g., using Konica-Minolta ChromaMeter CS-100) in the way known to those skilled in the art. The brightness uniformity is desirably no worse than 15% across the substrate-guided holographic diffuser surface.
[0074] It should be further understood that substrate-guided holographic diffuser for LCD backlighting provides substantial advantages over the existing state-of-the-art as described below. E.g., a current Luminit product line, www.luminitco.com, or RPC Photonics product line, www.rpcphotonics.com/products.asp consist of diffusers that are all designed to be illuminated from some distance from the diffuser surface. A proposed substrate-guided holographic diffuser is designed to be illuminated from its edge. This property provides a more efficient LCD backlighting solution for LCDs and LED lighting patches for LED-lighting that are more compact than current solutions. Contrary to conventional diffusers, substrate-guided holographic diffuser can direct the diffused light, and even create a real image of the holographically-formed surface 350. Table 2 provides comparison of substrate-guided holographic diffuser to other light diffusers.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Comparison of Light Diffusers: standard ground glass diffuser, Luminit standard diffuser, and the substrate-guided holographic diffuser Luminit Off-the- Standard Ground Shelf Standard Substrate-guided Glass Light Shaping Holographic Diffuser Diffuser Diffuser Transmission 20%-60% 85%-92% ~92% Angle range, ~10 deg, 0.2 deg-80 deg, 0.2 deg-80 deg, FWHM uncontrolled controlled controlled Light source Behind the Behind the At the edge of the placement diffuser, diffuser, diffuser ~a few cm away ~a few cm away Application Applicable as a Applicable as a Applicable as a for LCD part of the 6-7 part of the 6-7 single replacement backlighting component stack, component stack, for the 6-7 lots of light loss minimized light component stack, loss minimized light loss
[0075] The value of the light transmission of the substrate-guided holographic diffuser listed in Table 2 (92%) is the lowest taking into account Fresnel reflection light losses. It can be higher (up to 96%) when the coupling of light from the LED light source 340 into the plate 320 is optimized in the best way possible, i.e., there is no air gap between the LED light source 340 and the plate 320 and the coupling optics of the LED light source 340 is made of the same material as the plate 320. For the reflective type substrate-guided holographic diffuser, the light transmission value can be made even higher when, in addition to the optimized LED light source coupling, an anti-reflective coating is deposited on the substrate-guided holographic diffuser side opposite to the holographic surface H (
[0076] As a backlight unit for an LCD display application, the substrate-guided holographic diffuser-based illumination light patch is more compact than current solutions because it eliminates the need to place LEDs at some distance from the diffuser as in current state-of-the art. In addition, substrate-guided holographic diffuser replaces a 6-7 element stack of light-shaping elements needed to generate homogeneous bright illumination with a single substrate-guided holographic diffuser component.
[0077] It should be further understood that substrate-guided holographic diffuser for LCD backlighting provides substantial increase both in light throughput efficiency and substantial power savings over the current-state-of-the-art. Existing LCD backlights have at least 7 components (
[0078] It should be further understood also that substrate-guided holographic diffuser for LED lighting offers substantial advantages over existing technologies as described below. The requirement for reduced energy usage in architectural, street, etc. lighting applications is directly related to the efficiency of light-shaping elements: they should deliver a pre-designed light pattern with minimal light losses. At the same time, they need to provide flexibility and compactness in design. Substrate-guided holographic diffuser provides a solution for both of these requirements.
[0079] Another advantage of the substrate-guided holographic diffuser is provided by coupling practically all of the light from the LEDs to the diffuser. Such narrow-band LEDs are available from a number of manufacturers.
[0080] Yet another advantage of substrate-guided holographic diffuser compared to a regular diffuser is its ability to concentrate the diffused light if it is illuminated with a phase-conjugated beam.
[0081] The described embodiments of the substrate-guided holographic diffuser refer to methods and techniques to make a master diffuser. The master diffuser needs to be replicated. This can be done, e.g., using contact copying of volume (thick) holographic optical elements by means of a roll-to-roll web process. A flexible film such as static cling vinyl as an index matching material can be used. The advantage of this material is that it will suppress the recording of spurious holograms and will allow dry contact copying.
[0082] Another important factor in copying is that the photopolymer material requires an absorption liner such as black polyester or orange dyed polyester (available, e.g., from CPFilms) as a top liner to avoid recording spurious holograms.
[0083] Another aspect of the present invention relates to copying the master substrate-guided holographic diffuser in the case when the holographically-formed surface 350 is of the surface relief (thin) rather than of a volumetric type. In this case, the copying is brought about through a web-based molding process.
[0084] With regard to the foregoing, it will be observed that numerous modifications and variations can be effectuated without departing from the true spirit and scope of the novel concepts of the present inventions. It is to be understood that no limitation with respect to the specific embodiment illustrated should be inferred. The disclosure is intended to cover by the appended claims all such modifications as fall within the scope of the claims. All of the references that follow are incorporated by reference as if set forth fully herein.
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