Highly efficient medical headlamp
11560998 · 2023-01-24
Assignee
Inventors
- John Thomas Ferguson (Portland, OR, US)
- Ned Nestorovic (Woodinville, WA, US)
- Jack Schmidt (San Marcos, CA, US)
Cpc classification
F21V5/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21L4/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V7/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G02B19/0028
PHYSICS
F21Y2115/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21Y2113/13
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V21/084
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V11/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
A61B90/30
HUMAN NECESSITIES
F21V7/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V5/008
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F21V11/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V7/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V5/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V21/084
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V7/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A high-efficiency lamp, emitting light from a front surface, and having a high-efficiency light source, producing a first light beam. An iris assembly has an annular body that defines a first annulus and has iris blades which can be extended into the annulus to form a second, smaller, annulus. This iris assembly is positioned relative to the light source so that the iris blades are in front of the high-efficiency light source. The annular body and therefore the first annulus have finite depth from back to front. A light guide is placed immediately behind the iris blades and defines a channel that is open at its back and its front and has a reflective interior surface, with the open back being transversely coincident to the light source so that light from the light source can travel through the channel to and out from the open front.
Claims
1. A high-efficiency medical headlamp, emitting a light beam from a front surface, and comprising: a) a cylindrical housing, being no greater than 5 cm in diameter and 10 cm long, including an aft barrel and a lens-holder; b) a high-efficiency light source, supported in said housing, producing a first light beam; and c) a light guide supported in said housing immediately in front of said high-efficiency light source and defining a channel that is open at its back and its front, said channel having a front surface, and having a reflective interior surface, said open back being transversely coincident to said light source so that light from said light source can travel through said channel to and out from said open front; d) said lens-holder fittingly engaged to and supported by said aft barrel; e) an optical assembly, including at least one refractive lens supported in said lens-holder in front of said light guide and having a front surface that is also said front surface of said high-efficiency medical headlamp and having a rear surface; and f) wherein said rear surface of said optical assembly is separated by a gap from a plane aligned to said front surface of said channel, so that light from said light guide is projected onto said rear surface of said optical assembly.
2. The high-efficiency medical headlamp of claim 1, wherein said optical assembly consists of a single refractive lens, only.
3. The high-efficiency medical headlamp of claim 2, wherein said reflective interior surface is made of a material, selected from a group consisting essentially of aluminum and nickel.
4. The high-efficiency medical headlamp of claim 1, wherein said gap is greater than 15 mm.
5. The high-efficiency medical headlamp of claim 4, wherein said channel is less than 10 mm in diameter at said open front.
6. The high-efficiency medical headlamp of claim 1, wherein said channel has a length and wherein said gap is greater than said length.
7. The high-efficiency medical headlamp of claim 1, further including an iris assembly, having iris blades.
8. The high-efficiency medical headlamp of claim 7, wherein said front of said channel extends to within 2 mm of said iris blades.
9. The high-efficiency medical headlamp of claim 1, wherein said high-efficiency light source is an LED assembly.
10. The high-efficiency medical headlamp of claim 9, wherein said LED assembly includes a square LED die.
11. The high-efficiency medial headlamp of claim 9, wherein said LED assembly includes a square die.
12. The high-efficiency medial headlamp of claim 9, wherein said LED assembly is color tunable, producing different colored light according to an input.
13. The high-efficiency medical headlamp of claim 1, wherein said high-efficiency light source has a front portion that is inside said channel.
14. The high-efficiency medical headlamp of claim 1, wherein said channel is transversely round.
15. The high-efficiency medical headlamp of claim 1, further including an iris supported in said housing between said high-efficiency light source and said single lens.
16. The high-efficiency medical headlamp of claim 1, wherein said iris has iris blades and a housing and said housing defines an annulus behind said iris blades and said light guide extends into said annulus.
17. A high-efficiency lamp that emits a beam from a front surface, and comprising: a) a housing and a high-efficiency light source supported in said housing; b) a light guide supported in said housing immediately in front of said high efficiency light source and defining a channel that is open at its back and its front and having a reflective interior surface, said channel having a front surface, said open back being transversely coincident to said light source so that light from said light source can travel through said channel to and out from said open front, and having a length; c) an optical assembly, including at least one refractive lens, supported in said housing in front of said light guide and having a front surface that is also said front surface of said high-efficiency lamp, said optical assembly having a rear surface; d) wherein said rear surface of said optical assembly is displaced from a plane aligned to said front surface of said channel by at least said length of said channel, so that light from said light guide is projected onto said rear surface of said optical assembly.
18. The high-efficiency lamp of claim 17, wherein said optical assembly consists of a single refractive lens, only.
19. The high-efficiency lamp of claim 17, further including an iris assembly having iris blades, and wherein said iris blades are placed within 2 cm of said front of said channel.
20. The high-efficiency lamp of claim 17, wherein said channel expands outwardly as it extends from back to front.
21. The high-efficiency lamp of claim 20, wherein said reflective interior surface is made of a material, selected from a group consisting essentially of aluminum and nickel.
22. The high-efficiency lamp of claim 17, wherein said channel has a length and wherein said gap is greater than said length.
23. A high-efficiency medical headlamp, emitting a light beam from a front surface, and comprising: a) a cylindrical housing, being no greater than 5 cm in diameter and 10 cm long; b) a high-efficiency light source, supported in said housing, producing a first light beam; and c) a light guide supported in said housing immediately in front of said high-efficiency light source and defining a channel that is open at its back and its front, said channel having a front surface, and having a reflective interior surface, said open back being transversely coincident to said light source so that light from said light source can travel through said channel to and out from said open front; and d) an optical assembly, including at least one refractive lens supported in said housing in front of said light guide and having a front surface that is also said front surface of said high-efficiency medical headlamp and having a rear surface; and e) wherein the rearmost portion of said rear surface of said optical assembly is separated by a gap from a plane aligned to said front surface of said channel, so that light from said light guide is projected onto said rear surface of said optical assembly.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1) Various embodiments of the invention are disclosed in the following detailed description and accompanying drawings.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION AND EMBODIMENTS
(10) The following is a detailed description of exemplary embodiments to illustrate the principles of the invention. The embodiments are provided to illustrate aspects of the invention, but the invention is not limited to any embodiment. The scope of the invention encompasses numerous alternatives, modifications and equivalent; it is limited only by the claims.
(11) Numerous specific details are set forth in the following description in order to provide a thorough understanding of the invention. However, the invention may be practiced according to the claims without some or all of these specific details. For the purpose of clarity, technical material that is known in the technical fields related to the invention has not been described in detail so that the invention is not unnecessarily obscured.
(12) To assist the description of the scope and its components the coordinate terms [“back” and “front”] are used to describe the disclosed embodiments. The terms are used consistently with the description of the exemplary applications and are in reference to the front surface being the surface from which light is emitted.
(13) Referring to
(14) Actuation ring 18 can be rotated to change the size of the beam of light emitted and therefore of the spot of light created by the beam. Referring, now, to
(15) A light guide member 40 has three legs 42 that engage with matching holes defined in the aft barrel 14, extending through apertures in substrate 32. Light guide member 40, further includes a light guide 44 that defines a channel 46, open at its front and back, and having a reflective interior surface. In one embodiment, the front of LED assembly 30 extends into the rear portion of channel 46, as shown. In this embodiment, in one variant, the gap between the side surface of LED assembly 30 and the interior surface of the rear end of channel 46 is nowhere greater than 2 mm. In another embodiment, this gap is nowhere greater than 1 mm. In another embodiment, this gap is nowhere greater 0.5 mm. Further, in one embodiment, an iris 50, permits a user to change the width of the light beam that is emitted from the lens 20. An iris actuation pin 52 is engaged to ring 18, permitting a user to adjust the iris by rotating ring 18. Iris blades 56 move inwardly or outwardly from annular housing 54, according to the position of pin 52, creating a smaller or larger light spot. Annular housing 54 defines an annulus 58 (
(16) Notably, in an embodiment where light guide member 40, or even just light guide 44 is made of a highly thermally conductive metal, such as aluminum, it helps to draw heat away from LED assembly 30, thereby helping to maintain LED assembly 30 at a low temperature, thereby increasing the efficiency of LED assembly 30, which is decreased when the temperature of the LED increases. In embodiments light guide member 30 is constructed with additional legs 42, added fins, and/or protrusions that touch the interior of the housing 12 for the purpose of drawing even more heat away from LED assembly 30. In one embodiment a more powerful LED assembly 30 is used than could otherwise be used because the light guide member draws heat away so efficiently that an LED assembly 30 that produces more heat than could otherwise be tolerated by the system can be used.
(17) The headlamp described above can generally produce more light per unit of power applied to it than previously available headlamps. It is 5 also more compact, thereby reducing total headlamp weight. In a preferred embodiment, the headlamp produces between 130-140 lumens per watt and runs between three and four Watts with a weight ranging from two to four ounces. In one preferred embodiment, bare LED assembly 30 is a Cree® XP-L High Intensity LED.
(18) Referring to
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(20) Referring to
(21) An advantage of the configuration of headlamp 10, is that a single design for the optical portion (not including LED assembly 30 or light guide member) can accommodate a wide variety of different LED types. One LED type may be better, emitting light having different characteristics, than another LED type. Both square and round LED dies may be used, with the same optical, front end, design. Further, an LED assembly 30 having multiple LED dies is used in one embodiment. In one embodiment, LED assembly 30 is color tunable. Accordingly, a method of producing headlamps, includes producing optical front ends, of a single design, and back ends including LED dies and light guide members of differing types, with associated supporting elements of a variety of types, and putting a first back end together with the optical front end for a first type of medical headlamp having a first set of characteristics, and then putting a second back end together with the optical front end, to produce a headlamp having a second set of characteristics.
(22) The disclosed embodiments are illustrative, not restrictive. While specific configurations of medical headlamps have been described, it is understood that the present invention can be applied to a wide variety of optical technology. There are many alternative ways of implementing the invention.