Chromatic reflective unit
10222520 ยท 2019-03-05
Assignee
Inventors
- Paolo Di Trapani (Cavallasca, IT)
- Davide Magatti (Capiago Intimiano, IT)
- Antonio Lotti (Arcisate Varese, IT)
Cpc classification
F21V9/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C03C17/34
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
E04F13/077
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
F21V7/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F21V9/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C03C17/34
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F21V7/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
E04F13/077
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
F21V7/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A chromatic diffusing layer (510) comprises a plurality of nanoparticles (37) embedded in a matrix (39), for Rayleigh-like scattering with an average size d in the range 10 nmd240 nm, and a ratio between the blue and red scattering optical densities Log [R(450 nm)]/Log [R(630 nm)] of said chromatic reflective unit falls in the range 52.5, where R() is the monochromatic normalized specular reflectance of the chromatic reflective unit, which is the ratio between the specular reflectance of the chromatic reflective unit and the specular reflectance of a reference sample identical to the chromatic reflective unit except for the fact that the chromatic diffusing layer does not contain nanoparticles with the size d in the range 10 nmd240 nm and for the direction normal to the reflective layer (508) of the chromatic reflective unit (506), the monochromatic normalized specular reflectance R() of the chromatic reflective unit at a wavelength of 450 nm is in the range from about 0.0025 to about 0.15, such as defined by the equations 0.0025R(450 nm)0.15, 0.0025R(450 nm)0.05, 0.0025R(450 nm)0.04.
Claims
1. A chromatic reflective unit comprising: a reflective layer, and a chromatic diffusing layer having a back side provided at the reflective layer and a front side for being illuminated by incident light, wherein the chromatic diffusing layer comprises a plurality of nanoparticles embedded in a matrix, and is configured to provide for a specular reflectance that is larger in the red than in the blue and for a diffuse reflectance that is larger in the blue than in the red, wherein: said nanoparticles have an average size d in the range 10 nmd240 nm; the ratio between the blue and red scattering optical densities Log[R(450 nm)]/Log[R(630 nm)] of said chromatic reflective unit falls in the range 52.5, where R() is the monochromatic normalized specular reflectance of the chromatic reflective unit, which is the ratio between the specular reflectance of the chromatic reflective unit and the specular reflectance of a reference sample identical to the chromatic reflective unit except for the fact that the chromatic diffusing layer does not contain nanoparticles with the size d in the range 10 nmd240 nm; for the direction normal to the reflective layer of the chromatic reflective unit, the monochromatic normalized specular reflectance R() of the chromatic reflective unit at a wavelength of 450 nm is in the range from about 0.0025 to about 0.15.
2. The chromatic reflective unit of claim 1, wherein for the direction normal to the reflective layer of the chromatic reflective unit, the monochromatic normalized specular reflectance of the chromatic reflective unit at wavelength 450 nm is 0.0025R(450 nm)0.05.
3. The chromatic reflective unit of claim 1, further comprising a support structure for supporting the reflective layer or the reflective layer being configured as a support structure, wherein the reflective layer extends along the chromatic diffusing layer and or is attached to the chromatic diffusing layer and/or is attached to the support structure.
4. The chromatic reflective unit of claim 1, wherein the relative refraction index
5. The chromatic reflective unit of claim 1, wherein the maximum filling fraction is f0.4, or f10.sup.2.
6. The chromatic reflective unit of claim 1, wherein: the chromatic diffusing layer has a thickness variation lower than 40%, 30%, or 10% over lateral circular areas with diameter smaller than 20 cm or over later circular areas with diameter 3 cm; or the chromatic diffusing layer has a thickness of 1 mm to 2 mm or a thickness that is less than the lateral extent or less than 50% of the lateral extent or less than 0.5 mm or about 0.1 mm.
7. The chromatic reflective unit of claim 1, wherein the number of nanoparticles per unit area of the chromatic diffusing layer averaged over lateral circular areas with diameter 2 mm, does not vary more than 20%, 10%, or 5%, among lateral circular areas within every region with diameter of 10 cm on at least 80% of the surface of the chromatic reflective unit.
8. The chromatic reflective unit of claim 1, wherein the reflective layer is at least one of: continuously extending the substrate structure, directly applied on and structurally directly connected to the substrate structure; a continuous metal layer on the substrate structure; having a thickness providing for a reflectivity of at least 65% or at least 75% or at least 85% for light having passed through the chromatic diffusing layer; and formed by a surface portion of the support structure.
9. The chromatic reflective unit of claim 1, wherein at least part of the reflective layer has a shape that is planar or curved convex curved or concave curved.
10. The chromatic reflective unit of claim 1, wherein the chromatic reflective unit further comprises a mounting structure configured to mount the chromatic reflective unit, the support structure, the reflective layer, and/or the chromatic diffusing layer.
11. The chromatic reflective unit of claim 1, wherein: the support structure comprises a supporting structure made of glass, a sandwich structure, PMMA, a metal or aluminum having applied thereon and/or integrated therein the reflective layer and/or the chromatic diffusing layer, or the sandwich structure is an aluminum or steel composite panel having a mount-sided stabilizing layer, an illumination-sided stabilizing layer, and a core layer there-between, wherein the reflective layer is provided on or integrated into the illumination-sided stabilizing layer and the chromatic diffusing layer is applied onto the reflective layer or onto the illumination-sided stabilizing layer.
12. The chromatic reflective unit of claim 1, wherein: a difference in the refractive index of the nanoparticles with respect to the refractive index of the matrix, a size distribution of the nanoparticles, and a number of nanoparticles per unit surface area are selected to provide for the specular reflectance that is larger in the red than in the blue and for the diffuse reflectance that is larger in the blue than in the red, or the differences in the specular reflectance and the diffuse reflectance are given as average values with respect to a blue portion and a red portion in the visible light spectrum, or within a blue portion in the spectral range from 450 nm to 500 nm and a red portion in the spectral range from 620 nm to 670 nm.
13. The chromatic reflective unit of claim 1, wherein the nanoparticles contributing to the differences in the specular reflectance and the diffuse reflectance and the matrix are essentially non-absorbing.
14. The chromatic reflective unit of claim 1, wherein the chromatic diffusing layer is a matrix based layer a coating, a paint, or a bulk material.
15. The chromatic reflective unit of claim 1, wherein the chromatic diffusing layer further comprises at least one of: particles contributing to absorption of a limited spectral range such as in the infrared spectrum and/or in the ultraviolet spectrum and/or in a specific spectral range for superimposing a coloring to the appearance of the chromatic reflective unit; and particles having a size larger than the nanoparticles contributing to the differences in the specular reflectance and the diffuse reflectance that contribute to an increase in forward scattering, thereby decreasing the specular reflectance, and wherein the specular reflectance is decreased essentially independent of the color.
16. The chromatic reflective unit of claim 1, wherein the chromatic diffusing layer further comprises at least one of low angle diffusing particles within the matrix and/or a micro surface structure contributing to forming a low-angle scattering cone around the specular reflection and having a size larger than the nanoparticles particles contributing to the differences in the specular reflectance and the diffuse reflectance, and wherein the low angle diffusing particles scatter light within an angular fan with a full width half maximum (FWHM) divergence that is three times smaller or four times smaller than the FWHM divergence generated by the nanoparticles contributing to the differences in the specular reflectance and the diffuse reflectance.
17. A lighting system comprising: a light source configured to generate a visible light beam; a chromatic stratified panel structure of claim 1, illuminated by the light source, wherein a portion of the light beam forms an illuminating light beam by passing through the chromatic stratified panel structure essentially unscattered, and a portion of the light of the light beam is Rayleigh scattered by the nanoparticles within the chromatic stratified panel structure.
18. The lighting system of claim 17, wherein a first color of the Rayleigh scattered light and a second color of the essentially not Rayleigh-like scattered direct light are separated in uv-color space by at least 0.008 or at least 0.02 or 0.03; and/or a direct light correlated color temperature is close to the black body color temperature, in the range from 800 K to 6500 K; and/or a first color is associated with a diffuse light correlated color temperature that is different from the direct light correlated color temperature of the light beam; and/or a direct light correlated color temperature differs from a diffuse light correlated color temperature by a factor of 0.85 or less.
19. A chromatic reflective unit comprising: a reflective layer, and a chromatic diffusing layer having a back side provided at the reflective layer and a front side for being illuminated by incident light, wherein the chromatic diffusing layer comprises a plurality of nanoparticles embedded in a matrix, and is configured to provide for a specular reflectance that is larger in the red than in the blue and for a diffuse reflectance that is larger in the blue than in the red, wherein: said nanoparticles have an average size d in the range 10 nmd240nm; the ratio between the blue and red scattering optical densities Log[R(450 nm)]/Log[R(630 nm)] of said chromatic reflective unit falls in the range 52.5, where R() is the monochromatic normalized specular reflectance of the chromatic reflective unit, which is the ratio between the specular reflectance of the chromatic reflective unit and the specular reflectance of a reference sample identical to the chromatic reflective unit except for the fact that the chromatic diffusing layer does not contain nanoparticles with the size d in the range 10 nmd240nm; for the direction normal to the reflective layer of the chromatic reflective unit the monochromatic normalized specular reflectance of the chromatic reflective unit at wavelength 450 nm is 0.05R(450 nm)0.15.
20. A chromatic reflective unit comprising: a reflective layer, and a chromatic diffusing layer having a back side provided at the reflective layer and a front side for being illuminated by incident light, wherein the chromatic diffusing layer comprises a plurality of nanoparticles embedded in a matrix, and is configured to provide for a specular reflectance that is larger in the red than in the blue and for a diffuse reflectance that is larger in the blue than in the red, wherein: said nanoparticles have an average size d in the range 10 nmd240 nm; the ratio between the blue and red scattering optical densities Log[R(450 nm)]/Log[R(630 nm)] of said chromatic reflective unit falls in the range 52.5, where R() is the monochromatic normalized specular reflectance of the chromatic reflective unit, and R() is the ratio between the specular reflectance of the chromatic reflective unit and the specular reflectance of a reference sample identical to the chromatic reflective unit except for the fact that the chromatic diffusing layer does not contain nanoparticles with the size d in the range 10 nmd240 nm; wherein along the direction normal to the reflective layer the number of nanoparticles per unit area is
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated herein and constitute a part of the specification, illustrate exemplary embodiments of the disclosure and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the disclosure. In the drawings:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(25) The following is a detailed description of exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure. The exemplary embodiments described therein and illustrated in the drawings are intended to teach the principles of the present disclosure, enabling those of ordinary skill in the art to implement and use the present disclosure in many different environments and for many different applications. Therefore, the exemplary embodiments are not intended to be, and should not be considered as, a limiting description of the scope of patent protection. Rather, the scope of patent protection shall be defined by the appended claims.
(26) The disclosure is based in part on the realization that in systems like those described in the above mentioned PCT/EP2014/059802 the specular reflection of a surrounding scene, as for example a scene of a recognizable indoor or outdoor environment or any scene featuring a spatially structured luminance distribution, is superimposed as a background to the blue scattered light. This may result in a degradation of color uniformity and luminance uniformity of light emitted by the device, and therefore also in a spoiling of the desired perception of an infinitely deep sky.
(27) Furthermore, it was realized that for outdoor applications in overcast conditions, where reproducing a bluish clear sky may be desired, a system like those described in the above mentioned PCT/EP2014/059802 may fail or be less effective in generating a bluish luminance for a typical position of observation. Given the fact that outdoors the brightest part of the surrounding scene is typically above the horizon and that an observer usually may look at the device from below, said observer will seereflected by the systemthe most luminous portion of the scene, thus resulting in a yellowish color instead of the desired blue.
(28) The disclosure is based in part on the realization that one can control the visual appearance of a chromatic reflective unit by providing an optical unit that prevents or at least reduces such as minimizes the impact of unwanted contribution to the specular reflected image from the structured luminance distribution of the surrounding scene as that provides a warmer (yellow) contribution superimposed as a background to the colder (blue) scattered light.
(29) It was further realized that the color-spoiling effect of the specular reflection of bright objects in the surrounding scene may be reduced and even overcome, when one reduces the geometric homogeneity of the reflecting surface. For example, providing a random orientation of reflective surface sections will avoid a clear image of a reflected area. Herein, a random orientation of reflective surface sections is understood as not being uniform. For example, in view of the limited number of reflective surface sections, a discrete number of orientations (inclination angles/incident angles) may be selected and the reflective surface sections may be associated individually or in groups to the orientations.
(30) Similarly, providing subsets of reflecting surface sections having essentially identical orientation within a subset but different orientation between subsets similarly may avoid the appearance of a clear reflected image (or provide the same to be viewable at different positions as discussed below). Accordingly, those structures may allow maintaining the specific depth perception that can be provided by chromatic reflective units as disclosed herein.
(31) Furthermore, the disclosure is based in part on the realization that one may increase those observation areas that are subject to the depth perception by providing two or more subgroups of reflective surface sections, each subgroup reflecting an associated portion of the light beam (each incident under a different angle) to another spatially separated observation area. This may allow, for example, a sun-sky-impression for an observer at multiple observer areas.
(32) The disclosure is further based in part on the realization thatby providing a plurality of reflective surface sectionone may enlarge and/or focus a reflected area to a respective larger or smaller observation area. Thereby, the sun-sky-impression may be accessible from an enlarged observer area.
(33) The disclosure is further based in part on the realization that a chromatic reflective unit as disclosed herein may work even in absence of directional illumination (such as in absence of direct sun illumination or collimated projected light) and may still produce a realistic and vivid sky and sun appearance, together with a natural depth perception associated to those.
(34) The disclosure is further based in part on the realization that the herein disclosed concepts of a chromatic reflective unit may be able to rely on even a small unbalancing of the whole luminance distribution participating at the illumination of the chromatic reflective unit to contribute to a chromatic output (appearance) of the chromatic reflective unit.
(35) In some embodiments, the chromatic output was realized to convert the gray shades of an overcast sky into a wide distribution of colors that are typical for the sky of a clear or partly clear day, including the warm blue hues of a perfectly clear bright sky and the warmer yellow and red tinges produced by sunlight propagating through a long path in the atmosphere and illuminating e.g. a group of clouds. The chromatic output was further realized to resemble even under essentially overcast weather conditionsas an example of light conditions without a contribution of directional light as associated to sun rays or an illumination by a projector (i.e. as in illuminated configurations) to the illumination of the chromatic reflective unitthe visual appearance of the sky.
(36) The disclosure is further based in part on the realization that the desired performance of the chromatic reflective unit may be realizedin case it is properly configuredin a manner to minimize (or at least to reduce) the spoiling of blue color featuring the scattered light due to warmer contribution of specular reflection of the surrounding scene. This can be achieved by configuring the unit to increase (e.g. maximize) the probability of causing the observer to see reflected images of an area that is typically characterized by a brightness that is lower than the average brightness of the surrounding scene. The configuration may, for example, select the ground as reflected scene. In those embodiments having the chromatic reflective unit installed along a vertical wall at a position above the observer, the chromatic reflective unit may be configured so that the reflecting surface sections are oriented with their normal vectors pointing towards the ground. For example, the normal vectors of the reflecting surface sections may form an average angle of 50, 20, 50 with respect to the normal vector of the wallassuming a planar surface-type, with respect to the normal vector of that surface-type.
(37) The disclosure is further based in part on the realization that one may favorably combine the two components of diffuse light and specular reflected light by providing a specific contribution of the specular reflected light via the reflective surface(s) to the perceived appearance by suitable configuring the reflective surface. For example, with respect to facade embodiments, the inclination may be selected with respect to the vertical, thereby having an area with less luminance contributing to the specular reflection (the ground and objects below the horizon usually having lower luminance than the sky) and emphasizing the blue component created by the complete luminance distribution affecting the chromatic mirror in any direction.
(38) As an example, it may be possible with the chromatic reflective unit used on a large scale to transform an inhomogeneous luminance of a whitish sky (e.g. on a cloudy day) into an inhomogeneous chromatic bluish appearance of the facade of a building. Specifically, this may be possible for those observation directions, which cause the observer to see a specular reflected image of a darker scene. Moreover, it may be possible to transform the same into an inhomogeneous yellowish appearance of the faade for those directions, which allow the observer to see the reflected image of the brighter portion of the scene. In the case of a faade of a building being formed by a chromatic reflective unit as disclosed herein and having the reflective surface sections with their normals oriented towards the ground, an observer standing on the ground, preferentially sees the lower part of the faade emitting toward the observer blue light, while the highest part of the faade, which causes the observer to see the specular reflection of the high bright sky, is seen as emitting toward the observer yellow light. Notably the ratio between the bluish a and the yellowish areas as seen by the observer can be varied by changing the inclination of the reflective surface sections, said ratio increasing with the increase of the angle between the normal of the reflective surface section and the normal to the wall of the building.
(39) In other words, the disclosure is further based in part on the realization that a plurality of chromatic reflective surface sections may be configured (sized and oriented) to provide for a sky-like chromatic separation in the presence of a non-uniform illumination by broad spectrally distributed light, thereby producing an output chromatic and luminance distribution of light resembling the visual appearance of the real sky.
(40) The disclosure is further based in part on the realization that downward guiding of light into canyon-like streets delimited by skyscrapers may be increased by increasing the angle between the normal to the reflective surface sections and the normal of the wall (central plane), this providing an increase in the amount of natural illumination at the ground level. In addition, the removal of the visual canyon feeling may be achieved by changing the appearance of one or more buildings, e.g. causing the building faade to appear similar to the sky. Thus, it was realized that the strong depth effect and natural impression given by the herein disclosed chromatic reflective units may remove or at least reduce the claustrophobic feelings induced by narrow deep streets. Moreover, it may increase the luminous levels at the ground (or in general observer areas in the shade) and improve the comfort and quality given by the available light.
(41) In the following, various embodiments of a chromatic reflective unit are disclosed in connection with
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(43) As will become apparent from the embodiments described in the following, reflective surface sections 3 may be connected by some type of transition surface sections or may be formed by structurally independent surface sections. Moreover, reflective surface section 3 may be planar surfaces in shape (exemplarily in
(44) Chromatic diffusing layer 5 comprises a plurality of nanoparticles embedded in a transparent matrix. The nanoparticles and the transparent matrix have a difference in the refractive index. That difference in the refractive index, the size distribution of the nanoparticles embedded in the matrix, and the number of nanoparticles per unit surface area are selected such that a specular reflectance is provided that is larger in the red (in the meaning of longer wavelengths of an incident broad spectrum) than in the blue (in the meaning of shorter wavelengths of an incident broad spectrum), and that a diffuse reflectance is provided by a chromatic reflective section 6 (formed by a combination of a reflective surface section 3 with that section of chromatic diffusing layer 5 being in front of the respective reflective surface section 3) that is larger in the blue than in the red.
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(46) It is noted that neighboring reflective surface sections in x-direction (see
(47) Referring to
(48) Reflective surface sections 3 may be sections of a continuous reflective layer 3 such as a reflective coating or a reflective foil provided on substrate 7acting as a support structure. In some embodiments, the reflective layer may be applied specifically onto respective surface sections 7. On that reflective layer, chromatic diffusing layer 5 is applied, for example also as a continuous layer. In
(49) Referring to
(50) As discussed above, chromatic diffusing layer 5 is constructed such that it preferentially scatters short-wavelength components of incident light 9 with respect to long-wavelength components of incident light 9. The scattered light is referred herein as diffuse light 11 and it is associated with a blue (short-wavelength) color assuming a given selection of the scattering conditions of the nanoparticles.
(51) In
(52) As a consequence of the embedded nanoparticles, that portion of incident light 9, which is regularly reflected at reflective surface sections 3 without being deviated by scattering interaction with chromatic diffusing layer 5, has a visible spectrum that differs from the spectrum of incident light 9 in an associated center of mass-wavelength because the spectrum is shifted towards longer wavelengths (i.e. to the red giving a yellow tone). The portion of incident light 9, which is subject to the essentially Rayleigh-like scattering by the nanoparticles, is emitted in a diffuse manner, thereby leading to substantially homogeneous luminance in all the directions pointing away from its surface. It is noted that the diffuse light is based on the complete luminance to which chromatic reflective unit 1 is subjected from any direction. In other words, all light incident on chromatic reflective unit 1 contributes to the diffuse light, irrespective of the direction under which the light is incident.
(53) As a consequence, the light seen when looking at chromatic reflective unit 1 under a certain direction (such as viewing direction 13 in
(54) Assuming the case of a faade of a building being formed by a chromatic reflective unit as disclosed herein, the orientation of the chromatic reflective unit is shown in
(55) As will be explained below, an observer standing on the ground, i.e. below chromatic reflective unit 1, preferentially sees the lower part of the faade (chromatic reflective sections 6A) as being bluish, while the top part of the faade (chromatic reflective sections 6B)causing the observer to see the specular reflection of the high bright skyis seen as being yellowish. It is noted that the ratio between the bluish and the yellowish contributions as seen by the observer may be varied by changing the inclination of the reflective surface sections 3. The ratio may increase (i.e. more bluish perception) with the increase of the angle between the normal n of the respective reflective surface section 3 and the normal to the wall of the building.
(56) Specifically, an observer (illustrated by dot 8 in
(57) In contrast, the observer, when looking in a direction 13B at chromatic reflective section 6B of chromatic reflective unit 1, sees reflected along the direction 13B of specular reflection a bright object 12, e.g. a luminous over-casted, white sky. Consequently, the luminance of chromatic reflective section 6B along direction 13B has a strong contribution due to the specular reflection, i.e. a strong yellow (long-wavelength) component. For that reason, the main contribution to the luminance of chromatic reflective section 6B as seen by the observer is the contribution of the reflected light. Consequently, chromatic reflective section 6B appears yellow to the observer.
(58) In certain embodiments, the chromatic reflective unit may be sufficiently large or comprise a plurality of abutted chromatic reflective sections 6 to be considered onto a faade so that the following conditions are met:
(59) 1. The characteristic of the luminance distribution of the light, which illuminate the chromatic reflective section or the plurality of chromatic reflective sections may change, e.g. in angle and/or intensity over the x-y plane (x-y as defined in
(60) 2. An observer looking at the chromatic reflective section or the plurality of chromatic reflective sections sees different portions under significantly different viewing angles.
(61) The first and/or the second condition may cause different portions of an chromatic reflective section or different chromatic reflective sections to be seen by the observer in different colors as described above.
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(63) In general, the shape of a chromatic reflective unit can be associated with a surface-type as in general the shape extends layer-like in two directions. Thus, herein the surface-type is understood as the type of (3D-) surface that a chromatic reflective unit embodies. The surface-type can be of any surface shape such as a planar surface (corresponding to a panel shape of the chromatic reflective unit as illustrated in
(64) The herein disclosed non-coplanar orientation of the reflective surface sections results, however, to a deviation of their orientation with respect to that surface-type. In general, that deviation can be described using a central plane 17 and a reference plane 19 as introduced below.
(65) In
(66) Based on central plane 17, a reference plane 19 is selected that is coplanar with respect to a central plane 17 and that is displaced from central plane 17 at diffusing layer side 17A beyond anyone of the plurality of non-coplanar reflective surface sections 3. Reference plane 19 shown in
(67) In
(68) In the saw-like cross-section of chromatic reflective unit 1 shown in
(69) In distance graph 23, several local extrema 27 (local maxima or local minima) indicate the transition of increasing and decreasing sections. As shown, in
(70) In other words, the shape-analysis of the non-coplanar surface sections with respect to a predefined direction may include the steps: estimating for the reflective surface a best fitting plane with, for example, a linear least squares method: selecting a second plane parallel to the best fitting plane such that the second plane does not intercept with the reflective surface; estimating a distance function of two variables, such as d(x, y), which defines the distance between a specific point (x, y) on the second plane and the intercept with the reflective surface along a straight line orthogonal to the second plane at the point (x, y) (in case of multiple intercepts with the reflective surface, selecting the shortest distance as the value of the distance function d (x, y)); and selecting a section r(q) from d(x, y) wherein the section is the intersection of the distance function d(x, y) with a given plane perpendicular to the second plane. The distance requirement is then that the distance in dependence of the variable q has more than three local extrema (excluding terminal points) for at least one given section r(q).
(71) For completeness, for a panel shaped chromatic reflective unit 1 (planar surface type), the saw-tooth like distance d development may be essentially unchanged and repeat itself over the complete extent of the chromatic reflective unit 1, while for a curved surface type, the distance d development may approach or veer away towards the boarder of the chromatic reflective unit as will be apparent to the skilled person.
(72) Various embodiments of chromatic reflective units 1 with respect to the configuration of the non-coplanar reflective surface sections and the chromatic diffusing layer are exemplary described in connection with
(73) In
(74) In the embodiment of
(75) In the exemplary embodiment of
(76) In alternative embodiments, the chromatic diffusing layer may also extend into gap volume 33, thereby providing an inhomogeneous thickness and an in y-direction varying number of nanoparticles per unit surface area. This may also generate modulations in color that may in some configurations be acceptable, in particular in dependence of the shape of gap volume 33 and the viewing distance.
(77) Similar to
(78) For illustrating a further sandwich-type embodiment,
(79) As indicated in
(80) Like in the embodiment of
(81) With respect to the manufacturing of chromatic reflective unit 1B, the specific embodiment of
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(83) In contrast to the embodiment of
(84) In general, the reflective surface sections may have a lateral extent of at least 0.5 mm, e.g. at least 1 mm such as 5 mm, 10 mm, or more, and/or cover an area of at least 0.5 mm.sup.2, e.g. at least 1 mm.sup.2 such as 2 mm.sup.2, 1 cm.sup.2, or more.
(85) Depending on the use, e.g. if the chromatic reflective unit will be illuminated from both sides, also first metal layer 43A may be imprinted and coated to provide the plurality of non-coplanar reflective surface sections.
(86) In summary, sandwich-structures shown in
(87) As mentioned above, chromatic diffusing layer 5 may be a coating or film that has a thickness of, for example, about 0.2 mm or less such as 0.1 mm or less or even 0.05 mm or less. Moreover, the coating or film may be deposited onto the reflecting surface sections prior or after providing their respective non-coplanar shape.
(88) For completeness, in addition to nanoparticles 37, larger light-scattering centers may be embedded within the chromatic diffusing layer or, for example, the filling material of gap volume 33. Those additional light-scattering centers may have an average size larger than Rayleigh-active nanoparticles 37, for example in the range of 1 m or more such as larger than about 5 m. The additional light-scattering centers may providein addition to the above discussed Rayleigh-like diffuse scattering by Rayleigh-active nanoparticles 37a blurring effect that effects the specular reflected component to be deviated from the pure specular reflection in a forward scattering cone.
(89) As will be apparent to the skilled person, an analogue blurring effect may be generated by providing micro-roughness on the chromatic diffusing layer, for example, on the illumination side and/or by providing the reflective surface, instead of with a perfectly glossy finishing, with a rough finishing (such as those available in commercial products such as some type of coil-coated high-reflective metal sheets) configured to provide diffusion of reflected light within a cone of about 3 or more such as 5 or more or even 10 or more.
(90) Methods for applying the reflective layer and/or the chromatic diffusing layer include metal vacuum deposition, molecular beam epitaxy, plasma coding, spraying, inkjet methods, film splitting, or the like.
(91) In some embodiments, a metal layer can be used as reflective layer such as an aluminum metal mirror foil with reflectivity larger than 95% or even larger than 98%.
(92)
(93) Chromatic reflective unit 1D comprises a mounting structure 49 with a series of mounting protrusions 49A. Mounting structure 49 may provide a back frame to be mounted, for example, to a wall of a building.
(94) In some embodiment, mounting structure 49 may extend grid wise in an x-y-direction. Accordingly, a normal 51 to the x-y plane characterizes a viewable face 50 of the surface base shape (in this case panel shape) of chromatic reflective unit 1D.
(95) A sequence of chromatic mirror units 53 are mounted to mounting protrusions 49A. The mounting is performed such that each chromatic mirror unit 53 is inclined with respect to viewable face 50. Specifically, as indicated in
(96) The chromatic mirror units 53 are displaced with respect to each other in y-direction and are oriented with respect to normal 51 in essentially identical manner.
(97) Each chromatic mirror unit 53 comprises a reflective surface section covered by a chromatic diffusing layer section. Accordingly, the reflective surface sections contribute to a non-continuous reflective surface of chromatic reflective unit 1D.
(98) Referring to
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(103) As chromatic reflective unit 1D comprises a surface-like base shape with viewable face 50, and the reflective surface sections themselves have surface-like shapes characterized by a width direction and a height direction, the embodiment of
(104) Chromatic mirror units 53 may each comprise a reflective surface section covered by a chromatic diffusing layer section.
(105) In some embodiments, each reflective surface section is provided on a support board such as a planar plastic, such as polymeric, or glass board and has supplied thereon the chromatic diffusing layer section; all support boards together with, for example, mounting structure 49 may be considered as defining a support structure providing non-coplanar surface sections. In other embodiments, the chromatic diffusing layer section is configured strong enough to act as the support for the reflective layer; then all chromatic diffusing layer sections together with, for example, mounting structure 49 form a support structure providing a plurality of non-coplanar surface sections on which a reflective layer is formed.
(106)
(107) Accordingly, the embodiment of
(108) The embodiment of
(109) In summary, referring to
(110)
(111) Specifically.
(112) In contrast, the embodiment of
(113)
(114)
(115) For example,
(116) A more regular configuration of chromatic mirror units is shown in
(117)
(118)
(119) For example, the inclination angles associated with respective chromatic reflective sections in
(120) Moreover, the above discussed configuration illustrate the possibility to providewith respect to a single one of the respective surface sections or with respect to a plurality of reflective surface sectionsa constant or varying scattering characteristic, a constant or varying nanoparticle distribution, and/or a constant or varying inclination angle of the reflective surface sections. Those aspects affect the chromatic feature of the chromatic reflective units for specific viewing directions.
(121) In the following, exemplary application of chromatic reflective units are described, in particular with respect to outdoor concepts and indoor concepts. In general, the herein described chromatic reflective units may extend over areas of several square centimeter (e.g. for illumination configurations), up to several 100 square centimeter, up to even several square meter (e.g. for facade configurations).
(122) A facade application is explained in connection with
(123) In such an outdoor configuration, structural units 73 are a measure to affect the visual appearance of building 71 by using the chromatic feature under natural illumination. The natural illumination may include cloudy weather conditions such as shown in
(124) Referring to
(125) As illustrated at the left side of
(126) Referring to
(127) As will be apparent to the skilled person, the luminance of structural units 73 effects also the illumination conditions on the streets or inside of neighboring buildings when the downwards guided/reflected light is entering rooms through windows. The herein disclosed structural configurations may increase the illumination and may remove or at least reduce the narrow impressions created by skyscrapers and tall buildings in general.
(128) As explained below in detail, the chromatic reflective units are sensitive to an anisotropy of the outdoor illumination that is transferred into an inhomogeneous chromatic appearance of a building.
(129)
(130) With respect to a vertical orientation of a reflective surface section of a chromatic reflective unit mounted in the outdoor, the vertical plane containing dashed line 82 separates the hemisphere in two halves 82A and 82B. Only half 82A (i.e. essentially the part of the sky hemisphere in
(131) As proposed herein, inclining the orientation of the reflective surface section of the chromatic reflective unit, for example by 30 as schematically indicated in
(132) As mentioned before, the luminance of the ground is generally reduced with respect to the luminance of the sky hemisphere.
(133)
(134) On the other side, an observer 75B may look via the reflection at reflective surfaced section 3 of the chromatic reflective unit in a direction that points to a darker region 83 of low luminance portions 83, the respective chromatic reflective section appears in a blue color with higher purity (with respect to the case of observer 75A) because of less white/yellow light being superimposed onto diffuse blue light 11.
(135) Accordingly, positioning reflective surface sections in an orientation in space such that they reflect less luminance portions 83 may increase the color blue. In the facade embodiment of
(136) In connection with the
(137) In the embodiment of
(138)
(139)
(140) In connections with
(141)
(142)
(143) In alternative embodiments, glass panel 109 may be replaced by transparent panels made of, for example, a polymeric, e.g. an acrylic, polycarbonate, PVC or the like material. Respective non glass materials may simplify the mounting and reduce the weight of chromatic mirror unit 53C.
(144) In
(145) Active illumination configurations are described in the following in connection with
(146) As shown in
(147)
(148) In addition, reflected light beam 125B will provide for an illumination of ground 127 essentially in the yellow tuned color of the projector.
(149)
(150) A person within room 131, when looking at chromatic reflective unit 1E from the outside of reflected light beam 125B, sees the bluish appearing chromatic reflective unit 1E.
(151) The person, when being within reflected light beam 125B, sees the reflected light.
(152) As described herein, the chromatic diffusing layer can produce a chromatic separation (in terms of correlated color temperature CCT) of the regular (specular) reflected light of reflected light beam 125B from the scattered diffuse light. Specifically, the correlated color temperatures of the diffuse light will be larger than the correlated color temperature of the specular reflected light, for example by a factor 1.2 or 1.1 or the like. Depending on, for example, the color, shape, and homogeneity of the light emitted from projector 123, a sunlight imitating lighting system can be generated as described in the initially introduced applications.
(153) In general, for non-coplanar surface sections, multiple sun reflections on chromatic reflective unit 1 may occur that each surrounded by a blue appearance due to diffuse scattered light. They may appear to an observer, for example, as reflections of the sun light on an irregular surface such as reflections of sun light on the waves on a lake.
(154)
(155) Chromatic reflective unit 401 may be configured so that the non-coplanar reflective sections 3 are connected and form a continuous coarse grain surface 410. Exemplary cut-views of coarse grain surface 410 are shown in
(156) As further shown in
(157) The extent of bright light associated with an area on coarse grain surface 410 depends on the extent of the surface that fulfills the specular reflective conditions (in general at least subgroups of non-coplanar surface sections are formed by the coarse grain structure, in particular the mosaic-like surface structures).
(158) Assuming the requirement that the observer can distinguish isolated bright points from the surrounding (the surrounding not contributing to the perceived specular reflection), the required size will be apparent to the skilled person. For example, it depends on the geometry of the illumination system, in particular the distance of the observer to coarse grain surface 410. Depending on the expected distance of the observer to the chromatic reflective unit, surface sections 3 may have the size of several square millimeters or few square centimeters.
(159) For comparison of the reflective feature of coarse grain surface 410 with a planar chromatic reflective surface, for each point P1 to P3, reflected beams n1 to n3 are indicated as dashed lines in
(160) Specifically, the embodiments of
(161)
(162)
(163) In general, coarse grain surface 410, specifically the continuous reflective surface, may be made of a multitude of planar or quasi-planar surface sections of various shapes and extends. The shapes and extends may be configured with higher or lower degree of regularity, order, and/or periodicity such as with a limited number of types of surface sections, shapes, or inclinations.
(164) The continuous reflective surface may be completely (as shown in
(165)
(166) The correlation area of the mosaic-like surface structures corresponds essentially to the average transversal size of the single mosaic-like surface structure such as one complete surface oscillation (e.g. from a deepest point to a highest point to the next deepest point on the surface). Moreover, the correlation area is essentially comparable in size to the size of the (light interacting) surface section. Accordingly, to be visually resolvable, it is in the range from, for example, about 0.5 mm to 1 m. In principle, the reflective surface section is a fraction of the correlation/transversal size (for example, half in a symmetric geometric shape or even a larger percentage depending on the inclination of the facet structure). As will be understood by the skilled person, transversal in this context refers to the surface-type, e.g. a plane parallel to the central plane. Correlation is a defined mathematical term (here the 2D-correlation). It is noted that in case of a non-planar surface, correlation scales larger than the section may appear (e.g. if the unit is curved or itself sinusoidal).
(167) Referring to
(168) In contrast, continuous coarse grain surface 410 shown in
(169) Similarly to the embodiment shown in
(170) As a general indication, the x (or y) size of the sections, the x (or y) average size of the patches, the x (or y) local periodicity of the oscillating surface or, in general the x (or y) support structure size to support on average a single oscillation of the reflective surface (one local maxima and one local minima of the distance to a reference plane) may be configured so that, for an observer standing in the installation ambient, the individual surface sections are optically resolvable by eye in order to appreciate color and brightness variations. For indoor applications reflective sections may extend about or larger than 1 mm, such as few centimeters or even larger than 0.2 m. For outdoor applications, the surface sections may be larger than 5 mm, such as 0.3 m, or even larger than 0.5 m.
(171) When interposed between a light source (this can be a specific light projector or also Sun or a distribution of luminance with some peaks etc.) and the observer, the chromatic reflective units based on mosaic-like surface structures provide in appearance a fragmentation (such as a partition-chopping-splitting) of the source in many smaller perceived sources with comparable (in general not significantly reduced) luminance but with significant smaller size (angular size, for a fixed observer distance from the source).
(172) Those smaller luminance peaks are obviously distributed over a large angular range with respect to the original source angular shape.
(173) This produces in terms of visual appearance the same perception of brightness produced by the original source (local peaks preserve the brightness level of the source) provided that the optical structures can be resolved by the observer's eye (e.g. light peaks essentially do not mix up), thereby providing, for example, of the sun being reflected in the watertogether with scattered light regions, which may be perceived as sky-like fragments.
(174) This appearance is specific and stands in contrast with a fine-structured diffuser (that would be perceived when the optical structures are not resolvable) as in that case the luminance is averaged and the high-level peaks are smoothed and significantly reduced as a result.
(175) Referring again to
(176) The configuration combines the chopping of luminance into small regions with diffusing the blue component as a Rayleigh diffuser.
(177) This allows to obtain a smearing and a broadening of the direct light spot by a fragmentation of the emitting area of the source, yet each being perceived as the sun in terms of color and luminance though chopped in smaller sources, while the sky color may be preserved.
(178) In some embodiments, continuous coarse grain surface 410 may be coated with a chromatic diffusing layer as disclosed herein.
(179) Although exemplary embodiments of this invention have been described herein, embodiments may be combined, e.g. in a faade element or in one illumination system such as combining on a chromatic reflective unit random and plan-parallel reflective surface sections.
(180) The inventors have further realized that a combination of a reflective panel with the Rayleigh-like scattering has also advantages on lighting systems in general. An exemplary lighting system will be described in connection with
(181) Several advantages were realized for the herein disclosed parameter ranges that support in particular suppression of background reflections. Before describing the exemplary lighting system embodiment, the aspects of the nanoparticle layer are summarized for the as high concentration Rayleigh-like scattering embodiment in the following. It is noted again that those aspects do apply to structures disclosed before (forming inter alia non-coplanar reflective surface sections) as well as e.g. panel structures and coatings. For example, the skilled reader will further appreciate that some aspects discussed above for the non-coplanar designs such as inclination aspects of mirror units to use ground as darker background, aspects relating to birds, aspects relating to color drifts may not be relevant under certain boundary conditions.
(182) In application PCT/EP2015/001454, entitled CHROMATIC REFLECTIVE UNIT, filed on 15 Jul. 2015 by the applicants, corresponding to the first part of this application, a set of intervals is disclosed for the effective areal density N of nanoparticles for a nanoparticle based chromatic mirror unit.
(183) Such areal density N may be defined as the number of nanoparticles per square meter, i.e. the number of nanoparticles within a volume element delimited by a portion of the surface of the nanoparticle-loaded layer having an area of 1 m.sup.2 and corresponds to the value obtained by multiplying the number density of nanoparticle by the thickness of the layer.
(184) In the first part of this application, the chromatic mirror unit was also characterized from a macroscopic point of view by the use of the monochromatic normalized specular reflectance R(), defined as the ratio between the specular reflectance of the chromatic reflective unit and the specular reflectance of a reference sample identical to the chromatic reflective unit except for the fact that the diffusing layer does not contain the nanoparticles having a size in the range from 10 nm to 240 nm, i.e. the nanoparticles which are responsible of preferentially diffusing the short wavelengths of the impinging radiation.
(185) Those parameters stand in relation to WO2009/156348 A1 that discloses for transmission concept a solid optical chromatic diffuser use nanoparticle-based Rayleigh-like scattering and in particular introduces the concept of the monochromatic normalized collinear transmittance T() to define the desired Rayleigh-like feature. R() and T() are quantities describing the behavior of chromatic diffusers in reflection and transmission geometries, respectively. As in reflection geometry, by assuming a perfectly reflective layer for the mirror layer, the light is crossing twice the diffusing layer, for the same concentration N holds the relation: R=T.sup.2.
(186) Improved intervals relate to the above disclosed values for R(450 nm) in the range from 0.01 to 0.16, for example from 0.04 to 0.09 with corresponding areal densities:
(187)
for m and D definitions see equivalently PCT/EP2015/001454 or WO2009/156348 A1) and
(188)
for example,
(189)
(190) Moreover, the monochromatic normalized specular reflectance at wavelength 450 nm could be further reduced by increasing the areal density of nanoparticles. This decrease in R has the following advantages: 1Increase of the diffused light (blue haze) of the diffusing layer in order to increase the luminance of the scattered light; this higher luminance gets rid of background scene perception, to be used especially in presence of high level of illumination of the room (also related to different/additional light sources). 2Decrease of the correlated color temperature (CCT) of the sun like at sunset. i.e. higher levels of chromatic diffusion make the sun more yellow/red, without spoiling the color of the sky. 3Obtain a sunset-warm sun, i.e. make the sun color shift toward low color temperatures, while at the same time keeping a high efficiency by the use of the mirror layer which redirects the otherwise lost component of back-scattered light. The presence of the mirror layer enables to increase the concentration enormously without losing the efficiency.
(191) In order to achieve the above stated goals, R(450 nm) can be in the range from 0.003 to 0.01, for example from 0.005 to 0.009. In terms of concentrations, in view of the above considerations, the corresponding N would be:
(192)
for example,
(193)
(194) Additional ranges that are applicable to achieve desired effects can be derived from the table below listing the respective numerical factors of the above equations. Those factors, each may be applied as upper or lower limit, including that value or excluding that value respectively:
(195) TABLE-US-00001 Factor Factor R(450 nm) (e.g. for Nmin) (e.g. for Nmax) 0.01 9.27e28 (1.04e27) 0.16 3.69e28 (4.14e28) 0.04 6.48e28 (7.27e28) 0.09 4.85e28 (5.44e28) 0.003 1.17e27 (1.31e27) 0.01 9.27e28 (1.04e27) 0.005 1.07e27 (1.20e27) 0.009 9.48e28 (1.06e27) 0.008 9.72e28 (1.09e27)
(196) Referring to
(197) Lighting system 501 comprises a light source 502, configured to emit light in an emission solid angle to form a light beam 503 (in
(198) To reduce the dimension of illumination system 501, the optical systems downstream of the respective light emitter may include an optical system such as folding optics. Lighting system 501 further includes a chromatic reflector unit 506 that couples the light originating from light source 502 to a region to be lit up. In general, reflector unit 506 comprises a reflective structure 508 providing a reflective surface 508A and chromatic panel structure 510.
(199) Reflective unit 506 may further comprise a support structure (such as frame 514). The support structure may comprises a supporting structure made of glass, a sandwich structure, PMMA, a metal such as aluminum having applied thereon and/or integrated therein the reflective layer 508 and/or the chromatic diffusing layer 510, and wherein in particular the sandwich structure is an aluminum or steel composite panel having a mount-sided stabilizing layer, an illumination-sided stabilizing layer, and a core layer there-between, wherein the reflective layer is provided on or integrated into the illumination-sided stabilizing layer and the chromatic diffusing layer is applied onto the reflective layer or onto the illumination-sided stabilizing layer. Further embodiments of underlying structures are disclosed, for example, in the PCT application entitled STRATIFIED PANEL STRUCTURE FOR SUN-SKY-IMITATING LIGHTING SYSTEMS, filed on the same day by the applicants, the content of which is incorporated herein by reference. Respective aspects of those stratified panels would be then adapted in line with the present disclosure.
(200) Reflective surface 508A is generally any type of optical acting interface that reflects light having passed through chromatic panel structure 510. For example, reflective surface 508A may be a surface of an aluminum layer or an interface between components, such as a reflective coating. Due to reflective surface 058A, light of light beam 503 being incident on reflective surface 508A is redirected to pass again through chromatic panel structure 510, thereafter forming an illuminating light beam 503A (delimited by dash-dash-dotted lines 507A). In
(201) Chromatic panel structure 510 is generally configured for emitting diffuse light (later also referred to as diffuse (light) component of the illumination system) at a first color, e.g. in case of a sky imitation a bluish sky color, extends in front of reflective surface 508A, and comprises a visible front area section 510A that an observer can see when looking at reflector unit 506. In the exemplary embodiment of
(202) For example, the first color and the second color may be separated in the CIE 1976 (u,v) color space by, at least 0.008 such as at least 0.01, 0.025, or 0.04, where the color difference uv is defined as the Euclidean distance in the uv color space. In particular for sun-imitation configurations, the illuminating light beam CCT of the second color may be close to the Planckian locus (e.g. in the range from 800 K to 6 500 K). In some embodiments the second color may correspond to uv points with a maximum distance from the Planckian locus of e.g. 0.06. In other words, a distance from the Planckian locus is, for example in the range from 800 K to 6500 K, given by uv0.060.
(203) As it is apparent to the skilled person, depending on the specific interaction of chromatic panel structure 510 with light beam 503, the color and/or CCT of light beam 503 and illuminating light beam 503A may be essentially identical or may differ. Depending from the type of nanoparticles and their concentration, the CCT difference may be, for example, at least 300 K or even 1 000 K or more.
(204) Looking from within range 507 onto reflector unit 506, an observer may have an optical perception as schematically indicated in
(205) In line with the optical perception illustrated in
(206) Nanoparticle-based Rayleigh-like diffusing material used in the chromatic panel structure 510 may comprise a solid matrix of a first material (e.g. resins or adhesive polymer having excellent optical transparency), wherein nanoparticles of a second material (organic or inorganic nanoparticles such as ZnO, TiO2, SiO2, Al2O3 and similar) are dispersed. The refractive indexes of the two materials are different, and this mismatch on the refractive index on the nano-scale is responsible of the Rayleigh-like scattering phenomenon. The absorption of the first and the second material in the visible wavelength range can be considered negligible. Moreover, chromatic panel structure 510 may be uniform, in the sense that, given any point of the chromatic stratified panel, the physical characteristics of the panel in that point does not depend on the position of that point. The nanoparticles may be monodisperse or polydisperse, they may be spherically shaped or shaped otherwise. In any case the effective diameter d of the nanoparticles falls within the range [5 nm-350 nm], such as [10 nm-250 nm], or even [40 nm-180 nm], or [60 nm-150 nm], where the effective diameter d is the diameter of the equivalent spherical particle, namely the effective diameter spherical particle having similar scattering properties as the aforementioned nanoparticles.
(207) Combining the herein disclosed features of the nanoparticle-based Rayleigh-like diffusing coating with the structural features disclosed herein may allow addressing one or more aspects of the prior art.
(208) Summarizing, a light beam passing through a diffusive layer will generate scattered light and transmitted light. The coating features can modify both the spectral properties and the intensity distribution of the transmitted light. In particular the morphology of the layer (i.e. flatness, smoothness or orange peel) may give rise to a phase variation, which implies a modulation of the intensity distribution of the transmitted light. For the application of sun-sky-imitation, the uniformity in the transmission of an illumination profile is an important feature.
(209) Therefore, it was realized that, to maintain the uniformity, the chromatic diffusing layer may have, for example, a thickness variation lower than 40%, for example 30%, such as 10% over lateral circular areas with diameter smaller than 20 cm, for example smaller than 10 cm, such as 3 cm. It is noted that the diameter depends on the type of installation, in particular the expected distance from an observer the chromatic diffusing panel.
(210) Similarly, it was realized that the chromatic diffusing layer may have a number of nanoparticles per unit area of the chromatic diffusing layer averaged over lateral circular areas with diameter of 2 mm, that does not vary more than 20%, for example not more than 10%, such as 5%, among lateral circular areas within every region having a diameter of 10 cm on at least 80% of the surface of the chromatic reflective unit.
(211) Although the preferred embodiments of this invention have been described herein, improvements and modifications may be incorporated without departing from the scope of the following claims.