Flattop laser beam generation and reshaping on an oblique screen using light pipes
20230141759 · 2023-05-11
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F21V5/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G02B27/0927
PHYSICS
H01S5/005
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A high power uniform light beam is generated on an oblique plane by one or more diode lasers and 2 or more light pipes. The light pipes may be trapezoidal so that the illuminated area is substantially square. The light pipes may be elliptical so that the illuminated area is substantially circular.
Claims
1. An illumination apparatus for use with a detection/observation module and for use with a sample area defining a plane, the illumination apparatus having an optical axis, the optical axis being away from normal to the plane and defining an oblique angle relative to the normal axis, the illumination apparatus comprising at least two light pipes, each of the light pipes having a predetermined cross section, each of the light pipes illuminated by a respective power level of light differing from any other of the light pipes, the illumination apparatus further comprising an imaging lens disposed between the light pipes and the sample area.
2. The illumination apparatus of claim 1 wherein the predetermined cross section of the light pipes is trapezoidal, whereby a resulting illuminated area on the plane is substantially square or rectangular.
3. The illumination apparatus of claim 2 wherein the predetermined cross section of the light pipes is trapezoidal, whereby a resulting illuminated area on the plane is substantially square.
4. The illumination apparatus of claim 2 wherein the predetermined cross section of the light pipes is trapezoidal, whereby a resulting illuminated area on the plane is substantially rectangular.
5. The illumination apparatus of claim 1 wherein the predetermined cross section of the light pipes is elliptical, whereby a resulting illuminated area on the plane is substantially circular.
6. The illumination apparatus of claim 1 wherein the oblique angle is between 30 degrees and 90 degrees.
7. The illumination apparatus of claim 1 wherein the light pipes are comprised of BK7 glass, fused silica glass, or other suitable material.
8. The illumination apparatus of claim 7 wherein the light pipes are comprised of BK7 glass.
9. The illumination apparatus of claim 1 wherein the light pipes are comprised of fused silica glass.
10. The illumination apparatus of claim 1 wherein the each light pipe has an input aperture and an exit aperture, and each input aperture and each exit aperture is anti-reflection coated.
11. The illumination apparatus of claim 1 wherein each of the light pipes defines surfaces other than its input aperture and its exit aperture, and said surfaces have high-reflection coating or total internal reflection.
12. The illumination apparatus of claim 1 wherein each of the light pipes defines surfaces other than its input aperture and its exit aperture, and said surfaces have high-reflection coating.
13. The illumination apparatus of claim 1 wherein each of the light pipes has a respective light source, and wherein the respective light sources are diode lasers, fiber coupled diode lasers, or solid-state lasers.
14. The illumination apparatus of claim 1 wherein each of the light pipes has a respective light source, and each light source has its own respective power control.
15. The illumination apparatus of claim 1 wherein the imaging lens is a single-element lens.
16. The illumination apparatus of claim 1 wherein the imaging lens is composed of multiple elements.
17. The illumination apparatus of claim 1 wherein the number of light pipes is at least three.
18. The illumination apparatus of claim 17 wherein the number of light pipes is at least four.
19. A method for illuminating a sample area, the sample area defining a plane, the method comprising aiming at least two light pipes at the sample area, the light pipes defining an optical axis, the optical axis being away from normal to the plane, each of the light pipes having a predetermined cross section, the method further comprising illuminating each of the light pipes with a respective power level of light differing from the power level employed for any other of the light pipes, the method further comprising disposing an imaging lens between the light pipes and the sample area.
20. The method of claim 19 wherein the number of light pipes is at least three.
21. The method of claim 20 wherein the number of light pipes is at least four.
22. The method of claim 19 wherein the predetermined cross section is trapezoidal, whereby the illuminated area is substantially square or rectangular.
23. The method of claim 22 wherein the predetermined cross section is trapezoidal, whereby the illuminated area is substantially square.
24. The method of claim 22 wherein the predetermined cross section is trapezoidal, whereby the illuminated area is substantially rectangular.
25. The method of claim 19 wherein the predetermined cross section is elliptical, whereby the illuminated area is substantially circular.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0021] As will be described, this invention utilizes specially designed light pipes to produce a laser light beam with an HLR of approximately 1, incident on a target plane that is at an oblique angle relative to the axis of the light pipes. The non-uniform distributed laser light sources are first fed into specially designed light pipes. In each light pipe, the light is scrambled by multiple internal reflection and exits the light pipe at its exit aperture with a uniform intensity distribution. Following the light pipes in the optical path, an imaging lens is used to project the shape of the exit aperture onto the oblique plane.
[0022] We can begin by modeling what goes wrong when a single light pipe is employed such as that depicted in
˜(L.Math.cos(α)/cos(α+θ))−2,
where L is the distance from the lens to the screen center, α is the screen tilting angle from normal direction, and θ is the light ray angle measured from the normal direction. (Due to the large magnification used in the setup, the distance from the light pipe exit face to the lens can be ignored.) If the screen is tilted by, say, 55 degrees from normal relative to the light-pipe axis, the light intensity at the upper edge where angle θ=10 degrees would fall to about 55% of the central intensity. At the lower edge of angle θ=−10 degrees, the intensity increases to 150%. The HLR is thus about 1:0.37.
[0023] As will be described, the invention overcomes this problem by selecting multiple light pipes of different shapes and injecting particular ratios of laser powers to improve the HLR. At least two light pipes with proper laser power ratios are utilized to improve the light distribution on the oblique imaging plane.
[0024]
[0025] In
[0026] We thus permit the detection/observation module to maintain its (highly desirable) normal orientation relative to the plane of the sample area, and we reposition the illumination apparatus to an oblique angle relative to the sample area. This is depicted in
[0027] When the screen is tilted by an angle α relative to the optical path (305) as shown in
[0028] A ray-tracing simulation permits a high-confidence modeling of a light intensity cross section across line 4A in
[0029] We can now discuss a first step in the direction of trying to address the undesirable consequences of the off-normal-axis illumination. A first step is to try to arrive at an illuminated area that is square, so that it matches the square shape of the area addressed by the detection/observation module.
[0030] In order to correct the shape distortion, a light pipe with trapezoid shape and specific size is chosen, as seen in
[0031] What may be immediately appreciated by the alert reader, however, is that the HLR is not near unity, and so the HLR needs improvement. In
[0032] In order to correct the slanted power distribution in the y direction, multiple light pipes with differing power levels are used. One example is using two trapezoid light pipes in parallel as shown in
[0033] In the example of
[0034] One way to choose such a ratio is to return to
[0035] Similarly to the discussion above with
[0036] The laser power division can be achieved by translating the light source relative to the light pipe. The laser power in the upper trapezoid is varied from 0% to 100% when the light source position is initially aligned to the lower trapezoid and gradually shifted toward upper one. The laser power measurement can be done by monitoring the image plane using a laser camera which is available from many manufacturers. The other method to achieve the proper laser power ratio is using two separated light sources. Each source uses its own power driver.
[0037] It will be appreciated that if it is desired to further improve the HLR, the number of light pipes may be increased.
[0038] The two or more light pipes could fill out an elliptical cross section, in which case the result could be a circular illumination shape.
[0039] It will thus be appreciated that what is provided is a way to illuminate a sample area with very uniform illumination, despite the axis of the optical path of the illumination being oblique to the plane of the sample area. It will also be appreciated that what is provided is a way to illuminate the sample area so as to match the area being addressed by a detection/observation module such as a high-powered microscope. The alert reader will have no difficulty devising myriad obvious variants and improvements upon the invention, all of which are meant to be encompassed within the claims that follow.