Improvements In and Relating to LED Illumination in Microscopy

20170343786 · 2017-11-30

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    Disclosed is an LED arrangement for a microscopy instrument (200 FIG. 2) comprising a light emitting area (112), and a part-spherical solid and light transmissive cap (120), in light communication with the light emitting area, the cap having a hemispherical surface (126) including a portion (124) at which light from the light emitting area is reflected and a portion (128) at which light from the emitter can exit the cap, in order to provide a usable light cone L which includes light recycled from the more divergent emitted light, and is thereby more intense.

    Claims

    1. An LED arrangement comprising a light emitting area, and a part-spherical, light transmissive cap, in light communication with the light emitting area, the cap having a curved surface including a portion at which light from the light emitting area is reflected and a portion at which light from the emitter can exit the cap.

    2. The LED arrangement as claimed in claim h wherein the curved surface of the cap is generally hemispherical and the cap further includes a generally flat surface across the diametric base of the hemispherical surface.

    3. The LED arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein the light emitting area is proximal to a central region of the generally flat surface preferably held immediately adjacent thereto, or in touching contact, in each case to thereby provide said light communication and wherein said reflected light from the LED is reflected back toward the LED.

    4. The LED arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein said reflecting portion of the curved surface includes a mirrored coating and said exit is not mirrored.

    5. The LED arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein the light emitter is spaced from the exit by a distance such that the angle of divergence of light exiting the exit is less than 60 degrees, preferably about 50 to 20 degrees, and more preferably about 30 degrees.

    6. The LED arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein the light emitter has a width w and the cap has a radius r, and wherein the ratio of r:w is between about 10:1 and 20:1 or a ratio that provides efficient internal recycling of light to produce exiting light of increased intensity compared to the intensity of the emitted light which has not been recycled.

    7. The LED arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein cap is a solid homogeneous material such as glass or clear plastics.

    8. The LED arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein the cap is a half ball lens modified to include a reflective surface at said reflective portion and a non-reflective portion at said exit.

    9. A microscopy instrument comprising an LED light source as claimed in claim 1.

    10. An LED arrangement or a microscopy instrument comprising an LED light source as claimed in claim 1.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

    [0012] The invention can be put into effect in numerous ways, illustrative embodiments of which are described below with reference to the drawings, wherein:

    [0013] FIG. 1 shows an LED arrangement;

    [0014] FIG. 2 is a ray diagram; and

    [0015] FIG. 3 shows microscopy device employing the LED arrangement shown in FIG. 1.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

    [0016] The invention, together with its objects and the advantages thereof, may be understood better by reference to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals identify like elements in the Figures.

    [0017] FIG. 1 shows a conventional LED 110 package which includes a semiconductor light emitter 112 which is typically 1 to 9 mm squared in surface area, and therefore around 1 to 3 mm in width w. The emitter has an electrically insulating backing 114, and, in this case, has packing 116 on either side of the emitter 112 allowing the LED to be mounted to a flat surface, for example by the use of transparent or translucent adhesive.

    [0018] Also shown in FIG. 1 is a generally hemispherical cap 120 which is around 5 to 10 mm in radius. The cap is formed conveniently from a modified glass half ball lens of radius r. The LED package is adhered to or otherwise held to a flat face 122 of the cap 120, such that the middle of the emitter 112 is close to the geometric centre C of the cap.

    [0019] The cap 120 has a reflective coating, for example a mirrored coating 124 formed around most of its curved surface 126, formed by vacuum vapour deposition or other known techniques. A portion 128 of the curved surface is free from the reflective coating, to form a light exit.

    [0020] In use, the emitter 112 can emit light in all directions of an arc E of approximately 180 degrees, because the semiconductor die of the emitter 112 is essentially flat. Light emitted directly toward the exit 128 can escape through that unreflective area in a usable light cone L to be used in a microscope device, for example instrument 200 described in FIG. 2. However, as described above, limitations in the conventional optics available have led to the necessity for the cap 120 to be used to direct more light emitted across the arc E into the useable arc L. In this embodiment, light, for example light ray R is emitted from the emitter 112 and does not escape via the exit 128, so it is internally reflected within the glass cap 120 off the reflector 124 to return toward the emitter 112, whereat it is reflected off the emitter 112 and travels along path R′ into the usable cone of light L. A similar occurrence takes place for the majority of light which does not at first escape along the cone L, in some instances, by multiple reflections at the reflector 124 and back onto the emitter 112.

    [0021] FIG. 2 shows a software generated ray trace diagram which defines the light paths of the LED arrangement shown schematically shown in FIG. 1. In particular, the reflective paths of light as a whole originating from the LED emitter 112 are more clearly visible. As described above, the rays emitted by the emitter 112 either pass through the exit or are reflected back to the LED via the reflector 124. Those that are reflected back will be redirected by the LED emitter, and a substantial portion of those redirected rays will subsequently lie within the central cone L and thus will pass through the exit 128.

    [0022] FIG. 3 shows schematically the LED arrangement 100 used in a microscope 200. In the embodiment, the cone of light L described above is focused by a convex lens 210 into a point, which point focused light enters an optical fibre 220. Light exiting the optical fibre 220 within a housing 300 passes through collimating lenses 230 which produce parallel rays of light which are in turn reflected by a polychroic mirror 240 toward and objective lens 250 and then refocused onto a sample 260. This imaging light is more intense than light which is collected from a conventional LED, and so more light (and a thereby a better image) travels back through the objective lens 250, straight through the mirror 240 and on to a tube lens 270 and finally into a camera 280 or other image capture means.

    [0023] The concept proposed here involving the use of a reflective arcuate ‘shield’ surrounding the LED emitter to redirect light back on to the LED itself provides a significant improvement in the amount of usable light. The cone angle of the usable light cone L is preferably about 30 degrees, but an angle of about 20 to 60 degrees will provide suitable results. Preferably the cone angle is between 40 and 20 degrees. Although LED semiconductor emitters are formed from materials having various colours, it is proposed that white or near white semiconductor materials will provide the best diffuse reflective properties for the arrangement illustrated.

    [0024] The emitter semiconductor 112 has a width, typically of 1 to 3 mm across. It has been found that the radius r of the half ball lens used should be about 10 to 20 times the width w of the emitter 112. The use of a solid material, for example glass, adjacent or in direct contact with the lens 120 is preferred because this arrangement allows heat to be conducted away from the LED more efficiently than if the LED were in air.

    [0025] Although two embodiments have been described and illustrated, it will be apparent to the skilled addressee that additions, omissions and modifications are possible to those embodiments without departing from the scope of the invention claimed. For example, although a cap 120 in the form of a glass half ball lens has been described and illustrated, the concept will work with any approximately hemispherical shape, and any transparent or translucent material, which may include a band pass filter to reduce the bandwidth of the light in cone L. A reflective coating 124 has been described, but a separate shell, or applied film, for example, would suffice. The exit 128 could be formed by a mask used when applying the coating/film, or may be formed by removing a portion of the coating once applied. The light exit 128 is, most conveniently, circular to provide a regular conical usable light source. However, the exit 128 could be other shapes, for example the exit could be a slit, to provide a line of exit light, suitable for other optical techniques. For increased efficiency, the flat face 122 of the cap 120 could be made reflective also, at regions other than the emitter area 112. The light emitter 112 is preferably adhered to the flat face 122, but it could be held in place by friction, for example applied by a mechanical clamp. It is intended that the cap 120 is solid i.e. is formed from a homogeneous material such as glass. However other homogeneous materials could be employed, such as clear moulded plastics or composite materials which include liquid filled cavities.