The present invention relates to a distance-measuring unit for distance measurement based on a time-of-flight signal.
The distance measurement in question is based on a time-of-flight measurement of emitted electromagnetic pulses. If these pulses strike an object, the pulse is partially reflected at its surface back to the distance-measuring unit and can be recorded as an echo pulse with a suitable sensor. If the emission of the pulse takes place at a time t0 and if the echo pulse is detected at a later time t1, the distance d to the reflecting surface of the object may be determined by means of the time-of-flight ΔtA=t1−t0 according to
d=Δt
A
c/2. Eq. 1
Since the pulses are electromagnetic pulses, c is the value of the speed of light.
The technical object of the present invention is to provide a particularly advantageous distance-measuring unit.
This is achieved according to the invention with the distance-measuring unit as claimed in claim 1. It comprises an emitter unit for emitting the laser pulses and a receiver unit for receiving echo pulses. One particular feature in this case is that the receiver unit and the emitter unit are coupled to the detection field by means of the same optical unit. The echo pulses are thus guided onto the sensor surface of the receiver unit by means of the same optical unit as the one by means of which the laser pulses travel from the emitter unit into the detection field.
This integration may for example be advantageous with a view to a compact structure, as the emitter unit and the receiver unit may be provided relatively close to one another or even integrated at the component level, see below in detail. Moreover, the multiple use of the optical unit per se is already advantageous because, for example, in this way the number of individual parts may be decreased or the adjustment outlay may be reduced. A compact and economical LIDAR sensor system may therefore be produced (Lidar=light detection and ranging).
Preferred configurations may be found in the dependent claims and the disclosure as a whole, distinction not always being made in detail in the presentation of the features between device and method or use aspects; the disclosure is in each case implicitly to be interpreted in respect of all claim categories. For example, if a distance-measuring unit suitable for particular operation is described, this is also intended to include disclosure of a corresponding operating method, and vice versa.
The optical unit is preferably refractive; an exclusively refractive optical unit is particularly preferred, i.e. the guiding of light or radiation takes place only by refraction (reflection is also possible in general). The optical unit is preferably a converging lens, which may be constructed as individual lenses or as a lens system having a plurality of individual lenses. In respect of further possibilities, reference is made to the disclosure below.
A laser diode is preferably provided as the emitter unit. It may for example be a surface emitter (VCSEL), with which integration with the receiver unit (photodiode) at the component level is even possible, see below in detail. On the other hand, however, the laser diode may also be constructed as an edge emitter, i.e. the laser radiation may be emitted at a laser facet on the side edge of the chip.
Also, independently of the structure of the emitter unit in detail, the electromagnetic radiation is preferably infrared radiation, i.e. wavelengths of for example at least 600 nm, 650 nm, 700 nm, 750 nm, 800 nm or 850 nm (increasingly preferred in the order mentioned). Around 905 nm may for example be particularly preferred, in respect of which advantageous upper limits may be at most 1100 nm, 1050 nm, 1000 nm or 950 nm (increasingly preferred in the order mentioned). A further preferred value may for example be around 1064 nm, which entails advantageous lower limits of at least 850 nm, 900 nm, 950 nm or 1000 nm and advantageous upper limits (independent thereof) of at most 1600 nm, 1500 nm, 1400 nm, 1300 nm, 1200 nm or 1150 nm (in each case increasingly preferred in the order mentioned). Preferred values may also be around 1548 nm or 1550 nm, which entails advantageous lower limits of at least 1350 nm, 1400 nm, 1450 nm or 1500 nm and advantageous upper limits (independent thereof) of at most 2000 nm, 1900 nm, 1800 nm, 1700 nm, 1650 nm or 1600 nm (in each case increasingly preferred in the order mentioned). In general, however, wavelengths in the far IR may for example also be envisioned, for example 5600 nm or 8100 nm.
A pulse is a temporally limited quantity which is emitted in order, in the case of reflection at the object, then to be detected by a sensor of the distance-measuring unit with a time lag. A pulse width, taken according to the full width at half maximum (FWHM), may for example be at most 1 ms, and preferably much less, i.e. increasingly preferably in the order mentioned at most 800 μs, 600 μs, 400 μs or 200 μs, or even less, namely at most 1000 ns, 900 ns, 800 ns, 700 ns, 600 ns, 500 ns, 400 ns, 300 ns, 200 ns, 100 ns, 80 ns, 60 ns, 40 ns, 30 ns, 25 ns, 20 ns, 15 ns, 10 ns, 5 ns or 2 ns (increasingly preferred in the order mentioned). In principle, a pulse that is as short as possible may be preferred, although for technical reasons lower limits may for example be at least 0.001 ns, 0.01 ns or 0.1 ns.
In general, the receiver unit may also be provided as a position-resolving receiver unit, i.e. the sensitive sensor surface may be subdivided into a plurality of individually readable regions. An example thereof is a CCD or CMOS array. The receiver unit is preferably provided as a photodiode, specifically without position resolution over the sensor surface. As the photodiode, a PIN diode, APD (avalanche photodiode) or SPAD (single photon APD) is for example possible, or a photomultiplier.
According to one preferred embodiment, the distance-measuring unit comprises a reflector which is arranged between the emitter unit and the optical unit. During operation, the laser pulses of the emitter unit are reflected at the reflector, specifically at the reflection surface thereof, before they travel through the optical unit into the detection field. With this deflection, the same optical unit may for example be used for laser pulses and echo pulses even when the laser diode is configured as an edge emitter and the laser pulses are emitted “laterally”.
In a preferred configuration, the receiver unit and the reflector are positioned relative to one another in such a way that a perpendicular projection of the reflection surface into the sensor surface fills the sensor surface partially but not fully. In other words, the reflection surface shadows a part of the sensor surface as seen from the detection field. This is on the one hand an expression of the integration, because the emitter unit and the receiver unit may therefore actually be assigned to the same spatial direction. On the other hand, the shadowing exists only partially so that an energy fraction from the echo pulses always reaches the sensor surface.
In a preferred configuration, the reflector itself is placed onto the sensor surface and connected thereto. The components, i.e. the receiver unit or photodiode on the one hand, and the reflector on the other hand, are thus stacked on one another, and the reflector is preferably adhesively bonded. The radiation which strikes the “sensor surface” (or at least a fraction thereof and at least in one wavelength range) may be metrologically detected with the receiver unit. The sensor surface is, for example, not necessarily the surface of the photodiode chip, and the latter may for example also be packaged so that a radiation-transmissive window forms the sensor surface.
As an alternative, a laterally suspended reflector may also be preferred, i.e. the reflector may be fastened by means of a suspension element. The latter extends laterally beyond the edge of the sensor surface, and is fastened there, for example adhesively bonded onto the housing of the emitter unit. This variant may, for example, be preferred when adhesive bonding of the reflector onto the sensor surface is not possible, or is possible only with increased outlay.
The reflector may be provided as a reflector made of a nontransmissive material, for example made of a metal such as aluminum, or made of a plastic. The metallic or plastic material may be inherently reflective (for example embedded reflection particles in the case of the plastic) or separately coated (for example with Au or Ag or Al).
In general, it may be preferred for the reflector to be provided as a prismatic body made of a radiation-transmissive material, i.e. a material which transmits at least wavelengths in the range of the laser and echo pulses. The reflector may in particular be provided as a reflector made of a plastic material (for example polycarbonate) or preferably a vitreous material, in particular quartz glass. A coated surface of the reflector (for example coated with Au, Al or Ag) may form the reflection surface.
In a preferred configuration, the reflection surface is a total internal reflection surface, i.e. the laser pulses enter the prismatic body and emerge after total internal reflection (the optical density of the radiation-transmissive material is higher than that of the surrounding medium, for example air). Total internal reflection may, for example, be advantageous in respect of efficiency. Considered in a cross section, the reflector may have a triangular shape, and it may in particular constitute a right-angled triangle. An X cube may also be provided as the prism.
The suspension element, at least in the region of the sensor surface, may have a relatively simple shape, in particular a cuboid shape, in order to reduce unintended reflections. In general, a suspension element having side surfaces that are as parallel as possible to the sensor surface may advantageously allow good radiation transmission (from the detection field onto the sensor surface). In this respect, an at least local antireflection coating of the suspension element may also be preferred, for example at least of those side surfaces thereof which are substantially parallel to the sensor surface.
According to one preferred embodiment, the suspension element is provided monolithically with the reflector and made of the same radiation-transmissive material. “Monolithically” means free from, i.e. without, material boundaries in the interior, i.e. uninterruptedly continuously (for example formed by casting or by machining on the same base body).
In one preferred embodiment, the distance-measuring unit is adapted for solid angle-selective emission of the laser pulses, i.e. they can be emitted selectively into different solid angle segments of the detection field. It is then possible to segmentally “listen” and determine a respective distance value, which gives a one-dimensionally or even two-dimensionally pixelated distance image. In general, this solid angle-selective emission of the pulses may for example also be achieved with a tiltable or oscillating reflection surface, i.e. for example a MEMS mirror. The latter reflects the laser pulses incident from the emitter unit into different solid angle segments in different oscillation or tilt settings, which gives the aforementioned resolution.
In a preferred configuration, however, the solid angle-selective emission is produced with a plurality of emitter units, which respectively feed their own solid angle segment of the detection field. Preferably, each emitter unit is in this case assigned its own reflector, by means of which the laser pulses enter the corresponding solid angle segment. The emitter units may then, for example, emit sequentially during operation so that the laser pulses successively enter the different solid angle segments (respectively while waiting for a pause interval corresponding to the distance).
In a preferred configuration, the reflection surfaces of the different reflectors are tilted relative to one another, the different solid angle segments being covered by this relative tilting of the reflection surfaces. In general, this may for example also be achieved by means of the optical unit, or emitter units mounted with a tilt relative to one another; however, the latter implies increased mounting outlay and is therefore less preferred than tilting of the reflection surfaces.
According to one preferred embodiment, the distance-measuring unit comprises a plurality of receiver units, each of which has a sensitive sensor surface. Preferably, each of these sensor surfaces is then respectively assigned its own reflector. This means that the reflector and the receiver unit are positioned relative to one another in such a way that a perpendicular projection of the reflection surface into the sensor surface fills the latter partially but not fully. In general, the respective sensor surface may also be assigned a plurality of reflectors, exactly one reflector per sensor surface is preferred.
In general, a resolution along two axes may advantageously be provided by the combination of a plurality of sensor surfaces and reflectors, i.e. the detection field may in principle be scanned two-dimensionally. If the sensor surfaces are for example arranged in a row next to one another, the detection field may be resolved along this axis on the receiver side (echo pulses returning from different segments strike different sensor surfaces). The relative tilting of the reflection surfaces may then preferably be fanned out along an axis perpendicular thereto, so that two-dimensional or grid-like scanning is obtained overall.
According to one preferred embodiment, the laser pulses of the different emitter units are guided into the detection field through the same optical unit. The advantages mentioned in the introduction of multiple use or compact arrangement to this extent come into play particularly greatly.
Again relating to the optical unit in general, i.e. independently of the assignment of a plurality of emitter units: as an alternative to a lens, in general a holographic structure for guiding radiation may for example also be envisioned. The lens preferably provided may, however, also be constructed more complexly, for example as a microlens array or gradient-index lens. A lenticular lens may likewise be provided, i.e. one which is translationally symmetrical along one axis.
In a preferred configuration, however, the optical unit is a converging lens, preferably having a locally different radius of curvature. In particular, a smaller radius of curvature (stronger curvature) may be preferred centrally and a larger radius of curvature (lower curvature) may be preferred peripherally, the central region being assigned to the reflector and therefore to the emitter unit, and the echo pulses travelling through the edge region onto the sensor surface.
As mentioned in the introduction, according to one preferred embodiment, a laser diode as the emitter unit and a photodiode as the receiver unit may be structured on a common semiconductor substrate. This may in particular be done with a laser diode configured as a surface emitter, which is for example constructed on the basis of GaAs (GaAs/AlGaAs). Photodiodes may also be produced on the basis of III-V compound semiconductors, and are thus located in the same system. Correspondingly, the laser diode and the photodiode may already be combined at the wafer level, i.e. produced in the same front-end process.
The emission of the surface emitter takes place perpendicularly to its surface, i.e. perpendicularly to the sensor surface. The laser diode and the photodiode may then, for example, be placed directly next to one another (on the same substrate). A more extensive geometrical restriction is however also possible, that is to say for example the sensor surface may enclose the laser diode, i.e. have a ring shape (for example annular shape), the laser diode being seated therein.
The invention also relates to the use of a distance-measuring unit as disclosed here in a motor vehicle, for example a truck or motorcycle, and in an automobile. Application in a semiautonomously or fully autonomously driving vehicle is particularly preferred. In general, however, application in an aircraft or watercraft may also be envisioned, for instance an airplane, a drone, a helicopter, train or ship. Further application fields may be in the field of indoor positioning, i.e. detecting the positions of persons and objects inside buildings; detection of a plant structure (morphological recognition in plant cultivation) is also possible, for example during a growth or ripening phase; applications may also be in the field of the control (tracking) of effect lighting in the field of entertainment, the control (tracking) of a robotic arm in the fields of industry and medicine likewise being possible.
The invention will be explained in more detail below with the aid of an exemplary embodiment; the individual features in the scope of the coordinated claims may also be essential to the invention in a different combination, and distinction is furthermore not made in detail between the various claim categories.
In detail:
The emitter unit 2 is adapted to emit laser radiation 6, and can thus emit laser pulses 7 during operation. These are guided by means of a reflector 8, after reflection at the reflection surface 8.1 of the latter, through the optical unit 4 and therefore into the detection field 9. If there is an object 10 there, radiation is partially reflected back at its surface and thus returns in the form of echo pulses 11 to the distance-measuring unit 1. The echo pulses 11 pass through the same optical unit 4 as the one through which the laser pulses 7 emerge, and are guided onto the sensor surface 3.1. From the time lag which exists between the emission of the laser pulse 7 and the reception of the echo pulse 11, with the speed of light c it is possible to determine the distance to the object 10 (which is then done in an evaluation or computer unit, for example an ASIC).
As may be seen from
In the variants described above, the reflectors 8, 40 were respectively placed directly onto the respective sensor surface 3.1, 46.1 of the respective receiver unit 3, 46, i.e. they were adhesively bonded onto the small prismatic bodies. In this case, a (for example metallic) coating forms the respective reflection surface 8.1, 40.1.
In the present case, the reflection surface 8.1 is a total internal reflection surface, the laser pulses 7 enter the prismatic quartz glass reflector, are totally internally reflected and then emerge (upward).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2018 218 706.1 | Oct 2018 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2019/078779 | 10/23/2019 | WO | 00 |