Adaptive optical filter for spectacle lenses

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 9915831
  • Patent Number
    9,915,831
  • Date Filed
    Friday, September 26, 2014
    10 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, March 13, 2018
    6 years ago
  • Inventors
  • Original Assignees
  • Examiners
    • Dang; Hung
    Agents
    • Oblon, McClelland, Maier & Neustadt, L.L.P.
Abstract
An adaptive optical filter for a spectacle lens, comprising at least two separate zones (10_M, 10_S), each being defined by an instantaneous value of at least one optical property. The optical property (CT) of at least one of the zones (10_M, 10_S) of the adaptive optical filter (10) is variable over time between a maximum value (CTMAX) and a minimum value (CTmin).
Description
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is the U.S. National Phase application of PCT Application No. PCT/EP2014/070631 filed Sep. 26, 2014, which claims priority to the French application 1359258 filed on Sep. 26, 2013, which applications are incorporated herein by reference and made a part hereof.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to optical filters, used as optical shutters to control the attenuation of a light intensity, adaptively in response to exterior conditions or on command by a user. The invention may advantageously be implemented in sunglasses to protect from glare.


2. Description of the Related Art

Many types of sunglasses are already known, using:

    • simple tinted lenses of uniform color or having a color gradient; or
    • photochromic lenses that tint depending on the amount of ultraviolet light to which they are subjected, and that gradually return to their clear state when the exposure to ultraviolet ceases.


Documents FR 2 722 581 and WO 98/27452 disclose spectacles the lenses of which comprise, in the vertical direction:

    • a polarized upper zone;
    • a polarization-neutral lower zone; and
    • a median zone the polarization of which degrades continuously from the upper zone to the lower zone.


Such spectacles allow their user to spontaneously or naturally adopt a vision position permitting vision through the lower zone, and a deliberate vision position, in which his head is downwardly inclined to a greater or lesser extent, permitting:

    • either vision through the upper zone, which greatly attenuates polarized light that is incident or reflected from faraway sources;
    • or vision through the median zone, in order to modify at the discretion of the spectacle wearer the degree of attenuation of far-field sources;
    • or vision through the lower zone, which produces no attenuation for observation of the near field.


Documents EP 0 341 519, FR 2 693 562 and FR 2 975 792 disclose spectacles the frame of which comprises a photosensitive sensor and the lenses of which include a liquid-crystal layer, the sensor emitting a signal that is an increasing function of the light intensity reaching it, and an electronic circuit controlling the liquid crystals in such a way that the transmittance of the liquid crystals decreases when the light intensity received by the sensor increases.


Document FR 2 781 289 discloses spectacles the frame of which comprises a photosensitive sensor emitting a signal the power of which increases as a function of the light intensity reaching it, an electronic circuit connected to the sensor and emitting a secondary AC signal the power of which increases with the power of the signal emitted by the sensor, and lenses including an electro-optical screen, the electronic circuit making the frequency of the secondary signal vary, an increase in light intensity resulting in a decrease in the transmittance of the spectacle lenses.


Lastly, document WO 2012/036638 discloses a pair of liquid-crystal ophthalmic spectacles the lenses of which include an upper zone for far vision, a lower zone for near vision, and an element of variable transparency. In near-vision mode, the lens zone for far vision is opacified, and the lens zone for near vision is clear or transparent. In far-vision mode, the lens zones for far and near vision are clear or transparent. The aim of these spectacles is to encourage the wearer to use the upper zone of the lenses for far vision, and the lower zone for near vision, instead of accommodating using the upper zone, in order to treat or prevent myopia.


There is, therefore, a need to provide an improved lens that overcomes one or more problems in the prior art.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention operates in this context and it has the aim of providing an adaptive optical filter, especially intended to form a spectacle lens, capable of having a light transmission of almost zero in order to allow dazzle to be avoided, and a maximum light transmission, especially of about 100%, in order to allow clear vision in the absence of a source of glare in the field of view, the passage from one transmission state to the other being gradual.


With this aim, the subject of the present invention is an adaptive optical filter for a spectacle lens, comprising at least two separate zones (10_M, 10_S), one preferably being located above the other, each of the zones being defined by an instantaneous value of at least one optical property, the optical property preferably being the light transmission coefficient.


According to the invention, the optical property (CT) of at least one of the zones (10_M, 10_S) of the adaptive optical filter (10) is variable over time between a maximum value (CTMAX) and a minimum value (CTmin).


Preferably, the transmission coefficient of the lower zone is higher than that of the upper zone.


According to other features of the invention, to be considered separately or in combination:

    • the light transmission coefficient of at least one of the zones of the adaptive optical filter is variable according to a pulse width modulation;
    • at least one of the zones of the adaptive optical filter includes a liquid-crystal cell;
    • at least one of the zones of the adaptive optical filter includes a micro-optical-electromechanical system;
    • the adaptive optical filter includes two zones the light transmission coefficient of each of which is variable over time between a maximum value and a minimum value;
    • the light transmission coefficient of one of the zones depends on the light transmission coefficient of the other zone;
    • the light transmission coefficient of at least one of the zones of the adaptive optical filter depends on the duty cycle of the pulse width modulation cycle;
    • the duty cycle of the pulse width modulation cycle of the light transmission coefficient of one of the zones depends on the duty cycle of the pulse width modulation cycle of the light transmission coefficient of an adjacent zone;
    • the light transmission coefficient is controlled by a control signal issued from a photosensitive sensor;
    • the photosensitive sensor emits a signal the value of which depends on the light intensity that it receives from the scene in front of the spectacle wearer;
    • the light transmission coefficient is controlled by a manual control signal; and/or
    • the adaptive optical filter comprises a zone the light transmission coefficient of which is constant over time.


These and other objects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description, the accompanying drawings and the appended claims.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE ACCOMPANYING DRAWINGS

Other aims, features and advantages of the present invention will become clearly apparent from the description that will now be given of an exemplary nonlimiting embodiment with reference to the appended drawings, in which:



FIG. 1 schematically a perspective view of an adaptive optical filter produced according to the present invention;



FIGS. 2A and 2B schematically show a pair of spectacles incorporating two filters produced according to the present invention, in two operating states;



FIGS. 3A and 3B show operational graphs explaining the states shown in FIGS. 2A and 2B;



FIGS. 4A and 4B show graphs of the temporal variation of the various signals used in the present invention; and



FIG. 5 schematically shows in perspective, on a very large scale, the filter in FIG. 1, according to a second embodiment.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS


FIG. 1 shows a schematic perspective view of an adaptive optical filter or spectacle lenses produced according to the teachings of the present invention. In the nonlimiting example shown in this figure, the filter or spectacle lenses, designated in its entirety by the reference 10, includes three zones:

    • a lower zone 10_I,
    • a median zone 10_M, and
    • an upper zone 10_S.


The lower zone 10_I has a fixed transmission coefficient CTI, of maximum value. In other words, the lower zone 10_I lets a maximum of light pass through.


The upper zone 10_S has a light transmission coefficient CTS that is variable over time, under the control of an electric signal. This transmission coefficient CTS may thus take any value between a maximum value CTMAX, for which a maximum amount of light is transmitted, and a minimum value CTmin, for which a minimum amount of light is transmitted.


The median zone 10_M has a light transmission coefficient CTM that is variable over time, so that its instantaneous value is always comprised between the fixed value CTI and the variable value CTS.


The filter in FIG. 1 is intended to equip a pair of spectacles, as shown in FIGS. 2A-2B and 3A-3B.



FIGS. 2A and 2B show a pair of spectacles, each of the spectacle lenses 10 of which incorporates at least one filter produced according to the present invention, in two operating states.


There may be seen:

    • in FIG. 2A a pair of spectacles, each of the spectacle lenses 10 of which includes a lower zone 10_I, a median zone 10_M, and an upper zone 10_S; and
    • in FIG. 3A, the variation in the transmission coefficient of these spectacle lenses 10 along the line III-III in FIG. 2A, the abscisse being taken along this vertical line III-III.



FIGS. 2A and 3A clearly show that the lower zone 10_I possesses a transmission coefficient CTI that is constant over the entire height of this lower zone 10_I, and of a maximum value.


Likewise, the upper zone 10_S possesses a transmission coefficient CTS that is constant over the entire height of this upper zone 10_S, and of value CTS lower than the value CTI of the transmission coefficient of the lower zone 10_I. In the example shown, the value CTS of the transmission coefficient of the upper zone 10_S is equal to the minimum value CTmin.


The median zone 10_M possesses a transmission coefficient CTM that is variable, and the value of which is comprised between the values of the transmission coefficients CTI and CTS of the adjacent lower and upper zones 10_I and 10_S. For example, the instantaneous value of CTM will possibly be equal at any instant to the arithmetic mean of the values CTI and CTS.


According to the present invention, and as already mentioned above, the transmission coefficients are CTS of the upper zone 10_S and CTM of the median zone 10_M variable over time, such that:

    • the light transmission coefficient CTS of the upper zone 10_S is variable over time, and may take any value comprised between a maximum value CTMAX, for which a maximum amount of light is transmitted, and a minimum value CTmin, for which a minimum amount of light is transmitted; and
    • the light transmission coefficient CTM of the median zone 10_M is constantly comprised between:
      • the variable instantaneous value CTS of the light transmission coefficient of the upper zone 10_S, and
      • the fixed maximum value CTI of the light transmission coefficient of the lower zone 10_I.
    • the light transmission coefficient CTM for example being equal to the arithmetic mean of the constant and variable values CTI, CTS.


This is indeed what may be seen in FIGS. 2B and 3B, from which it is apparent that:

    • the light transmission coefficient CTS has taken its maximum value CTMAX, and that
    • the light transmission coefficient CTM is still comprised between the new value CTS of the transmission coefficient of the upper zone 10_S and the constant value CTI of the transmission coefficient of the lower zone 10_I.


Therefore, according to the invention, a spectacle lens 10 comprising an adaptive optical filter has indeed been produced, the optical filter being capable of exhibiting:

    • in its upper zone 10_S, a light transmission coefficient CTS that is variable between:
      • a minimum value CTmin of almost zero in order to prevent dazzling by light sources in the field of view of the spectacle wearer, and
      • a maximum value CTMAX that is the highest allowed by the technology used to vary this transmission coefficient, in order to allow the spectacle wearer to observe the far field in the scene in front of him;
    • in its lower zone 10_I, a constant light transmission coefficient CTI of maximum value, in order to allow the spectacle wearer to perfectly distinguish objects in the near field in front of him; and
    • in its median zone 10_M, a light transmission coefficient CTM the value of which is at any instant comprised between the constant value CTI of the transmission coefficient of the lower zone 10_I and the variable value CTS of the transmission coefficient of the upper zone 10_S, in order to spare the spectacle wearer from an abrupt variation in the attenuation procured by the lower zone 10_I and upper zone 10_S, whatever the attenuation provided by the latter.


Various technologies allow filters to be produced, for example to produce spectacle lenses 10, having a transmission coefficient that is variable over time in order to implement the invention described above.


According to a first embodiment, liquid-crystal cells will possibly be used as constituent materials of the spectacle lenses 10, which are then controlled by an electric signal.


Conventionally, a liquid-crystal cell includes two polarization filters, a polarizer and an analyzer, enclosing a liquid-crystal layer. Transparent electrodes are deposited on those faces of the polarization filters which are turned toward the liquid-crystal layer, and the application of an electric field between these two electrodes allows the polarization state of the liquid-crystal layer to be switched, and therefore the light transmission coefficient to be modified, by the cell, between a zero value, for which the cell is opaque, and a maximum value, for which the cell has a maximum transparency.


Preferably, a digital, i.e. alternating, and preferably pulse-width-modulated (pulse width modulation PWM) signal having a preset frequency, as shown in the graphs in FIGS. 4A and 4B, will preferably be used as the electric control signal controlling the transmission coefficient of the liquid crystal 16S or 16M.


In the following description, only the control of the transmission coefficient CTS of the upper zone 10_S will be described. These explanations are easily transposable to the control of the transmission coefficient CTM of the median zone 10_M.


The electric control signal will possibly be issued from a manual control (not shown) actuated directly by the spectacle wearer, in order to control the transmission coefficient of the upper zone 10_S.


Preferably, the electric control signal will possibly be issued from a photosensitive sensor (not shown), emitting a signal the value of which depends on the light intensity that it receives from the scene in front of the spectacle wearer, and associated with a circuit that converts this signal into a PWM-coded digital control signal Sc, in order to automatically control the transmission coefficient of the filter composing a zone of the spectacle lens 10, and in particular its upper zone 10_S, depending on the luminosity emanating from the scene located in front of the spectacle wearer.


As may be seen in FIG. 4A, this control signal SC varies between a value SCMAX during a duration t1 and a value SCmin during a duration t2, the sum of the durations t1 and t2 defining the period T of the alternating signal SC, which is in addition characterized by a duty cycle α.


It will be recalled that the duty cycle α of the signal SC is defined by the ratio of the duration t1 during which the signal is maximum, to the duration T of the period, and therefore varies from 0 to 100%:






α
=


t
1

T





The duty cycle α of the signal SC thus appears as a direct function either of the light intensity received by the photosensitive sensor, or of the setpoint value set by the spectacle wearer. In FIG. 4A, the control signal SC shown is,

    • pulse-width modulated,
    • at a preset frequency






v
=

1
T






and

    • with a duty cycle α, in accordance with the graph in FIG. 4A.


This control signal SC then controls the transmission coefficient CTS of the upper zone 10_S of the spectacle lenses 10.


As shown in FIG. 4B, the transmission coefficient CTS varies in response to the signal SC, between a value CTMAX during the duration t1 and a value CTmin during the duration t2, with the same duty cycle α as the signal SC and the same frequency ν.


The value CTMAX is that for which the spectacle lenses 10 have their maximum transparency. In most cases, liquid-crystal screens have this state in the absence of any electrical excitation, i.e. in the rest state, and are opaque only under the effect of an electric field. In these cases, the value CTMAX corresponds to a minimum excitation of the liquid crystals forming the spectacle lenses 10.


In certain cases, the rest state of a liquid-crystal screen will possibly be that in which the liquid crystals have their maximum opacity, becoming transparent only under the effect of an electric field. In this eventuality, the value CTMAX corresponds to a maximum excitation of the liquid crystals forming the upper zone 10_S of the spectacle lenses 10.


The above explanations apply, mutatis mutandis, to the value CTmin of the transmission coefficient of the spectacle lenses 10.


The graph in FIG. 4B thus shows the variation in the transmission coefficient CTS of the upper zone 10_S of the spectacle lenses 10, and not the variation in the excitation signal of these spectacle lenses 10.


The spectacle wearer may therefore observe the scene in front of him through the spectacle lenses 10, the upper zone 10_S of which has a transmission coefficient that is adjusted:

    • either in real-time depending on the luminosity of the scene: the brighter this scene, the more the upper zones 10_S of the variable-transmission spectacle lenses 10 attenuate the light reaching the spectacle wearer;
    • or according to the setpoint value given by the spectacle wearer, depending on the attenuation that he would like to see delivered by the upper zone 10_S of the lenses 10.


The automatic or manual variation in the transmission coefficient CTS of the upper zone 10_S of the spectacle lenses 10 is thus obtained by a succession of maximum and minimum transparency states of the spectacle lenses 10, at a frequency ν and with a duty cycle α. The frequency ν is chosen to be sufficiently high to prevent any flicker effect for the spectacle wearer. The frequency ν will for example be higher than 100 Hz in order to benefit completely from the effect of persistence of vision.


As a result thereof, the average transmission coefficient, perceived by the spectacle wearer, will be able to vary between CTmin for α=0 and CTMAX for α=100.


The automatic or manual variation of the transmission coefficient CTM of the median zone 10_M of the spectacle lenses 10 is obtained in the same way, by a succession of maximum and minimum transparency states of this zone 10_M of the spectacle lenses 10, at the same frequency ν.


To obtain a transmission coefficient CTM for the zone 10_M the value of which is always comprised between the values of the transmission coefficient of the adjacent zones 10_I and 10_S, according to one embodiment, the duty cycle α (CTM) of the transmission coefficient CTM of the median zone 10_M will possibly be a simple function of the duty cycle α (CTS) of the transmission coefficient CTS of the median zone 10_S, for example:







α


(

CT
M

)


=


α


(

CT
S

)


2





According to a variant embodiment, the lower zone 10_I does not include liquid crystals and for example consists of a simple transparent lens, the value of the transmission coefficient CTI of the lower zone 10_I possibly then reaching a value close to 100%.


Therefore, according to the invention, an adaptive optical filter has indeed been produced for a spectacle lens 10, the filter comprising at least two zones,

    • a zone 10_I in which the light transmission coefficient CTI is constant and of maximum value, preferably about 100%, in order to allow the spectacle wearer to perfectly distinguish objects in the near field in front of him; and
    • a zone 10_S in which the light transmission coefficient CTS is variable between:
      • a minimum value CTmin of almost zero in order to prevent dazzling by light sources in the far field of view of the spectacle wearer, and
      • a maximum value CTMAX that is the highest allowed by the technology used to vary this transmission coefficient, in order to allow the spectacle wearer to observe the far field in the scene in front of him.


If the control signal controlling the transmission coefficient is issued from a luminosity sensor, the transmission coefficient of the adaptive optical filter is adjusted in real-time depending on the luminosity of the scene observed by the spectacle wearer: the higher the luminosity, the darker the adaptive optical filter, and vice versa.


For the comfort of the spectacle wearer, it is possible according to the present invention to add a third zone 10_M, in which the light transmission coefficient CTM is variable, its value remaining at any instant comprised between the values of the transmission coefficients of the adjacent zones 10_I and 10_S.


For an even better comfort of the spectacle wearer, the number of intermediate zones, between the lower zone 10_I having the fixed and minimum transmission coefficient CTI and the upper zone 10_S having the variable transmission coefficient CTS, will possibly be multiplied, each intermediate zone having a light transmission coefficient comprised between the transmission coefficient of the adjacent zones.


Other embodiments of the invention may be envisioned to obtain the same result.


Instead of using liquid-crystal cells as the variable transmission coefficient materials, micro-optical-electromechanical systems (known by the acronym MOEMS or MEMS), such as that schematically shown in FIG. 5, will possibly be used. Such systems are for example described in documents U.S. Pat. No. 4,248,501 or 5,784,189 to which the reader may refer.


Such systems are also controllable by an electronic signal, and their light transmission coefficient may be controlled at frequencies and with duty cycles compatible with the present invention.


Of course, the present invention is not limited to the embodiments described above; indeed, those skilled in the art will in contrast be able to make many modifications thereto without departing from its scope.


While the system, apparatus, process and method herein described constitute preferred embodiments of this invention, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to this precise system, apparatus, process and method, and that changes may be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention which is defined in the appended claims.

Claims
  • 1. An adaptive optical filter for a spectacle lens, comprising at least two separate zones (10_M, 10_S), one being at least one upper zone and another being at least one lower zone, each of said at least one upper zone and said at least one lower zone being defined by an instantaneous value of at least one optical property, wherein said at least one optical property (CT) of at least one of said at least two separate zones (10_M, 10_S) of said adaptive optical filter is variable over time between a maximum value (CTMAX) and a minimum value (CTmin);wherein said at least one optical property is a light transmission coefficient (CT);wherein a coefficient of transmission of said at least one lower zone is greater than a coefficient of transmission of said at least one upper zone.
  • 2. The adaptive optical filter as claimed in claim 1, wherein said light transmission coefficient (CT) of at least one of said at least two separate zones (10_M, 10_S) of said adaptive optical filter is variable according to a pulse width modulation (PWM).
  • 3. The adaptive optical filter as claimed in claim 2, wherein said light transmission coefficient (CT) of at least one of said at least two separate zones (10_M, 10_S) of said adaptive optical filter depends on a duty cycle (α) of said pulse width modulation (PWM) cycle.
  • 4. The adaptive optical filter as claimed in claim 3, wherein said duty cycle (α) of said pulse width modulation (PWM) cycle of said light transmission coefficient (CT) of one of said at least two separate zones (10_M) depends on said duty cycle (α) of said pulse width modulation (PWM) cycle of said light transmission coefficient (CT) of an adjacent zone (10_S).
  • 5. The adaptive optical filter as claimed in claim 2, wherein said light transmission coefficient is controlled by a control signal issued from a photosensitive sensor.
  • 6. The adaptive optical filter as claimed in claim 2, wherein said adaptive optical filter comprises a zone (10_I), said light transmission coefficient (CTI) of which is constant over time.
  • 7. The adaptive optical filter as claimed in claim 1, wherein at least one of said at least two separate zones (10_M, 10_S) of said adaptive optical filter includes a liquid-crystal cell.
  • 8. The adaptive optical filter as claimed in claim 1, wherein at least one of said at least two separate zones (10_M, 10_S) of said adaptive optical filter includes a micro-optical-electromechanical system (MEMS).
  • 9. The adaptive optical filter as claimed in claim 1, wherein said adaptive optical filter includes said at least two separate zones (10_M, 10_S), said light transmission coefficient (CT) of each of said at least two separate zones (10_M, 10_S) of which is variable over time between a maximum value (CTMAX) and a minimum value (CTmin).
  • 10. The adaptive optical filter as claimed in claim 9, wherein said light transmission coefficient (CT) of one of said at least two separate zones (10_M) depends on said light transmission coefficient (CT) of the other of said at least two separate zones (10_S).
  • 11. The adaptive optical filter as claimed in claim 10, wherein a duty cycle (α) of said pulse width modulation (PWM) cycle of said light transmission coefficient (CT) of one of said at least two separate zones (10_M) depends on said duty cycle (α) of said pulse width modulation (PWM) cycle of said light transmission coefficient (CT) of an adjacent zone (10_S).
  • 12. The adaptive optical filter as claimed in claim 1, wherein said light transmission coefficient is controlled by a control signal issued from a photosensitive sensor.
  • 13. The adaptive optical filter as claimed in claim 12, wherein said photosensitive sensor emits a signal the value of which depends on a light intensity that it receives from a scene in front of a spectacle wearer.
  • 14. The adaptive optical filter as claimed in claim 1, wherein said light transmission coefficient is controlled by a manual control signal.
  • 15. The adaptive optical filter as claimed in claim 1, wherein said adaptive optical filter comprises a zone (10_I), said light transmission coefficient (CTI) of which is constant over time.
  • 16. The adaptive optical filter as claimed in claim 1, wherein said light transmission coefficient is controlled by a control signal issued from a photosensitive sensor.
  • 17. A spectacle lens comprising: an adaptive optical filter having: at least two separate zones (10_M, 10_S), one being at least one upper zone and another being at least one lower zone, each of said at least one upper zone and said at least one lower zone being defined by an instantaneous value of at least one optical property,wherein said at least one optical property (CT) of at least one of said at least two separate zones (10_M, 10_S) of said adaptive optical filter is variable over time between a maximum value (CTMAX) and a minimum value (CTmin);wherein said at least one optical property is a light transmission coefficient (CT);wherein a coefficient of transmission of said at least one lower zone is greater than a coefficient of transmission of said at least one upper zone.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
13 59258 Sep 2013 FR national
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/EP2014/070631 9/26/2014 WO 00
Publishing Document Publishing Date Country Kind
WO2015/044354 4/2/2015 WO A
US Referenced Citations (87)
Number Name Date Kind
3199114 Malifaud Aug 1965 A
3961181 Golden Jun 1976 A
4286308 Wolff Aug 1981 A
4311368 Saito et al. Jan 1982 A
4848890 Horn Jul 1989 A
5258607 Agostini et al. Nov 1993 A
5276539 Humphrey Jan 1994 A
5486938 Aigrain Jan 1996 A
5671035 Barnes Sep 1997 A
5835458 Bischel et al. Nov 1998 A
5859735 De Vries Jan 1999 A
5911018 Bischel et al. Jun 1999 A
5978524 Bischel et al. Nov 1999 A
6078704 Bischel et al. Jun 2000 A
6118908 Bischel et al. Sep 2000 A
6133686 Inoue et al. Oct 2000 A
6141465 Bischel et al. Oct 2000 A
6313587 MacLennan et al. Nov 2001 B1
6384982 Spitzer May 2002 B1
6424448 Levy Jul 2002 B1
6493128 Agrawal et al. Dec 2002 B1
6522794 Bischel et al. Feb 2003 B1
6557995 Edwards May 2003 B1
6568738 Braun May 2003 B1
6624564 Wang et al. Sep 2003 B2
6626532 Nishioka Sep 2003 B1
6928180 Stam et al. Aug 2005 B2
7134707 Isaac Nov 2006 B2
7684105 Lamontagne et al. Mar 2010 B2
7751122 Amitai Jul 2010 B2
7874666 Xu et al. Jan 2011 B2
7893890 Kelly et al. Feb 2011 B2
7970172 Hendrickson Jun 2011 B1
8197931 Ueda et al. Jun 2012 B2
8208504 Dantus et al. Jun 2012 B2
8233102 Burlingame et al. Jul 2012 B2
D665009 Nibauer et al. Aug 2012 S
D717865 Votel et al. Nov 2014 S
8964298 Haddick et al. Feb 2015 B2
8976084 Hamdani et al. Mar 2015 B2
D734808 Markovitz et al. Jul 2015 S
9087471 Miao Jul 2015 B2
D735799 Markovitz et al. Aug 2015 S
9186963 Tewari et al. Nov 2015 B2
D746362 Markovitz et al. Dec 2015 S
D747403 Markovitz et al. Jan 2016 S
9277159 Shin et al. Mar 2016 B2
D763944 Shin Aug 2016 S
D765761 Votel et al. Sep 2016 S
D769358 Markovitz et al. Oct 2016 S
D769362 Markovitz et al. Oct 2016 S
D769962 Markovitz et al. Oct 2016 S
9511650 Momot Dec 2016 B2
20020175615 Wang et al. Nov 2002 A1
20060140502 Tseng et al. Jun 2006 A1
20060175859 Isaac Aug 2006 A1
20070285759 Ash et al. Dec 2007 A1
20080186604 Amitai Aug 2008 A1
20080218434 Kelly et al. Sep 2008 A1
20090213282 Burlingame et al. Aug 2009 A1
20090213283 Burlingame et al. Aug 2009 A1
20100065721 Broude et al. Mar 2010 A1
20100161177 Yuter Jun 2010 A1
20100194857 Mentz et al. Aug 2010 A1
20110072961 Jungkuist et al. Mar 2011 A1
20110233384 Wu et al. Sep 2011 A1
20110288725 Yuter Nov 2011 A1
20120019891 Dewell Jan 2012 A1
20120026071 Hamdani et al. Feb 2012 A1
20120044560 Lam et al. Feb 2012 A9
20120126099 Tewari et al. May 2012 A1
20120180204 Hawkins Jul 2012 A1
20120303214 Yuter Nov 2012 A1
20130113973 Miao May 2013 A1
20130127980 Haddick et al. May 2013 A1
20130300911 Beckman Nov 2013 A1
20140109302 Casbi et al. Apr 2014 A1
20140153076 Tewari et al. Jun 2014 A1
20140253816 Shin et al. Sep 2014 A1
20150062469 Fleury Mar 2015 A1
20150077826 Beckman Mar 2015 A1
20160077400 Lam et al. Mar 2016 A1
20160214467 El Idrissi et al. Jul 2016 A1
20160216536 Hue et al. Jul 2016 A1
20160223816 Hue et al. Aug 2016 A1
20160357014 Beckman Dec 2016 A1
20170023802 El Idrissi et al. Jan 2017 A1
Foreign Referenced Citations (30)
Number Date Country
301804989 Jan 2012 CN
102707456 Oct 2012 CN
2001086 Jul 1971 DE
3836095 Apr 1990 DE
102012008913 Nov 2012 DE
0341519 Nov 1989 EP
0459433 Dec 1991 EP
0498143 Aug 1992 EP
0945303 Sep 1999 EP
2684770 Jun 1993 FR
2693562 Jan 1994 FR
2722581 Jan 1996 FR
2781289 Jan 2000 FR
2846756 May 2004 FR
2941786 Aug 2010 FR
2975792 Nov 2012 FR
2976089 Dec 2012 FR
2988493 Sep 2013 FR
3010941 Mar 2015 FR
3011091 Mar 2015 FR
2420183 May 2006 GB
2445365 Jul 2008 GB
2004233908 Aug 2004 JP
9210130 Jun 1992 WO
9214625 Sep 1992 WO
9512502 May 1995 WO
9620846 Jul 1996 WO
9827452 Jun 1998 WO
2012036638 Mar 2012 WO
2012115301 Aug 2012 WO
Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20160202497 A1 Jul 2016 US