This application is a 35 USC §371 National Stage application of, and claims priority of, International Application No. PCT/US2011/042063 filed Jun. 27, 2011, which further claims the benefit of priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/358,835 entitled “A HIGHLY ADJUSTABLE SOLID STATE ILLUMINATION MODULE AND THE METHOD OF MAKING IT” filed Jun. 25, 2010, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference as part of the specification of this document.
This patent document relates to lighting devices and techniques, including designs and operations of light devices having an array of light pixels.
Lighting devices can be constructed by using light pixels arranged in an array where each light pixel is controlled to emit light. Each light pixel can be a light-emitting diode (LED) or a laser diode (LD).
Techniques for constructing a solid-state lighting module that includes solid-state light emitters that emit light of different colors and are selected from separated groups of solid-state light emitters that emit light of two or more separated colors, wherein one or more solid-state light emitters are selected from each of the separated color groups of solid-state light emitters. The lighting module includes a programmable device that stores or remembers desirable optical intensities of the separated color groups of solid-state light emitters, and a control circuit that individually controls light intensity of each of the separated color groups of solid-state light emitters. The light control circuit is coupled to or in communication with the programmable device to receive the desirable optical intensities of the separated groups of solid-state light emitters and is operable to adjust the intensities of the separated color groups of solid-state light emitters based on the desirable intensities. In another implementation, a solid state lighting module includes multiple LEDs or semiconductor laser diodes (LDs), an optional detection system, and a control system to produce a desirable color profile. In one implementation, the LED or LD power and light spectrum can be measured and the measured results are used to calculate one or multiple set of control profiles. The module is then controlled to produce a desirable color profile output based on the calculated profiles.
These and other features are described in detail in the drawings, the description and the claims.
A semiconductor LED light source has certain light spectrum output, multiple such LEDs can be combined, e.g., LEDs that emit light of different colors, to produce a variety of color output with different colors. Such LEDs with different colors can be LED lights combined with different phosphor materials that emit light of different color under optical excitation of the LEDs light or can be LEDs based on semiconductor materials that emit light of different colors. Due to the production variation of LED chips, and differences in phosphor performance, LED light spectrum of a single color may have variations from one LED to another LED or from one chip to another chip. The LED light spectrum of a single color may also change over time due to aging and other time-dependent factors. In addition, the LED intensity may change over time due to aging or a change in its environment. Any of these and other effects may cause the combined light output color to shift over time, or to vary between production lots.
The techniques described in this document can be used to provide lighting module designs and production methods that may be used to, in some implementations, mitigate these problems. The specific examples described below are for LED-based lighting devices and the techniques associated with such examples can be extended to other light pixels such as laser diodes.
Based on the techniques described herein, a light device can include solid-state light emitters (e.g., LEDs or LDs) that emit light of different colors and are selected from groups of solid-state light emitters that emit light of two or more separated colors, e.g., any two or more of selected colors, such as red, green, blue and yellow. One or more solid-state light emitters are selected from each of the separated color groups. This light device includes a programmable device that stores or remembers desirable optical intensities of these groups of solid-state light emitters, and a control circuit that individually controls light intensity of each of the separated color groups of solid-state light emitters. The light control circuit is coupled to or in communication with the programmable device to receive the desirable optical intensities of these groups of solid-state light emitters. The light control circuit is operable to adjust the intensities of these groups of solid-state light emitters based on the desirable intensities.
In another implementation, the adjustable light device can include an optional light detection module that detects optical intensities of the separated color groups of solid-state light emitters. The light control circuit is coupled to or in communication with the light detection module to receive measurements of optical intensities of the separated color groups of solid-state light emitters and is coupled to or in communication with the programmable device to receive the desirable optical intensities of these groups of solid-state light emitters. The light control circuit is operable to adjust the intensities of these groups of solid-state light emitters based on the desirable intensities.
In another implementation, a solid-state lighting module can be configured to include one or more solid-state light emitters from each of three or more separated colors groups, a light detection system that detects the optical intensities of these groups of LEDs, a programmable device that stores or remembers the desirable optical intensities of these groups of solid-state light emitters, and a control circuit that individually controls intensity of these groups of solid-state light emitters, and uses the light detection system measurements to adjust the intensities of these groups of solid-state light emitters to the desirable intensities.
The above adjustable light devices can be operated to provide the adjustment to offset or compensate for variations in the color and light power that are caused by various factors and thus enable the output of the light device to produce a desirable output in the presence of the variations to the light device.
The above adjustable light device can be used to ensure color production to meet certain color reproduction standards. For example, this device can be used for solid-state illumination source especially LED illumination source to provide a color reproduction capability to meet the specification of CRI comparing to traditional light source such as incandescent lamp or Xenon lamp which has CRI equal or better than 95 since its photons are generated from a blackbody radiation process. One of common white LEDs with luminescent material (such as YAG based phosphors) on blue LED produces white color near blackbody locus with CRI typically around 80 due to low optical output at red and green spectrum range of typical luminescent material. The above adjustable light device and other device designs with multiple color groups described in this document can be used to address this challenge and to produce high CRI output.
It is often technically difficult for a high CRI illumination source to adjust color temperature. For traditional illumination source or conventional solid-state illumination device, the color temperature can be pre-determined by choice of filament and/or luminescent material. With multiple color groups and independent intensity control as described in this document, a light module with adjustable color temperature and output lumen while maintaining high CRI can be constructed.
In some implementations, a light detection system or module can be provided to measure the light output power of each color group, and microcontroller can use the measurement data from the light detection module to adjust the light output intensity of each color group to insure the LED module color profile and power output is fixed at desirable value. This detection/control feedback design is to insure the light output level of each color group is at a preset level. In the case of aging of the LEDs, or shift of the component value or environments, this feedback design can archive fixed light output level for each color group and the whole LED module. This combination of the light detection and feedback to the control circuit can be beneficial in various applications where the combined light output color of the module is dependent on the relative power output level of each color group. And LED output level can be affected by aging, and environments. This combination of the light detection and feedback to the control circuit provides a mechanism to counter the effects caused by device aging, environments and other factors.
For example, three color groups of light emitters of LEDs/LDs can be constructed in an adjustable light device, such as a blue group of light emitters (blue LEDs), a yellow group of light emitters (realized with blue LED or UV plus yellow phosphors), and a red group of light emitters (red LEDs, or LED with red phosphors, or red laser diodes).
For another example, three color groups can include a green group of light emitters (green LEDs or realized with blue LED or UV plus green phosphors), a yellow group of light emitters (realized with blue LED or UV plus yellow phosphors), and a red group of light emitters (red LEDs, or LED with red phosphors, or red laser diodes).
For another example, four color groups can include a blue group of light emitters (blue LEDs), a yellow group of light emitters (realized with blue or UV LED plus yellow phosphors), a red group of light emitters (red LEDs or red laser diodes), and a green group of light emitters (realized with green LEDs, or blue LEDs with green phosphors, or green laser diodes).
For yet another example, two groups of light emitters can include a blue group of light emitters (blue LEDs), and a yellow group of light emitters (realized with blue LED plus yellow phosphors).
Additional designs of the color groups are provided below. In one example, one group of solid-state light emitter has color of blue LED (dominant wavelength from 435 to 485 nm), and one group of luminescent LED has color of yellow (dominant wavelength from 550 to 585 nm), and a group of LED has color of red (dominant wavelength from 610 to 640 nm). In another example, one group of solid-state light emitter has color of green color LED (dominant wavelength from 515 to 540 nm), and one group of luminescent LED has color of yellow (dominant wavelength from 550 to 585 nm), and a group of LED has color of red (dominant wavelength from 610 to 640 nm). In another example, one group of solid-state light emitter has color of blue LED (dominant wavelength from 435 to 485 nm), and one group of solid-state light emitter has color of green color LED (dominant wavelength from 515 to 540 nm), and one group of luminescent LED has color of yellow (dominant wavelength from 550 to 585 nm), and a group of LED has color of red (dominant wavelength from 610 to 640 nm). In the above examples, the yellow luminescent LED can be made of a yellow luminescent material (such as but not limited to phosphors or quantum dotes) excited by blue or UV LED.
In one example for implementation of the design, three color groups can be used. One group is primarily blue color. Another group is primarily yellow color, and the third group is primarily red color. The power intensity of each color group can be independently adjusted, by controlling either the current of the LED or the turn-on time of the LED. An optional detection system is made with photo sensitive elements to measure the intensity of the light output for each LED groups. This measurement is fed to a microcontroller which controls the drive current of LED or turn-on time.
Only a few embodiments are described. Other embodiments and their variations and enhancements can be made based on what is described and illustrated.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/US2011/042063 | 6/27/2011 | WO | 00 | 6/17/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2011/163672 | 12/29/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6122042 | Wunderman et al. | Sep 2000 | A |
6498440 | Stam et al. | Dec 2002 | B2 |
7148470 | Rains, Jr. et al. | Dec 2006 | B2 |
20090033612 | Roberts et al. | Feb 2009 | A1 |
20090189530 | Ashdown et al. | Jul 2009 | A1 |
20090278789 | Declercq et al. | Nov 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
10-2008-0089380 | Oct 2008 | KR |
10-2009-0059505 | Jun 2009 | KR |
10-2010-0055294 | May 2010 | KR |
20071066112 | Jun 2007 | WO |
Entry |
---|
International Search Report and Written Opinion mailed on Feb. 9, 2012 for International Application No. PCT/US2011/042063, filed Jun. 27, 2011 (8 pages). |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20130257287 A1 | Oct 2013 | US |