Preferred and alternative embodiments of the present invention are described in detail below with reference to the following drawings:
The current invention is shown as an optical device 8 in the top view and cross section shown in
The device 8 includes a first material layer 10 and a second material layer 20. The first material layer 10 is flexible. The second material layer 20 may or may not be flexible depending on the specific design properties desired. An array of rods 14 connects between layers 10 and 20. The rods 14 may be round, hexagonal, square—the specific shape is not critical. For this configuration, the rods 14 should be mechanically stiff.
The connection between the rods 14 and the material layers 10 and 20 is via flex joints 24. The flex joints 24 allow the angle between the rods 14 and the material layers 10 and 20 to rotate in both non-axial directions with respect to the material layers 10 and 20. A ball and socket joint would be one implementation of the flex joint 24 with the ball being fabricated into the end of the rod 14 and the socket being fabricated into the material layers 10 and 20.
A central rod 12 connects to the material layers 10 and 20. A pair of rotational joints 22 connects the rod 12 to the layers 10 and 20. The rotation joints 22 allow the material layers 10 and 20 to rotate with respect to each other around the axis defined by the center axis of central rod 12. Unlike the flex joints 24, the rotational joints 22 do not allow flexure in the non-axial angles.
This arrangement of rods 14, flex joints 24, central rod 12, and rotational joints 22 allows the two material layers 10 and 20 to rotate with respect to each other, but not translate.
When the flexible material layer 10 is rotated about the axis of the central rod 12, the effect for an individual rod 14 is shown in
t=√{square root over (D2−Ae)} (1)
where D is the length of the rod 14.
t=√{square root over (D2−r2θ2)} (2)
With a stiff second material layer 20, the first material layer 10 takes on a parabolic shape. This example is shown in
A parabolic surface is of particular interest in optics for imaging purposes. As demonstrated above, the imaging power or focal length of the surface is controlled very simply via the rotation angle, 0. A reflective surface is obtained by coating the first material layer 10 with a suitable metal or dielectric reflector.
A refractive element can be obtained by fabricating all of the components of a transparent material and then filling the empty space between the layers 10 and 20 with a liquid or gel (Fluid 26) with index of refraction that matches the other components. The matching index of refractions will cause all of the mechanical (solid) components to optically ‘disappear’. A thin, variable focus lens is thereby obtained.
The above example is illustrative of a basic mechanical configuration which can take on a multitude of variations. For example:
The central aspect of the current invention is the use of and array of rods 14 with flex joints 24 (or flexible rods) connecting two material layers 10 and 20, the layers 10 and 20 being stiff along their surface plane and flexible in their transverse axis such that a relative motion of the two layers can be used to produce a relative shape change. Of specific interest is a rotational motion used to produce a parabolic surface of variable curvature.
While the preferred embodiment of the invention has been illustrated and described, as noted above, many changes can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the scope of the invention is not limited by the disclosure of the preferred embodiment. Instead, the invention should be determined entirely by reference to the claims that follow.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/803,701 filed Jun. 1, 2006, which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60803701 | Jun 2006 | US |