The invention relates to a display device comprising a luminous element and a light guide having incoupling and outcoupling locations, the light guide being able to transport a light signal emerging from the luminous element.
In the case of display devices of this type, signals are displayed on a projection surface by means of a differentiating optical signal transmitter via an optically conducting element. In the case of such displays, use has been made to date of a multiplicity of individual light-emitting elements, or of an electronic display. Examples of the application of such display devices are multistatus displays in tacographs or car radios that display a number of display states on a display field via a light guide and, for example, two LEDs. Another case of application is economy displays, arranged in the form of a ring or bar, mentioned in combination instruments of motor vehicles and utility vehicles that is implemented, for example, by means of 20 light-emitting diodes (LED) or by a liquid crystal display (LCD). The disadvantage of such a display is the high outlay on circuitry and the large number of discrete components that thereby entail high production costs and a low degree of design freedom.
It is the object of the invention to propose a display unit of simpler and more cost-effective design.
This object is achieved according to the invention by a display device of the type mentioned at the beginning and in the case of which the luminous element has an emission characteristic of controllable solid angle.
The display unit therefore has a spatially differentiating light source that can be controlled by a controlling or regulating unit. It is thereby possible to supply various display surfaces with a light signal from a single luminous element. In one possible refinement of the invention, the display surfaces are the outcoupling locations of the light guide. In another design, projection surfaces are provided onto which light emerging from the light guide falls. In a compact design of the display device, the projection surfaces are connected directly to the light guide. They can, however, likewise be realized as separate components. The same holds for the light entrance surfaces of the light guide, which are adapted to the optogeometrical conditions of the light guide and are positioned in accordance with the light source.
In an advantageous development of the invention, the light guide has light channels that direct the incoupled light onto the appropriate display or projection surfaces. Possible problems arising from signals that produce optical crosstalk are achieved in the simplest case by optical separation of the light channels, for example, by introducing a non-transmissive layer. However, additional optical channels made from glass or glass fibers and introduced into the light guide are also conceivable. They permit the light to be guided to the projection surface without interference.
The luminous element is configured in such a way that it can change its spatial emission characteristic as a function of a control signal. In the simplest case, there is located above the light exit plane of the luminous element an aperture slot that varies its position in accordance with the desired light entrance window.
A mechanically less complicated design in the sense of this invention is provided by using a light-emitting diode that can vary its emission characteristic in three dimensions. Consideration is given in this regard, for example, to an RC-LED (Resonance Cavity LED) that keeps down the outlay on mechanical design. With this type of luminous element, “Bragg” mirrors in a light-emitting diode chip ensure that the spatial light intensity distribution curve, the so-called Rousseau diagram, becomes large or small. Thin film LEDs, in particular, can advantageously be used.
In an advantageous design of the invention, the temperature of the chip is controlled not only via the LED current, but also via an additional heating and/or cooling element that is fitted at the smallest possible spacing from a heat sink of the LED chip. A controlling unit ensures that the current parameters are acquired and processed, if appropriate with the aid of current and temperature comparison tables, stored on a computer, for the appropriate alignment of the light distribution curve.
Luminous elements having a sufficiently short wavelength such as, for example, UV light sources, render it possible to use projection surfaces equipped with wavelength transmitters to provide the light signal with different colors. As a rule, light with a wavelength of 400-800 mm is denoted as UV light. Use is made as frequency converters of phosphor and other so-called luminous materials whose activator centers emit the energy radiated by the luminous element with the desired color. It is also conceivable to use so-called silicon nanocrystals that emit different light of defined wavelengths after irradiation with UV light. Use in a dial is particularly advantageous here.
The invention is explained in more detail below with the aid of exemplary embodiments. In the drawing:
In the case of the narrow light cone that is shown, the light strikes only in the lower light channel such that at a light exit region 1 of the light guide 14 a light signal is also to be detected only in the region of the lower light channel. The upper light channel, which receives no light signal from the luminous element 12, remains unilluminated.
The other light cone 4 shown is substantially larger, and comprises both light channels 5 of the light entrance region 2, and so a signal is also to be seen on the side of the light exit region 1 in the region of the two light channels 5.
Only two light channels are illustrated in
Also shown in
Whereas the light guide 14 is immobile with respect to the luminous element 12 in the exemplary embodiment of
As in the case of the exemplary embodiment of
Another design is a homogeneous light guide which is, therefore, not divided into individual channels. In the case of such a light guide 14, as well, light can be irradiated by the luminous element 12 such that it emerges again at a specific location of the light guide 14. This is possible because the light does not traverse the light guide 14 rectilinearly as a rule, but is reflected multiply at the boundary layers to the surroundings of the light guide. It is thereby possible to use the angle of irradiation and the knowledge of the geometrical shape of the light guide 14 to determine at which location a light signal irradiated at a specific angle emerges again. The light-deflecting elements 9, which reflect light signals in the direction of the light exit regions 10, can once again be arranged such that only light signals irradiated at a specific angle emerge at a specific light exit region 10.
A cover unit 8 is provided above the light guide 14. It has sections that are formed as absorption elements 7, and regions that are formed as display elements 6. The display elements 6 are provided for the purpose of visualizing light signals emerging through the light exit regions 10 of the light guide 14. For this purpose, they are formed either as transmission elements, that is to say allow the light beams to pass unimpeded, or else they are formed as projection elements. In the latter case, the surface is, for example, roughened such that the light is scattered. The projection or transmission elements can be colored in order to give the visible light a specific color. The absorption elements 7 ensure that crosstalk is prevented between different transmission and projection elements.
In the further development of the invention shown in
A description is given with the aid of
It is shown schematically in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10234124.9 | Jul 2002 | DE | national |
The present application is a continuation of international application PCT/DE03/002064, filed Jun. 20, 2003, which designated the United States, and further claims priority to German patent application DE10234124.9, filed Jul. 26, 2002, the both of which are herein incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/DE03/02064 | Jun 2003 | US |
Child | 11035148 | Jan 2005 | US |