Luminaires for large signs are necessarily placed at oblique angles so as not to come between sign and viewer. The less oblique the angle the easier it is to get some light onto the farthest corners of the target, but the farther out this puts the luminaire, usually requiring stronger and thus costlier structural support. Conventional luminaires typically must overload the nearest part of the sign in order to get even a little light to the farthest corners, so that non-uniform illuminance is the norm. Only the human eye's great adaptability allows such failings to pass muster. Where they do not, as in luminaires for paintings, the lamp must be relatively further out from the painting to achieve the necessary degree of uniformity. Such an application would benefit from a luminaire that could be mounted closer to a painting and still be uniform.
The large source sizes of conventional lamps preclude “wall-washing” luminaires from achieving anything but great non-uniformity on oblique targets. The small size of light emitting diodes (LEDs), however, makes it possible to achieve the great angular variations in intensity required for oblique luminaires, where the cos−3 effect is substantial (factor of 7 increase from 50° to 70.4°). Only a luminaire that is substantially larger (factor of 10 or more) than its light source could deliver that great a variability in output intensity.
While illumination lenses have been patented, they all remain fundamentally limited by the large incidence angles required to deflect light refractively. Large incidence angles, such as the 50° required for a 20° deflection, engender distortion, chromatic dispersion, and large reflective losses. Lenses are favored for LEDs because the emission of an LED is typically hemispheric, with circuit boards and other structures behind that hemisphere, generally ruling out reflectors for anything but auxiliary cups next to the emitting chip. But the small size of LEDs means that very narrow collimation angles of only a few degrees can be achieved, as for example by the RXI lens disclosed in commonly-assigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,896,381 by Benitez et al.
A well collimated beam of light can be redistributed to a prescribed intensity pattern, such as for LED automotive high-beams, by the methods disclosed in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 7,042,655 by Sun et al. This method requires uniform illuminance across the beam, which cannot always be taken for granted. It also becomes difficult to apportion a round beam onto a square target without spillage or shadowing. While the method of the present application can be applied to such lenses, its primary application is to reflectors that redistribute a collimated beam into any desired pattern. Reflectors are particularly advantageous for this task because their deflection angle is twice the incidence angle, in contrast to refraction's factor of (n−1)/n (=⅓ for a material with a refractive index of 1.5). Thus relatively small values of surface curvature can generate considerable changes in deflection, which is indispensable for the large variations in intensity required for oblique presentation. This is where the degree of collimation is crucial. Before LEDs, collimation angles of only a few degrees was confined to large searchlights. A 3° beam divergence means that the edge of the illumination pattern can fall to zero in no smaller an angle than this. The present systems contemplate that the beam divergence of the input collimation is less than a fifth the smallest angular extent of the target, and more preferably a tenth.
With the advent of light emitting diodes (LEDs) in illumination, it has become possible for compact lenses to generate very narrowly collimated beams (i.e., only a few degrees). It is possible for a suitably shaped mirror to transform such a beam into a divergence that illuminates a desired target. Of particular interest as targets are nearby rectangles, such as paintings, billboards, and sides of buildings. An objective of the present invention is to provide such mirror shapes and how they can be made small and arrayed over a few inches to cover a collimated beam.
Embodiments of present invention may include two core ideas. First, a curved rectangular mirror can, at the proper tilt from a collimated beam, generate uniform illuminance on an oblique rectangular target. But conventionally this uniformity was only guaranteed by uniform beam illuminance, which is difficult to guarantee.
Second, when such a rectangular reflector is much smaller than the collimated beam, illuminance across it will vary very little, so that any beam non-uniformities will not show up in the mirror's output pattern. One preferred embodiment of the present invention is a circular array of many such small rectangular mirrors, joined at the same tilt, each producing the same pattern on the target. The principles of shaping the mirror in accordance with the particular target are disclosed herein and the polynomial coefficients are listed for several typical target presentations.
The angular outputs of luminaires can be classified as narrow (collimated, under 10 degrees wide), intermediate (15-40°), and wide-angle. The present invention best addresses the intermediate niche, particularly the most awkward and difficult targets for lenses, obliquely presented rectangles. Illumination patterns of arbitrary shapes such as letters can just as well be generated as rectangular illumination patterns, by a reflective array of similarly shaped minor elements. Most outlines, however, do not tessellate, or tile without leftovers, as nicely as rectangles or hexagons, posing a cost of lost light and the extra production step of masking the unwanted mirror sections between the array elements. Thus the principal emphasis of the preferred embodiments disclosed herein is on rectangles. In particular, billboard lighting faces limitations on both total lumens and the amount of spilled light. The present invention addresses this situation by delivering uniform illumination to a rectangle, with a sharp cutoff.
Embodiments of the present invention provide reflectors, arrays of reflectors, optical systems including such reflectors and/or arrays in combination with light sources, collimators, and/or targets to be illuminated, and methods of designing such reflectors, arrays, and systems.
According to one embodiment of the invention, there are provided a curved specular reflector, and a method of designing such a reflector, having a shape that reflects a collimated input beam onto a target, said reflector shape mathematically determined from the target geometry by a two-step integration of normal vectors that bisect the angles between said input beam and points on said target, the first of said two steps comprising the integration up the center of said reflector to yield a central spine, the second step comprising the lateral integration of horizontal ribs proceeding from each point on said spine.
According to another embodiment of the invention, there are provided a curved specular reflector, and a method of designing such a reflector, that when exposed to a uniform collimated beam with a direction defining a negative z-axis will uniformly illuminate a planar target at distance z0, said target being M times larger than said reflector, said reflector described by the mathematical function
and A=MX/z0, with X being the x-coordinate of the mirror outer edge.
According to another embodiment of the invention, there are provided an illumination system, and a method of designing an illumination system, comprising a target; an array of reflectors according to the invention, and a collimator for delivering a collimated input beam along the z axis, said input beam of angular beamwidth less than one fifth the angle subtended by said target at said reflector, the array being held oriented to said beam in operation.
According to further embodiment of the invention, there are provided a mirror system and a method of designing a mirror system comprising an array of mirrors, each oriented to illuminate substantially the whole of a common target substantially uniformly from a common input beam of collimated light.
The above and other aspects, features, and advantages of the present invention will be more apparent from the following more particular description of embodiments thereof, presented in conjunction with the following drawings wherein:
The reflectors of the present invention are designed by a flux mapping procedure that scans a target, generates a list of required normal vectors, and derives the reflector shape from that list by numerical integration. Any rectangular target can be illuminated by a square reflector, and any target would be expected to be presented symmetrically. Laterally offset targets, however, would require reflectors that were similarly asymmetric, but they would actually be sections of a notional larger symmetric reflector designed for a notional larger symmetric target that included the actual asymmetric one. Thus reflectors without right-left symmetry do not fall outside the scope of the present invention, however infrequently they may be needed. Accordingly, the following Figures only show symmetric illumination-configurations.
Central profile 33 of
The target is in this case vertically oriented, but a tilted target is equally serviceable by the present invention. As shown in
Vertical profile 33 of
Vertical profile 33 of
z=z[i]+m[i](x−x[i])=m[i]x+b[i]
where the z intercept of tangent line 51 is
b[i]=z[i]−m[i] x[i]
Then intermediate point i+½, at known height
zp=½(z[i]+z[i+1])
will be at the intermediate x-coordinate
xp=(z[p]−b[i])/m[i].
Tangent line 55 has the equation
z=zp+m[i+1](x−xp)=m [i+1]x+b[i+1]
with its z-intercept thus given as
b[i+1]=z[p]−m[i+1]xp.
Then point i+1 is fixed by
x[i+1]=(z[i+1]−b[i+1])/m[i+1]
and so another iteration step is completed, classified as the Runge-Kutta type.
x=(1−s2)xi+2s(1−s)xp+s2xi+1 and
z=(1−s2)zi+2s(1−s)zp+s2zi+1.
This accurate parabolic approximation is used in many ray-tracing programs.
As aforementioned, only one side of each bilaterally symmetric rib need be calculated, for 0<y<½. As shown in
Even for a rectangular target, a square mirror is preferable, since it is the most compact rectangle and thus best to use in a mirror array. Illumination across it is assumed to be uniform in all mirror-shape calculations herein. While this is presumptuous for large-scale mirrors, in an array of small mirrors, as shown in
As shown in
Because the mirror is so much smaller than the target, the distance to each target point, in the coordinates of
r
t
[i,j]=√(xt[i]2, yt[j]2, zt[i]2)
and the unit vector corresponding to it is
(xt[i], yt[j], zt[i])/rt[i,j].
As shown in
(xt[i]−rt[i,j], yt[j], zt[i])/rt[i,j]
remembering that xt[i]<0 by convention, as in
T
x(xt[i]−rt[i,j])+Ty yt[j]=0
As shown in
tan θ[i,j]=yt[j]/(rt[i]−xt[i,j]).
In
yp=½(y[j]+y[j+1])=(j+½)Δy
for which the corresponding unknown x-coordinate xp must be calculated.
xp=x[i,j]+½Δy tan θ[i,j].
To complete the iteration step, from xp the desired x-coordinate of the next point is
x[i,j+1]=xp+½Δy tan θ[i,j+1].
As produced from a spreadsheet rendition of the rib algorithm,
The shape generation algorithm just described gives numerical coordinates, (x,y,z) triads of both the tangent points defining the surface, as well as the intermediate points where the tangents intersect. Specification of these enables the specification of a unique parabola with tangents at both points. This is analogous to a Runge-Kutta numerical solving of a differential equation. Making the calculation interval, or spatial iteration step, small enables a good fit, after which the data could be down-sampled to a suitably coarser resolution.
A more compact way to specify a surface is a polynomial fit with a RMS error only a fraction of an optical wavelength. Numerical experimentation with a standard surface fit program is simplified if the numerical coordinates are expressed in the plane of the mirror concavity.
The surface of
Z=A+CY
2
+DX+FXY
2
+GX
2
+IX
2
Y
2.
At the coefficient-fitting Web-Site, www.zunzun.com, the coefficients of Table 1 were obtained from an 11×11 matrix of surface points of parameter variations of
Although NURB surfaces are useful in the programming of the figuring machine that will produce the insert for an injection mold for the array of
As previously mentioned, the mirror shape requires uniform illumination, something that only meticulous engineering can provide on a large scale. On a small scale, however, illuminance does not vary much over, say, a millimeter, across a 50 mm wide beam. Accordingly, if an array of 1 mm rectangles is formed as one piece, it would require much less material than a single large reflector. Most advantageously, the array can be a round shape.
When a collimated beam illuminates any such array of many small illuminating mirrors, variations of its illuminance will not show up in the target illuminance distribution. This invariance also shows up when the collimated input beam comprises several adjacent beams of different colors, their flux weighted to combine into white. The mirror array will perfectly mix the colors at the target. While conventional color mixing becomes more difficult as more colors are added, the present array can easily be shaped to accept as many different wavelengths as desired. The use of 5 collimated LEDs of different wavelengths would give a color rendering index superior to that of the conventional three colors.
Because of the off-axis configuration of
It is equally possible to form hexagonal mirrors and arrange them into an approximately circular array, as in
Besides the aforementioned numerical algorithm, it is also possible to analytically solve the differential equation of the mirror profile, once it has been cast into suitable two-dimensional (r,z) form, one that begins with a symmetrical on-axis mirror, as shown in
The lateral ribs shown in
In order to express the reflector shape in a single equation z=h(x,y), the spine z=g(x) will provide the f(0) values for each rib equation z=f(y) at a particular x. The equation for the spine merely has to use x values for the off-axis situation of
Combining all these gives the surface equation for the reflector of
For
The iterative algorithm that generates the reflector shape is more general than the analytic solution, since other prescriptions can be fulfilled as well, only some of which have analytic solutions. One such is constant far-field intensity I0 generated out to an axial angle Θ, giving a total flux of Φ=2π I0(1−cos Θ), which corresponds to the reflector radius rr by Φ=π rr2, so that cos Θ=1−2 rr2/I0. Then the slope function is given by
Imposing the boundary condition f(0)=0 makes this integrate to
Consider a case of a unit radius reflector that is to generate constant intensity out to an angle of 60°, so that Φ=π and I0=1. This reflector shape is graphed in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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60998836 | Oct 2007 | US | national |
This application claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/998,836 in the name of Oliver Dross, filed Oct. 12, 2007, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/US08/11584 | 10/7/2008 | WO | 00 | 4/7/2010 |