This specification describes examples of techniques for generating a spotlight by directing laser light onto phosphor.
A vehicle, such as an automobile, includes an illumination system. The illumination system includes lights on the front, the back and, in some cases, the sides of the vehicle. A headlight, for example, is located on the front of the vehicle and illuminates a path in front the vehicle, at least partly.
An example system includes a light source coated with a phosphor layer, a laser emitter to output a laser beam, and a controller to control a direction of the laser beam so that the laser beam hits a location on the phosphor layer. The laser beam excites the location on the phosphor layer to produce a spotlight at the location. The system may include one or more of the following features, either alone or in combination.
The spotlight may have a luminous intensity that exceeds a luminous intensity of light produced by the light source at the location absent the laser beam exciting the location. The controller may be configured to control the direction of the laser beam so that the laser beam hits the location on the phosphor layer when the light source is activated or when the light source is not activated. The system may include a steerable device to direct the laser beam to the phosphor layer. The steerable device may include a micro-electromechanical device such as a mirror that is movable.
The system may include another mirror to receive the laser beam from the steerable device and to reflect the laser beam to the phosphor layer. The steerable device may be controllable by the controller to move the laser beam to different points on this other mirror and therefore to different locations on the phosphor layer. One or more optical elements may be in an optical path between the other mirror and the steerable device. The one or more optical elements may include a lens to focus the laser beam onto the phosphor layer. The laser emitter may include a laser diode and a collimating lens. The laser diode may be configured to emit blue light and the phosphor layer may be configured to convert the blue light to white light.
The spotlight may have a luminous flux of at least 250 Lumens and the laser beam may have an optical power of at least 1 Watt. The phosphor layer may include cerium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet. The phosphor layer may include a europium doped nitridoaluminate. The light source may include a gallium-nitride (GaN) based light-emitting diode (LED) device. The laser emitter may be movable. Movement of the laser emitter may be controllable by the controller to control the direction of the laser beam so that the laser beam hits targeted location(s) on the phosphor layer.
The system may be, or be part of, a vehicle. The light source may be part of a headlight for the vehicle. The controller may be configured to control the direction of the laser beam based on an external illumination in an environment in which the vehicle is located. The controller may be configured to control the direction of the laser beam based on an object in a vicinity of the vehicle. The controller may be configured to control a direction of the laser beam based on an operator of the vehicle.
An example method of producing a spotlight uses a light source having a phosphor layer. The method includes receiving a signal based on one or more environmental factors, where the signal is usable to decide where the spotlight is to be directed in the environment, and directing a laser beam to a location on the phosphor layer based on the signal. The laser beam excites the location on the phosphor layer to produce the spotlight at the location. In a case that the light source is activated, the spotlight has a luminous intensity that exceeds a luminous intensity of light produced by light source at the location absent the laser beam exciting the location. The method may include one or more of the following features, either alone or in combination.
The system may be, or be part of, a vehicle. The one or more environmental factors may be obtained from one or more sensors and may include one or more of: an external illumination in an environment in which the vehicle is located, an object in a vicinity of the vehicle, operation of the vehicle over a predefined period of time, or a direction that an operator of the vehicle is looking. The phosphor layer may include cerium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet. The phosphor layer may include europium doped nitridoaluminate. The light source may include a gallium-nitride (GaN) based light-emitting diode (LED) device. The method may include turning-off the laser beam after a predefined period of time. The predefined period of time may be based, at least in part, on a composition of the phosphor layer. The spotlight may be produced when the light source is activated or when the light source is inactive.
Any two or more of the features described in this specification, including in this summary section, may be combined to form implementations not specifically described in this specification.
The systems, techniques, components, structures, and variations thereof described herein, or portions thereof, can be implemented using, or controlled by, a computer program product that includes instructions that are stored on one or more non-transitory machine-readable storage media, and that are executable on one or more processing devices to execute at least some of the operations described herein. The systems, techniques, components, structures, and variations thereof described herein, or portions thereof, can be implemented as an apparatus, method, or electronic system that can include one or more processing devices and computer memory to store executable instructions to implement various operations. The systems, techniques, components, structures, and variations thereof described herein may be configured, for example, through design, construction, size, shape, arrangement, placement, programming, operation, activation, deactivation, and/or control.
The details of one or more implementations are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the following description. Other features and advantages will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Like reference numerals in different figures indicate like elements.
Described herein are example implementations of systems for generating a spotlight to project onto a target. In an example, the spotlight includes a relatively narrow, intense beam of light. The system may be part of a vehicle, such an automobile. The spotlight may be generated using existing components of the vehicle's illumination system, such as its headlights, and may controlled to point in various directions. Control over spotlight operation and various components described herein may be implemented by a control system, examples of which are described below.
The GaN LED chip 14 of light source 11 is coated with a phosphor layer 15. Phosphor layer 15 converts the blue light from the GaN LED chip into white light for output from the vehicle's headlight. In an example, phosphor layer 15 includes cerium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet. However, other types of phosphors may be used such as, but not limited to, europium doped nitridoaluminate.
System 10 also include a lens 16. In this example, lens 16 is at the output of a vehicle 40's headlight 17a or 17b, as shown in
As shown in
To generate the spotlight, a direction of the laser beam 24 is controlled so that the laser beam hits a location on phosphor layer 15 of light source 11. The laser beam excites the phosphor at the location. The resulting excitation causes the phosphor layer to illuminate intensely at the location. In some examples, the intense illumination occurs only at the location, although there may be some additional incidental illumination in a small concentric area around the location. The result is a relatively narrow, intense beam of light as compared to normal headlight light output that does not result from laser excitation of the phosphor. This relatively narrow, intense beam of light travels through lens 16 and into the environment, for example, in front of the vehicle. This relatively narrow, intense beam of light produced at the phosphor layer and output through the lens is the spotlight. The spotlight may be distinguishable by intensity from other light output from the headlight, if any, as described below.
Various techniques may be implemented to control movement of the laser beam relative to the phosphor layer and thereby control the directional output of the spotlight. Example system 10 of
A steerable device 25 is configured to direct laser beam 24 from laser emitter 18 to a static mirror 26. Steerable device 25 is controllable to move the laser beam to different points on static mirror 26 and therefore to different spots on phosphor layer 15. In some implementations, steerable device 25 is or includes a micro-electromechanical system (MEMS) mirror that that is movable relative to static mirror 26. Steerable device 26 may be movable in one dimension (1D) or in two dimensions (2D) to direct the laser beam to different points on static mirror 26. For example, steerable device 25 may be mounted for movement on structure, such as an enclosure (not shown) that holds the vehicle's illumination system. Movement of the mirror relative the structure may be controlled using a motor (not shown) based on signals received from a control system 30, which is described in more detail below.
In this example, static mirror 26 does not move relative to other components of system 10; however, that need not be the case in all implementations. Accordingly, as indicated, movement of the laser beam to different spots on the phosphor layer is controlled through movement of steerable device 25. Additional optics, such as lens 32 may be located between static mirror 26 and steerable device 25. In this example, lens 32 has a convex face 32a and a flat face 32b, although lenses having different shapes may be used in some implementations. Lens 32 directs laser beam 24 to static mirror 26 and at least partially focuses laser beam 24 onto the phosphor layer of light source 11. In this example, lens 32 is also static in that it does not move relative to the other components of system 10, although that need not be the case in all implementations. Although one lens is shown, the additional optics may include two, three, four, or more lenses having different or the same shapes as lens 32.
In variants of the system described above, more than one of the components may move. For example, in addition to steerable device 25, mirror 26 and/or lens 32 may be configured for movement and controlled by one or more motors to move relative to other components of system 10. Coordinated movement between the various components may control positioning of the laser beam on the phosphor layer.
In some implementations, static mirror 26 may be omitted and lens 32 may be configured to direct, and to at least partially focus, the laser beam directly onto phosphor layer 15 of light source 11. For example, components 13 may be repositioned within system 10 so that laser beam 24 is provided directly to phosphor layer 15 without being bent by a static mirror or other optical components.
The luminous flux produced at the location on the phosphor layer that is hit by the laser beam is a function of the optical power of the laser beam. In an example, a laser beam having an optical power of 1 Watt (W) may produce a luminous flux of 250 lumens at the location on the phosphor layer that is hit by the laser beam; a laser beam having an optical power of 2 W may produce a luminous flux of 500 lumens at the location on the phosphor layer that is hit by the laser beam; a laser beam having an optical power of 3 W may produce a luminous flux of 750 lumens at the location on the phosphor layer that is hit by the laser beam; and so forth. Laser beams having high optical powers may damage some phosphor. Therefore, the duration that the laser beam remains at a single location on the phosphor layer may be limited to single digit seconds (e.g., 1 to 9 seconds), tens of seconds (e.g., 10 to 99 seconds), or a single-digit minutes. These durations may depend on the magnitude of the optical power and/or the composition of the phosphor material. The duration of the spotlight, however, is not limited to these values or ranges.
The light produced at the location on the phosphor layer due to the laser-based phosphor excitation may have a luminous intensity that exceeds the luminous intensity of light that can be produced by light source 11 by illuminating its LEDs at the same location. In other words, the light produced at the location on the phosphor layer due to the laser-based phosphor excitation may have a luminous intensity that exceeds the luminous intensity of light that can be produced by light source 11 absent laser-based phosphor excitation. Luminous intensity may be defined as lumen per solid angle (measured in candela (cd)). In some examples, the luminous intensity of light produced at the location on the phosphor layer due to the laser-based phosphor excitation may exceed the luminous intensity of light produced during the headlight's high-beam mode of operation and during headlight's low-beam mode of operation. In some examples, the luminous intensity of light produced at the location on the phosphor layer due to the laser-based phosphor excitation exceeds the luminous intensity of the light produced during the headlight's current mode of operation. For example, the luminous intensity of light produced at the location on the phosphor layer due to the laser-based phosphor excitation may exceed the luminous intensity of light produced during the headlight's low-beam mode of operation but not the luminous intensity of light produced during the headlight's high-beam mode of operation.
In an example, using a blue laser, it is possible to produce a small spot on the phosphor layer that, in turn, provides a small divergence when placed in the focal plane of a lens. In some examples, a car headlight may generate a light beam having a luminous intensity of up to 10,000 cd. The spotlight produced using the techniques described herein may produce a spotlight having a luminous intensity of up to 1,000,000 cd in some implementations or a spotlight that is 100 times greater in luminous intensity than the native high-beam and low-beam of the headlight.
In some implementations, the optical power of the laser beam produced by laser emitter 18 is adjustable to adjust the luminous intensity of light produced at the spot. In some implementations, the optical power of the laser beam produced by laser emitter 18 is not adjustable, in which case variance in the luminous intensity produced at the spot occurs mainly due to the operation of the light source. That is, in some cases, there may be an additive effect caused by light produced by the light source and the light produced by hitting the phosphor layer with the laser beam.
When light source 11 is not activated (e.g., the light source is off), a spotlight may still be produced by applying the laser beam to the phosphor as described herein, since the light produced by the laser and phosphor is not dependent upon operation of the LED light source. The luminous intensity produced at such times may be the same, less, or more than the values described above.
The spotlight is controllable to move within and around the vehicle's external environment. Movement of the spotlight is controlled by controlling where the laser beam hits the phosphor layer. In an example, the laser beam may be controlled to move from point to point on the phosphor layer in order to change the direction that the spotlight moves within and around the vehicle's external environment. In an example, the laser beam may be controlled to scan across the phosphor layer to provide a spotlight that scans an area around the vehicle, for example, in front of the vehicle. In this regard, referring to
In some implementations, each headlight on a vehicle, such as vehicle 40 of
The systems described herein, such as system 10 of
The control system may cause the spotlight to be generated, and control its direction, based on operator/manual input or automatically (e.g., not in response to operator/manual input) based on one or more signals obtained from one or more sensors on the vehicle. For example, referring to
Process 80 analyzes (80b) one or more of the signals from the sensors to determine whether to implement spotlight functionality and how or where to implement the spotlight functionality. In this regard, the control system may store, in memory, a set of predefined rules that dictate the conditions under which spotlight functionality is to be used. The control system may consult these rules based on the received sensor signals and cause a spotlight to be generated and output accordingly. For example, if the rules indicate that STOP signs are to be illuminated, and the sensor signals indicate that a STOP sign is in the vicinity of the vehicle, the control system may cause a spotlight to be generated automatically and to direct that spotlight at the STOP sign for a predefined duration. For example, if the rules indicate that animate objects such as animals or children are to be illuminated, and the sensor signals indicate that animate object are in the vicinity of the vehicle (based, e.g., on images or object movement), the control system may cause a spotlight to be generated automatically and to direct that spotlight at the animate objects for a predefined duration. For example, if the rules indicate that a spotlight is to be applied when the control system determines that the operator is routinely ignoring children on the side of the road, and the sensor signals indicate that children are on the side of the road, the control system may cause a spotlight to be generated automatically and to direct that spotlight at the children for a predefined duration. For example, the rules may specify intensities for the spotlight based on external illumination or the time of day. The spotlight that is generated therefore may have a greater or lesser luminous intensity based on such rules. For example, spotlights in daylight may be brighter than those in darkness.
To generate the spotlight, the control system turns-on (80c) the laser emitter and directs (80d) the resulting laser beam using any appropriate technique to a spot on the phosphor layer of the a light source (e.g., a GaN LED chip) based on where the sensor signal(s) indicate that the spotlight should be directed. As described above, the laser beam excites a spot on the phosphor layer to produce enhanced illumination at that spot. The light from that enhanced illumination exits the headlight and is directed at its intended target, which corresponds to the location of the spot.
As described previously, the maximum duration of the spotlight may be based, in part, on the composition of the phosphor layer. The spotlight may be deactivated by turning-off (80e) the laser emitter or, in some examples, redirecting the laser beam to a light-absorbing surface within an enclosure containing the illumination system.
As previously explained, in some implementations, the spotlight is controllable manually. Manual control may be used also in systems that implement automated control. For a manually-controlled spotlight, the operator may direct the spotlight using a control in the vehicle's interior. For example, a visual display in the vehicle's interior may show an image of the environment in the front of the vehicle. Through touch-control or use of a knob, pointer, or the like, the operator may specify a point to which the spotlight is to be directed. In response to such user input, the control system receives a signal identifying the intended location of the spotlight and performs the above-described control operations to generate the spotlight and to direct the spotlight to the location specified by the operator.
Although the preceding descriptions focus on producing a spotlight through a vehicle's headlight, a spotlight may be produced according to the techniques described herein for output from one or more vehicle taillights 81, 82 of
All or part of the systems and processes described in this specification and their various modifications may be configured or controlled at least in part by one or more computers, such as control system 30, using one or more computer programs tangibly embodied in one or more information carriers, such as in one or more non-transitory machine-readable storage media. A computer program can be written in any form of programming language, including compiled or interpreted languages, and it can be deployed in any form, including as a stand-alone program or as a module, part, subroutine, or other unit suitable for use in a computing environment. A computer program can be deployed to be executed on one computer or on multiple computers at one site or distributed across multiple sites and interconnected by a network.
Actions associated with configuring or controlling the systems and processes described herein can be performed by one or more programmable processors executing one or more computer programs to control or to perform all or some of the operations described herein. All or part of the systems and processes can be configured or controlled by special purpose logic circuitry, such as, an FPGA (field programmable gate array) and/or an ASIC (application-specific integrated circuit) or embedded microprocessor(s) localized to the instrument hardware.
Processors suitable for the execution of a computer program include, by way of example, both general and special purpose microprocessors, and any one or more processors of any kind of digital computer. Generally, a processor will receive instructions and data from a read-only storage area or a random access storage area or both. Elements of a computer include one or more processors for executing instructions and one or more storage area devices for storing instructions and data. Generally, a computer will also include, or be operatively coupled to receive data from, or transfer data to, or both, one or more machine-readable storage media, such as mass storage devices for storing data, such as magnetic, magneto-optical disks, or optical disks. Non-transitory machine-readable storage media suitable for embodying computer program instructions and data include all forms of non-volatile storage area, including by way of example, semiconductor storage area devices, such as EPROM (erasable programmable read-only memory), EEPROM (electrically erasable programmable read-only memory), and flash storage area devices; magnetic disks, such as internal hard disks or removable disks; magneto-optical disks; and CD-ROM (compact disc read-only memory) and DVD-ROM (digital versatile disc read-only memory).
Elements of different implementations described may be combined to form other implementations not specifically set forth previously. Elements may be left out of the systems described previously without adversely affecting their operation or the operation of the system in general. Furthermore, various separate elements may be combined into one or more individual elements to perform the functions described in this specification.
Other implementations not specifically described in this specification are also within the scope of the following claims.
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20240117947 A1 | Apr 2024 | US |