1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is generally related to microfilm imaging systems and, in particular, to a high-speed microfilm imaging system utilizing a compact, high-intensity LED micro-strip light source strobed synchronous with a line-scan imaging camera.
2. Description of the Related Art
Microfilm imaging systems are conventionally used for the high-speed transfer of microfilm documents in existing library archives to a digital image format. Existing microfilm scanning systems implement various film media transport systems and utilize high capture rate digital cameras. Rather than image an entire two-dimensional frame at a time, some microfilm imaging systems implement a continuous motion transport system and image a series of one-dimensional line exposures typically oriented transverse to the media transfer path. The line exposures are captured and transferred into data buffers for processing, typically by a digital computer, appropriate to reconstruct the individual images of the archived documents.
Imaging accuracy is dependent on a number of factors, including the microfilm transfer speed, the number of line exposures captured per frame, and the line exposure time. In conventional continuous scanning systems, transport speeds may potentially range from about 0.5 to more than 15 inches per second (IPS). Higher speeds are desirable. Minimum acceptable image resolutions, in terms of transverse exposure lines, is dependent on a number of media and transport speed related factors, but are typically between about 2,500 and 15,500 lines per inch. Increased exposure lines per inch are desirable. Conventional cameras, typically implemented using standard CCD arrays, are typically operated at rates of about 2,000 to about 10,000 exposures per second.
A principal limiting factor on camera speed is the exposure illumination required for full speed operation. As camera speed increases, the illumination must be increased proportionally for accurate image capture by the CCD array. In conventional microfilm scanning systems, a high-power, projector-type incandescent light source is placed to backlight the microfilm within a camera imaging path. For moderate to high speed systems, 100 to more than 150 watt incandescent bulbs are used. Even at the lowest wattage, an infrared (IR) filter is required between the incandescent bulb and microfilm to avoid thermal distortion or damage of the exposed microfilm. Perhaps more significant, exposure to IR will saturate, or blind, conventional CCD camera elements.
In addition to the IR filter, conventional incandescent light sources require use of a color corrected lens to achieve reasonable focal clarity and, correspondingly, reasonable reproduction quality in the acquired images. The illumination produced by conventional incandescent light sources is broadband, therefore requiring color dependent refractive correction by the lens. Broadband color corrected lenses are, unfortunately, relatively expensive.
Thus, a general purpose of the present invention is to provide an efficient, high-intensity light source well-tailored for use in microfilm imaging systems.
This is achieved in the present invention by providing a light source, suitable for use in a high-speed, continuous transport microfilm imaging system, that includes an LED emitter element thermally coupled to a heat sink and is mounted within a light source housing. A light output opening in the light source housing, further defined by a narrow width light transfer channel, defines a narrow width active illumination area on the microfilm media. An optical diffusion plate, providing for a randomized directional distribution of light emitted by the LED emitter element, is mounted within the light source housing in an optical path extending between the light output opening and the LED emitter element. A switched current source is coupled to the LED emitter element to enable strobed operation synchronous with the periodic operation of a line imaging camera. The LED emitter element can be construed as a linear micro-strip array of LED elements. A cylindrical lens can be placed in the optical path between the LED emitter element and diffusion plate to narrow and increase the intensity of light incident on and transmitted through the diffusion plate.
An advantage of the present invention is that the light source is highly efficient in that the light strip produces a narrow-band emission spectrum that is closely matched to the sensitivity band of the CCD elements. Spectrum filtering, and associated loss of light power, is not required. Further, the light strip produces no meaningful IR emissions. Any generated IR is too attenuated to reach and affect the CCD imager. An IR filter is not required.
Another advantage of the present invention is that the light source can be strobed synchronous with the exposure period of the CCD imager. The illumination cycle edges are sharp with repeatable characteristics and the illumination intensity is highly uniform. The intensity level can be set to different specific levels, enabling adaptation to different operating factors including media transport speed, desired imaging resolution, contrast range, and various aspects of a specific microfilm media. The power requirements and heat-generation by the light source are therefore minimized in alignment with the specific illumination needs of the imager.
A further advantage of the present invention is that a higher specific illumination intensity is achieved during the required duration of an imager exposure cycle. Higher specific illumination enables a reduction in the required exposure duty cycle and a corresponding increase in image resolution along the media transport axis. Narrow band illumination of the media also reduces light contributions from effectively adjacent image lines, thereby reducing line blending and further increasing effective imager resolution along the media transport axis. Collectively, up to a two-fold resolution improvement, relative to conventional systems, may be realized. Image resolution improvement in both the transport and transverse axises is also obtained as a result of the reduced color spectrum refraction variance due to the substantially monochromatic spectrum of the source light strip. The manufactured cost of the lens is also reduced.
Still another advantage of the present invention is that the light source is structurally stable and that the LED micro-strip is aligned and physically matches the CCD imager configuration. The mechanically fixed structure of the LED micro-strip results in less sensitivity to vibration, particularly relative to an incandescent filament. The fixed, multiple emitter element array structure of the LED micro-strip and associated diffuser element improves the quality of light dispersion and avoids the potential for hot or cold illumination spots. The narrow cross section of the LED micro-strip enables the efficient projection of illumination through the active area of the microfilm and on to the CCD imager.
Yet another advantage of the present invention is that the light source substantially improves the controlled delivery of narrow width illumination to the diffuser and further maintains a narrow width delivery of the randomized illumination to and through the microfilm. An optional, generally preferred, cylindrical lens is placed in the optical path to efficiently concentrate narrow width illumination onto the diffuser element. A narrow reflective channel is provided to restrain illumination dispersal from the diffuser while additionally allowing the diffuser to be placed outside of the maximum depth of field of the lens observable by the camera.
A still further advantage of the present invention is that the LED light source is constructed as a compact unitized structure containing a fully solid-state active light emitter. The light source structure includes an integral heat sink well sufficient to avoid any thermal distortion of the LED micro-strip. The combined use of solid-state emitters and strobed control results in power consumption and heat generation levels that are one-tenth that of conventional incandescent light sources. The solid-state LED micro-strip has a rated mean-time-between-failure of more than about 50 times that of conventional incandescent light sources. While not expected to fail within the normal operating lifetime of a microfilm scanner system, the light source is a readily serviceable and maintainable component.
The present invention provides a high-intensity, strobed light source appropriate for use in high-speed scan imaging systems, such as the continuous scan microfilm imaging system 10 shown in
A representative section 30 of microfilm media 32 is shown in
Referring to the timing graph 50 presented in
The exposure period 56, for the preferred embodiments of the present invention, is set by the controller 16 to about ten percent of the scan line period 58, defined as equal to the interval between the successive scan line images 40. Increasing the exposure period 56 to scan line period 58 ratio results in an effective blending of adjacent lines due to the motion of the microfilm media and thereby decreases the effective resolution of the imager 20 in the transport axis 38. Thus, lower ratios are generally preferred. With decreasing ratios, however, the optical power 52 must be proportionally increased to enable adequate illumination capture by the imager 20. Consequently, a ratio of about 10% is currently preferred. Ratios upwards of about 30% can be used, generally at decreased media transport speeds, where lower resolutions are acceptable.
An exploded view 60 of a preferred embodiment of the light source 24 is shown in
The exit light guide 62 fits within a light source body 72, also preferably fabricated from machined aluminum. The overall dimensions of the light source body 72 are 2.25 inches (length) by 0.875 inches (width) by 1.0 inches (height) in the currently preferred embodiment. In embodiments where a preferably rectangular form cylindrical concentrator 74 is utilized, a ledge within the internal cavity of the body 72 provides a retention surface against which the concentrator 74 is positioned so as to be substantial perpendicular to the extended light guide channel. In these preferred embodiments, the concentrator 74 has a length of 1.984 inches, width of 0.438 inches, thickness of 0.156 inches, and a focal length of 0.5 inches.
A light source assembly 76 is preferably constructed from an LED micro-strip assembly 78 mounted to an aluminum plate 80. Electrical connections 82 (one shown) to the micro-strip assembly 78 extend through access vias (not shown) in the plate 80 and corresponding access vias 84 in a heat sink block 86. In the preferred embodiments, the plate 80 mounts flush to the bottom of the light source body 72 and to the corresponding surface of the heat sink block 86. The currently preferred overall dimensions of the heat sink block 86 are 2.25 inches (length), 1.375 inches (width), and 0.5 inches (height) as constructed from machined aluminum. The fully assembled dimensions of 2.25 inches (length), 1.375 inches (width), and 1.75 inches (height) represents, in comparison to conventional incandescent light sources, a highly compact, unitized, and rugged light source 24.
A perspective view of the preferred light source assembly 76 is shown in
A construction detail 100 of the light source assembly 76 is shown in
While the single linear array of surface mounted LED elements 92 is preferred, multiple arrays of varying configurations can also be used. A top-view detail of an alternate LED array configuration 92′ is shown in
Another LED array configuration 92″ is shown in
Alternately, the LED array configuration 92″ may be used to generate red, green, and blue (RGB) illumination preferably by implementing a center blue and outer red and green linear arrays of LEDs 102. By operating the three linear arrays in non-overlapping succession synchronous with three exposure periods 56 occurring during each scan line period 58, RGB images of the documents 34 can be acquired. Power levels through the three linear arrays, alternately or in combination with differences in exposure periods 56, can be individually tailored to the illumination efficiency of the implementing red, blue, or green LEDs 102 as necessary to achieve color balance. Preferably, transport speed would be constrained such that the ratio of the longest of the three exposure periods 56 relative to the scan line period 58 would be less than about 30% so as to limit line-scan blending and realize an acceptable image quality.
A section 110 through the preferred assembled light source 24 is shown in
In the presently preferred embodiments of the present invention, the diffusion plate 70 is a 30° by 30° random angular diffuser. While the light dispersed from the diffusion plate 70 is directionally randomized, the dispersal pattern is sufficiently narrow that a majority of the dispersed light directly exits through the light channel opening 64 and remains within the width 118 until incident on the media 32 within the active area 120. A portion of the light dispersed from the diffusion plate 70 is desirably incident on the interior surfaces of the guide flanges 66. The polished interior surfaces generally constrain the light source illumination to within an effective active area 120 on the microfilm media 32. The greater angle of incidence on the media 32, relative to light directly incident within the width 118 is desirable for illuminating scratches and other imperfections in the surfaces of the media 32, making them less observable by the imager 20. A diffusion plate 70 with in-plane asymmetrical X-Y diffusion properties can be used to reduce or increase the portion of light transmitted by the diffusion plate 70 that is indirectly incident on the media 32 within the active area 120.
In the preferred embodiments, the guide flanges 66 are preferably positioned to within about 0.1 inches of the microfilm media 32, with closer being generally preferred to minimize unconstrained dispersal of the incident illumination. A distance of up to about 0.25 inches is likely acceptable. The height of the guide flanges 66 are preferably chosen, in combination with the guide flange 66 to microfilm media 32 gap, as sufficient to place the upper surface diffuser plate 70 outside of the maximum depth of field resolvable by the imager 20.
Use of the cylindrical concentrator 74 is preferred to maximize the optical power that is delivered into the center width 118 of the active area 120. Although the preferred diffusion plate 70 provides for a 30° dispersal along the transport axis 38, the high concentration of light within the width 118 on the surface of the diffusion plate 70 results in a very high percentage of the total light output of the LEDs 102 being delivered within a very narrow central band of the active area 120, generally corresponding to the width 118. Use of the cylindrical concentrator 74 is not, however, required. In initial preferred embodiments of the present invention, the cylindrical concentrator 74 and positioning ledges 122 are omitted. The horizontal spacing between the internal cavity surfaces 124 is made the some as surfaces 114 and similarly polished. The total light output of the LEDs 102 will be eventually incident on the diffuser plate 70 and substantially all will be transmitted through the light channel opening 64. However, the resulting projected light intensity will not be uniform across the width of the active area 120. Since the illumination output of the LEDs 102 is not constant over the dispersion angle 112, but is rather substantially greater along the perpendicular, the illumination incident on the media 32 will be greatest, as is preferred, within the width 118 of the active area 120.
The micro-controller 16 preferably includes a LED micro-strip driver circuit 130, as shown in
A 12-bit serial digital to analog converter 136, driven from a serial output line 138 of the controller 16, is preferably used to set a selected current level through the transistor Q3. The output voltage level from the converter 136 is applied to the input of a voltage-follower configured operational amplifier 140. In operation, the amplifier acts to maintain a zero differential voltage between the converter 136 set input control voltage and a feedback voltage that is proportional to the current through the transistor Q3. The current level through transistor Q3 determines the illumination produced by the LED micro-strip 92 and can be selected empirically or analytically based on optical density and related microfilm media factors.
Pulse-width control of the illumination generated by the LED micro-strip 92 is defined by a strobe control signal programmatically driven on a strobe line 142. The strobe control signal controls an NPN transistor Q4 configured to force a zero current level state by grounding an input of the operational amplifier 140. The transistor Q3 preferably has a high-switching speed, allowing for quick on/off transitions of current through the LED micro-strip 92. A silicon controlled rectifier S1 is provided to protect against potentially damaging over-currents through the transistor Q3 and LED micro-strip 92 as a result of component failures. Preferred part values and manufacturer part numbers for the LED micro-strip driver circuit 130, as implemented in an initially preferred embodiment of the present invention are as follows:
As generally shown in
In the preferred embodiments, operation of the imaging system 12 is controlled through a management application 162 executed on the computer system 14. The management application 162 presents a user interface display 164 representation of the state and operation of the imaging system 12 and, further, supports mouse and keyboard selectable system controls 166 to selectively enable and adjust operation of the imaging system 12. The management application issues commands to and receives data, specifically including buffered scan line data, from a real-time control executive 168 executed on the embedded micro-controller within the controller 16. The control executive 168 is connected through an interface circuit to the microfilm media transport system 18, imager 20 and lens 22. In particular, the control executive 168 responsible for performing 172 continuous motor speed control, using positional feedback signals, to maintain a commanded microfilm media transport speed through the transport system 18. Adjusted for actual microfilm media transport speed, the control executive 168 preferably operates the imager 20 to perform exposure cycles and return image line data 174. The enable and intensity level signals 132, 138 are set as commanded by the management application 162. The strobe control signal 142 is issued in concert with the performance of exposure cycles.
Thus, a compact, highly-efficient light source has been described. While the present invention has been described particularly with reference to a continuous microfilm line-scan system, the light source may be equally applicable in non-continuous and non-microfilm media applications. Further, the configuration of the LED micro-strip may be varied, specifically including physical layout of multiple linear arrays, as appropriate to achieve different levels of illumination. LED packaging and mounting technologies other than surface-mount may also be used. Suitable current level control and switching circuitry may also be implemented in various manners.
In view of the above description of the preferred embodiments of the present invention, many modifications and variations of the disclosed embodiments will be readily appreciated by those of skill in the art. It is therefore to be understood that, within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described above.