This invention relates to a system for projecting images on a screen. In particular, this invention relates to a transmissive projection system comprising dichroic mirrors used as polarizers for polarization conversion in a liquid crystal display (LCD) projector.
British patent application no. GB 2 354 658, which is considered the closest prior art, discloses a LCD projection system shown in
European patent application no. EP 0 825 472 discloses a projection type display apparatus comprising a polarization separation unit spatially separating intermediate light beams into a p-polarized light beam and an s-polarized light beam, and aligns the direction of one of both light beams with the direction of the other of both light beams, where after the polarized light beams are guided into their respective colour channels. Hence polarization conversion of the light beams is performed prior to the light enters the channels.
An object of the present invention is to provide a system for projecting images on a screen in which number of beam splitters is reduced.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a system utilizing dichroic mirrors for polarization conversion instead of reflective polarizers, such as wire grids, thereby reducing implementation costs.
A particular advantage of the present invention is the provision of a less expensive system and more efficient separation of the different light components of the light beam.
The above objects and advantages together with numerous other objects, advantages and features, which will become evident from below detailed description, are obtained according to a first aspect of the present invention by a system for projecting an image on a display comprising:
a first dichroic means receiving a first, a second and a third primary coloured light beam and adapted to transmit the first and to reflect the second and third primary coloured light beams,
a second dichroic means receiving said second and third primary coloured light beam and adapted to reflect said second primary coloured light and to transmit said third primary coloured light beam, characterized in further comprising:
a first polarizing means receiving said first primary coloured light beam, a second polarizing means receiving said second primary coloured light beam, and a third polarizing means receiving said third primary coloured light beam, which first, second and third polarizing means being adapted to transmit light polarized in a desired direction, and further comprising a reflective rotating means receiving reflected first, second and third primary coloured light beams polarized in an undesired direction from at least one of said first, second and third polarizing means and adapted to convert said light polarized in said undesired direction to converted light polarized in said desired direction and reflect said converted light back to said first, second and third polarizing means.
The polarizing scheme utilised by the system according to a first aspect of the present invention provides a simple and effective conversion requiring only as few reflective polarizers as possible.
The system according to the first aspect of the present invention may further comprise a first, second and third transmissive light valve means receiving the first, the second and the third primary coloured light beam, respectively, and each of the first, second and third transmissive light valve means being adapted to modulate one of the first, the second and the third primary coloured light beams. In addition, the system may further comprise a recombination prism receiving modulated first, second and third primary coloured light from the first, second and third transmissive light valve means, and being adapted to recombine the modulated first, second and third primary coloured light beams into the image to be projected on the display.
The first, the second and the third primary coloured light beam according to the first aspect of the present invention are coloured blue, green and red, respectively. These primary colours are generally utilised for liquid crystal display techniques.
The reflective rotating means according to the first aspect of the present invention may comprise a quarter wave plate adapted to receive the reflected first, second and third primary coloured light beams polarized in the undesired direction and to rotate polarization of the reflected first, second and third primary coloured light beams by 90°. In addition, the reflective rotating means may comprise a patterned mirror having reflective regions adapted to reflect rotated reflected first, second and third primary coloured light beams received from the quarter wave plate back through the quarter wave plate. Thereby a rotation of polarization of reflected first, second and third primary coloured light beams to a desired direction is established. By passing the quarter wave plate twice a linearly rotation of 90° is achieved thus rotating s-polarized light to p-polarized light, or rotating p-polarized light to s-polarized light.
The patterned mirror may further comprise transparent regions adapted to transmit the first, second and third primary coloured light beams polarized in the desired and the undesired direction from a light source to the quarter wave plate.
The first dichroic means according to the first aspect of the present invention may be operable as a low pass filter having a threshold for p-polarized light at the upper spectral limit of the spectral range of the first primary coloured light beam. Hence the first dichroic means, such as a dichroic mirror, may transmit p-polarized blue light while reflecting s-polarized blue light and other coloured light so that no reflective polarizer is required before the first light valve means. Thus an expensive reflective wire grid polarizer is avoided.
The second polarizing means may be adapted to rotate so as to control amount of the second primary coloured light beam reaches the second light valve means, or may in fact be replaced by a normal polarizer. A normal polarizer should in this context be construed as a polarizer transmitting light with one polarization and absorbing light with the other polarization. This is beneficial when the system is utilised for projecting video images, since lesser green coloured light is required.
The second dichroic means according to the first aspect of the present invention may be operable as a high pass filter having a threshold for p-polarized light at the upper spectral limit of the spectral range of the second primary coloured light beam. The first polarizing means may comprise a first polarizer and the second and third polarizing means comprising a reflective polarizer. Hence the second dichroic means, such as a dichroic mirror, reflects s-polarized blue light together with green light and part of the s-polarized red light to the second polarizing means, which reflects all other than p-polarized light back through the reflective rotating means converting the polarizations of the blue and green light.
The second dichroic means according to the first aspect of the present invention may be operable as a notch filter having a lower threshold for s-polarized light at the lower spectral limit of the spectral range of the second primary coloured light beam and an upper threshold for s-polarized light at the upper spectral limit of the spectral range of the second primary coloured light beam. The first polarizing means may comprise a first polarizer, the second polarizing means may comprise a second polarizer, and the third polarizing means may comprise a reflective polarizer. This system may further comprise a third dichroic means operable as a high pass filter having a threshold equal to lower spectral limit of the spectral range of the second primary coloured light beam (206).
Alternatively, this system may comprise a third dichroic means operable as a low pass filter having a threshold for s-polarized light at the lower spectral limit of the spectral range of the third primary coloured light. The low pass filter may have a threshold for p-polarized light above the spectral limit of the spectral range of the third primary coloured light. Additionally or alternatively, a white mirror for reflecting s-polarized light in the spectral range of the first primary coloured light beam, p-polarized light in the spectral ranges of the second and third primary coloured light beams. Hence all the undesired polarizations are converted in what is know as the red channel defined between the third light valve means and reflective rotating means, and thus two or three reflective polarizers may be eliminated thereby further decreasing costs for implementing the system.
Alternatively, the second dichroic means may be operable as a high pass filter having a threshold for s-polarized light at the upper spectral limit of the spectral range of the second primary coloured light beam. The first polarizing means may comprise a first polarizer, the second polarizing means may comprise a second polarizer, and the third polarizing means may comprise a reflective polarizer. This system may further comprise a third dichroic means operable as a high pass filter having a threshold equal to lower spectral limit of the spectral range of the second primary coloured light beam. As before this polarization conversion requires only one reflective polarizer thus simplifying implementation of this system as well as reducing costs for this system.
The above, as well as additional objects, features and advantages of the present invention, will be better understood through the following illustrative and non-limiting detailed description of preferred embodiments of the present invention, with reference to the appended drawing, wherein:
In the following description of the various embodiments, reference is made to the accompanying figures, which are shown by way of illustration in which the invention may be practiced. It is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized and structural and functional modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention.
The red 204, green 206 and blue 208 light, respectively, defined by a red spectral range, a green spectral range, and a blue spectral range. The red 204, green 206 and blue 208 light is projected on a first dichroic mirror 212 transmitting the blue spectral range. The blue light in the blue spectral range, indicated in
The transmitted s-polarized blue light (Bs) is projected on the recombination prism 218 gathering each of the encoded light beams from each of the coloured light paths, i.e. the red 204, green 206 and blue 208 light paths. The recombined light forms a complete image to be projected through a projection lens onto a projection screen.
The first dichroic mirror 212 reflects the light in the green and red spectral range to a second dichroic mirror 220, which reflects the green light in the green spectral range. The green light in the green spectral range, indicated in
The second dichroic mirror 220 transmits the red light in the red spectral range, indicated in
In general, the spectral behaviour of dichroic mirrors is dependent on wavelength of the light projected on to the dichroic mirrors, however, the spectral behaviour of dichroic mirrors are, in addition, dependent on polarization of light at a specific wavelength. For a dichroic mirror operating as a low pass filter, that is, a filter reflecting light having wavelengths above a certain threshold value and transmitting light having wavelengths below said certain threshold value, and for a high pass filter, that is, a filter oppositely reflecting light having wavelengths below a certain threshold value and transmitting light having wavelengths above said certain threshold value, p-polarized or parallel polarized light having a specific wavelength might be totally transmitted while s-polarized or perpendicular polarized light having said specific wavelength is partly reflected and partly transmitted.
The reflected spectral bandwidth of a notch filter is thus wider for s-polarized light than for p-polarized light and, correspondingly, the transmitted spectral bandwidth of a band pass filter is narrower for s-polarized light than for p-polarized light.
The first and second dichroic mirrors 212 and 220 thus respond differently to s-polarized and p-polarized light. A short wavelength part of the p-polarized green light is transmitted by the first dichroic mirror 212 having a low pass threshold value for s-polarized light at the lower spectral limit for green, since the low pass threshold value for p-polarized light is higher than the low pass threshold value for s-polarized light, and a long wavelength part of the green light is transmitted by the second dichroic mirror 220 having a high pass threshold value for s-polarized light at the upper spectral limit for green, since the high pass threshold value for p-polarized light is lower than the high pass threshold value for s-polarized light.
A middle part of the green spectral range, which is, approximately, half of the bandwidth of the green spectral range, is projected on the second reflective polarizer 222. Since lesser green light is required for video projection, the second reflective polarizer 222 may, in fact, be tilted so as to control the amount of green light reaching the recombination prism 218. By the tilting of the second reflective polarizer 222 a particular advantage is achieved, since this provides excellent means for changing the performance optimization from business to video. For video projection the second reflective polarizer 222 may be substituted by a normal polariser.
In this system 300, the first dichroic mirror 212 according to the second embodiment of the present invention operates as a low pass filter having a threshold for p-polarized light at the upper spectral limit and for s-polarized light at the lower spectral limit of the blue spectral range. The first dichroic mirror 212 thus transmits a major part of the p-polarized blue light in the blue spectral range, indicated by (Bp) in
Hence no polarization conversion is required in a blue channel 302 defined between a first polarizer 304, substituting the first reflective polarizer according to the first embodiment of the present invention, and the patterned mirror 202. The first polarizer 304 transmits p-polarized blue light (Bp) to the recombination prism 218.
The second dichroic mirror 220 according to the second embodiment of the present invention operates as a high pass filter having a threshold for p-polarized light at the upper spectral limit of the green spectral range. The second dichroic mirror 220 thus transmits the red light (Rs+Rp) and reflects the green light (Gs+Gp) together with s-polarized blue light (Bs). By selecting the threshold for p-polarized light at the upper spectral limit of the green spectral range, a part of the s-polarized red light (rs) is reflected by the second dichroic mirror 220.
Thus, polarization conversion is required in a green channel 306 defined between the second reflective polarizer 222 and the patterned mirror 202. The second reflective polarizer 222 transmits p-polarized green light (Gp) to the recombination prism 218 and reflects the s-polarized green light (Gs) together with the part of s-polarized red light (rs) and the s-polarized blue light (Bs) back through the quarter wave plate 210 to reflective regions of the patterned mirror 202, thereby converting the polarization of the light in the green channel 306.
Further, polarization conversion is required in a red channel 308 defined between the third reflective polarizer 226 and the patterned mirror 202. The third reflective polarizer 226 transmits the p-polarized red light (Rp) to the recombination prism 218 and reflects the s-polarized red light (Rs) back through the quarter wave plate 210 to reflective regions of the patterned mirror 202, thereby converting the polarization of the light in the red channel 308.
The system 300 according to the second embodiment of the present invention thus eliminates the requirement for the first reflective polarizer 216. This achievement provides a significant cost reduction in implementation of the system 300.
The first dichroic mirror 212 according to the third embodiment of the present invention operates as a low pass filter having a threshold for p-polarized light at the upper spectral limit and for s-polarized light at the lower spectral limit of the blue spectral range. The first dichroic mirror 212 thus transmits a major part of the p-polarized blue light in the blue spectral range, indicated by (Bp) in
The second dichroic mirror 220 according to the third embodiment of the present invention operates as a notch filter having a lower threshold for s-polarized light at the lower spectral limit of the green spectral range and an upper threshold for s-polarized green light at the upper spectral limit of the green spectral range. It is, particularly, advantageous to select the lower and upper threshold wavelength values for p-polarized light so that the p-polarized bandwidth is as narrow as possible, preferably zero bandwidth, so as to avoid any p-polarized green light (Gp) in a green channel 402 defined between a second polarizer 404, substituting the second reflective polarizer according to the first and second embodiment of the present invention, and the patterned mirror 202. Hence the requirement for the second reflective polarizer 222 is now eliminated from the green channel 402, thereby further reducing the costs for implementing the system 400.
The second dichroic mirror 220 thus reflects the full bandwidth of s-polarized green light (Gs) in the green spectral range, that is, the upper and lower thresholds are chosen so as to transmit p-polarized green light (Gp) in the red channel 308 together with together with the s-polarized blue light (Bs) and the red light(Rs+Rp). The s-polarized blue light (Bs) is reflected back through the quarter wave plate 210 to the reflective regions of the patterned mirror 202 by a dichroic high pass filter 406 having a threshold equal to the lower spectral limit of the green spectral range.
In addition, the dichroic high pass filter 406 may be substituted by a half wave retarder, which rotates polarization only for the blue and green light.
The first polarizer 304 in the system 400 transmits p-polarized blue light (Bp) in the blue spectral range to the recombination prism 218. The second polarizer 404 transmits s-polarized green light (Gs) in the green spectral range to the recombination prism 218. The third reflective polarizer 226 transmits the s-polarized red light (Rs) in the red spectral range to the recombination prism 218 and reflects the p-polarized red light (Rp) together with the p-polarized green light (Gp) in the red channel 308 back through the quarter wave plate 210 to reflective regions of the patterned mirror 202, thereby entirely performing conversion of polarization of the light in the red channel 308.
Hence, the system 400 according to the third embodiment of the present invention thus further simplifies the conversion by eliminating the requirement for the first and second reflective polarizer 216, 222. This achievement provides a significant cost reduction in implementation of the system 400.
The first dichroic mirror 212 according to the fourth embodiment of the present invention operates as a low pass filter having a lower threshold for p-polarized light at the upper spectral limit and for s-polarized light at the lower spectral limit of the blue spectral range. The first dichroic mirror 212 thus transmits a major part of p-polarized blue light in the blue spectral range, indicated by (Bp) in
The second dichroic mirror 220 according to the fourth embodiment of the present invention operates as a high pass filter having a threshold for s-polarized light at the upper spectral limit of the green spectral range. The second mirror 220 thus transmits a part of p-polarized green light (gp) into the red channel 308 together with red light (Rs+Rp) and reflects s-polarized blue light (Bs) together with green light (Gs+Gp).
The s-polarized blue light (Bs) in the green channel 402 is reflected back through the quarter wave plate 210 to the reflective regions of the patterned mirror 202 by a dichroic high pass filter 502 having a threshold wavelength value at the lower spectral limit of the green spectral range.
The first polarizer 304 transmits the p-polarized blue light (Bp) in the blue spectral range to the recombination prism 218. The second polarizer 404 transmits part of the s-polarized green light (Gs) to the recombination prism 218, while the dichroic high pass filter 502 reflects the s-polarized blue light (Bs) back through the quarter wave plate 210 to reflective regions of the patterned mirror 202, thereby performing a polarization conversion of blue light in the green channel 402. The third reflective polarizer 226 transmits the s-polarized red light (Rs) and reflects p-polarized red light (Rp) together with the part of p-polarized green light (gp) back through the quarter wave plate 210 to reflective regions of the patterned mirror 202, thereby performing polarization conversion of part of the green light, and all the red light in the red channel 308.
It should be noted, that insertion of the dichroic high pass filter 502 before the second polarizer 404 in the green channel 402 provides a simple and elegant solution for reducing costs of the system 500, since no reflective polarizer is required in the green channel 402. Note that some p-polarized green light is lost in the second polarizer 404.
System 600 comprises the first and second dichroic mirrors 212, 220 operating as described with reference to system 400 shown in
The third dichroic mirror 604 operates as a low pass filter having a threshold for s-polarized light at the lower spectral limit of the red spectral range. The threshold for p-polarized light is higher, preferably above the upper spectral limit of the red spectral range.
The third dichroic mirror 604 thus transmits the s-polarized blue light (Bs), p-polarized green light (Gp) and p-polarized red light (Rp) to a white mirror 606. Hence no reflective polarizers are required in either the blue, green or red channel 302, 402, 308. The white mirror 606 is at a position of the window image, that is, it is to be illuminated in the same way as the light valves (i.e. LCDs) and polarizers.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04101002.6 | Mar 2004 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB05/50793 | 3/3/2005 | WO | 9/6/2006 |