Light Emitting Diode (LED) technology offers advantages in efficiency and life over traditional incandescent or halogen lights. Typical LED lamp design approaches use a planar array of LEDs with one or more collimating optics to achieve the desired photometric distribution. Many LED lamps used as alternatives to Parabolic Aluminized Reflector (PAR) lamps cannot match the photometric performance for a given frontal area compared to the conventional lamps they would replace, particularly for applications that require very high peak intensities such as a PAR64 aircraft landing light or an entertainment stage light.
Instead of a simple forward facing planar array that might typically be used for a PAR lamp replacement, the present invention uses depth of the package to increase the total peak intensity. One or more layers of LEDs shine into an array of elliptical reflectors. Each elliptical reflector has an LED at one focal point and shares the second focal point with a larger parabolic reflector that collimates the light. The resulting system has a hole in the center of the parabolic reflector where additional layers of LEDs, with or without collimation optics, are placed to further increase the intensity of the system. This configuration allows the distribution to be adjusted for the application (wavelength, peak intensity and beam spread) by changing the number or type of LED, the focal lengths of the ellipses, the parabola and the collimation optics.
In one aspect of the invention, the LEDs are separated to distribute the thermal load over a larger surface area for higher power applications.
In still another aspect of the invention, dual-mode capability within the same footprint is provided by replacing some of the visible LEDs with Infrared (IR) LEDs and modifying the drive electronics to control those IR LEDs separately.
In yet another aspect of the invention, the system provides variable color output by appropriate placement of various colored LEDs (e.g., red, green, blue, amber and/or white) and separate drive electronics for each group of colored LEDs to allow for color mixing.
Preferred and alternative embodiments of the present invention are described in detail below with reference to the following drawings:
The lens 58 holds the parabolic reflector 36 within the first housing section 50. The lens 58 may attach to the first housing section 50 in a number of ways, for example threads on the first section 50 and the opposing surface of the lens 38 or an epoxy or other comparable fastener.
A second ledge 62 formed on a bottom surface of the second open end of the housing section 50 supports an LED board 74 that is part of the first LED layer 40. The LED board 74 may be attached to the housing section 50 by fasteners or other comparable means. If metal fasteners (e.g. screws) are used then the housing section 50 acts as a heat sink to a metal layer within the LED board 74. The first LED layer 40 includes first and second open ends. The first open end includes an annular flange 64. The annular flange 64 and a portion of the LED board 74 securely sits between a first surface 66 of the second housing layer 52 and the second ledge 62. This allows the first LED layer 40 to sit securely within a cavity formed within the second housing section 52.
A similar type of slot is formed between a second surface 68 of the second housing section 52 and a first surface 70 of the third housing section 54. The slot formed between the second and third housing sections 52 and 54 receives an outer circumferential flange 72 of the second LED layer 42 and a portion of an LED board 76 of the third housing section 54. This allows the second LED layer 42 to sit securely within a portion of a cavity formed within the third housing section 54. The third housing section 54 also includes a second cavity portion that receives the third LED layer 44. A base of the third LED layer 44 is fastened to an interior base of the third housing section 54 using fastener(s), adhesives or comparable components.
In one embodiment, the reflectors 94, 104, 114 are single units formed by a plastic injection molding process. The reflectors 94, 104, 114 are then coated with a reflective coating, such as, but not limited to, aluminum or silver. Other reflector devices may be used. For example, one or more of the parabolic reflectors 36, 114 may be an uncoated, reflective white plastic, such as that produced by Bayer. Also, the boards 74, 76, 110 may be printed circuit boards that include traces that electrically connect the LEDs 92, 102, 112 to wires or traces located on or embedded in the housing sections 50, 52, 54. In one embodiment, a wiring harness (not shown) connects to mounted headers (not shown) soldered onto the circuit boards at the time the LEDs are installed. A wiring routing channel and pocket (not shown) are included in each of the housing sections 50, 52, 54 to accommodate the wiring harness and mounted headers.
As shown in
In this example, the light assembly 30 produces light from approximately 37 LEDs with a high percentage of light produced by each LED being reflected either off of the parabolic reflector 36 or passing directly through the parabolic reflector 36 via its own parabolic reflector associated with the LED. In this example, the angular spread of light is approximately 11° to 12° with a production of over 700,000 candelas. Intensity and angular spread of light is adjustable by changing any number of variables: focal length of reflectors, number and type of LEDs, etc.
In another embodiment, different LED configurations may be used within the light assembly. The following are non-limiting examples of different LED configurations.
White and Infrared lights are included to produce both visual and non-visual light. In one embodiment, the LEDs used are all of a single color (red, amber, green, blue, etc.).
In one embodiment, the system includes different colored LEDs (red, green, blue, amber and/or white) distributed throughout the LED boards 74, 76, 110 with independent drive electronics (not shown) for producing variable color output. The drive electronics independently control the intensity of each color group, resulting in color mixing.
In one embodiment, the system is capable of providing variable temperature white. Similar to the aforementioned color mixing method, this embodiment is achieved through the appropriate location on the circuit boards (74, 76, 110) of groups of white LEDs selected from two specific “color” bins (a result of the LED manufacturing process) associated with “blackbody color temperatures” found close to, or along, the Planckian locus within a color space such as the CIE 1931 chromaticity diagram. Separate drive electronics control the intensity of each “color” bin of LEDs independently, thus providing the ability to vary the color temperature of the output light along a line between the two white endpoints defined by the selected LED “color” bins.
The addition of other white bin groups to the preceding method creates a color temperature polygon (triangle, rectangle, etc.), the boundaries of which are defined by the color points of the selected groups of colored LEDs. Varying the intensities of the component groups changes the output color temperature within the boundaries of the polygon.
Monochromatic LED groups, such as red, replace white in the previous embodiment for creating another color space polygon (triangle, rectangle, etc.), the boundaries of which will be defined by the color points of the selected groups of colored LEDs. Varying the intensities of the component groups changes the output color and color temperature within the boundaries of the polygon.
While the preferred embodiment of the invention has been illustrated and described, as noted above, many changes can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the device could include only two layers of LEDs with associated reflectors and those two layers could have only elliptical reflectors or one layer has elliptical reflectors and one layer includes parabolic reflectors. In another example, the device could include three or more LED and associated reflector “ring” layers. Further, one of the layers may include both elliptical and parabolic reflectors. Also, in one example the parabolic reflector 36 is replaced with a non-parabolic type reflector. Accordingly, the scope of the invention is not limited by the disclosure of the preferred embodiment. Instead, the invention should be determined entirely by reference to the claims that follow.
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