The present invention relates to a light collection system for extracting more visible light from a light source by converting ultraviolet (“UV”) energy into visible light.
Using non-imaging optics, it is currently possible to achieve over 90% collection of visible light from a light source such as a metal halide lamp. The light can be used to couple into a fiber optic illumination system, but typically any UV energy is filtered from light directed to a fiber optic cable using absorbing or reflecting filters. This is to prevent degradation of the fiber optic cable.
One way prior art lighting systems used UV energy is by employing phosphor to convert UV energy to visible light. Phosphor conversion systems have been used in fluorescent lamps, metal halide lamps, and light emitting diodes to produce light or change the color of light. However, phosphors do not conserve the angular distribution of the driving light—the light they emit has a broader angular distribution than the light absorbed. This increase in angular distribution often reduces the brightness of phosphor-based lamps sufficiently so as to be difficult to use in efficient, compact optical coupling systems such as lighting fixtures or fiber optic illuminators. What is needed is a compact way of improving light-output quantity and quality using phosphors.
It would be desirable to provide a light collection system in which UV energy is captured and converted into visible light with phosphor. It would be desirable to provide a compact way of doing so while improving both light-output quantity and quality. This would increase the visible light provided from a light source that produces UV energy in addition to visible light. The additional visible light could be directed to a fiber optic cable without causing UV damage to the cable.
The current invention seeks to improve quantity of light collected from a metal halide lamp and directed into a fiber optic cable of compact size by using phosphors.
Some light sources used in a fiber optic illumination system, especially metal halide light sources, produce a significant amount of UV energy. The inventive system extracts more visible light from such a light source, as set forth in the following specification. The claimed designs utilizes so-called reflecting surfaces made from “thin film” coatings and non-imaging optics to collect visible light and UV energy, and then uses phosphor to convert the UV energy into additional visible light. In this way, the UV energy is harnessed and converted into usable visible light and the system has a net increase in delivered visible light. This net increase can be sufficient to overcome coupling optics inefficiencies such that the system delivers more light than the bulb produces.
In accordance with a preferred form of the invention, a light collection system comprises a light source with a bulbous section for emitting radiant energy in the direction of first and second portions of the bulbous section that are preferably opposite each other. A reflecting surface directs visible light from the light source to the first portion. Another reflecting surface directs UV energy from the light source to the second portion. A first angle-to-area converter receives visible light in the first portion and decreases the angle of the visible light to a desired angle. A second angle-to-area converter receives UV energy in the second portion and decreases the angle of the UV energy to a desired angle. A phosphor layer receives UV energy downstream of the second angle-to-area converter and converts the UV energy to visible light. A third angle-to-area converter receives visible light from the phosphor and reducing the angle of such light to an angle optimized for entering a fiber optic cable.
The foregoing light collection system captures UV energy and converts it into visible light with phosphor. The light collection system is compact and It does so in compact and improves both light-output quantity and quality. This increases the visible light provided from a light source that produces UV energy in addition to visible light. The additional visible light can be directed to a fiber optic cable without causing UV damage to the cable.
In the drawings, in which like reference numerals refer to like parts:
Coating 16 is designed to allow visible light (e.g, rays 15) to pass but to reflect UV energy back into bulbous section 14. Coating 16 preferably also contains anti-reflective (“AR”) material optimized for visible light, to promote better transmission of visible light through coating 16. Coating 18 is designed to allow UV energy (e.g, rays 19) to pass but to reflect visible light back into bulbous section 14. Coating 18 preferably also contains AR material optimized for UV energy, to promote better transmission of UV energy through coating 18. An idealized version of light source 10 would have the right-shown approx. hemisphere of the bulbous section emitting all of the visible light from the arctube and the left-shown approx. hemisphere would emit all of the UV energy. In reality, the visible light- and UV energy-reflecting materials in coatings 16 and 18 are not perfect reflectors, and various light absorption elements such as the quartz arc tube reduce transmission so that about 80% of visible light and 80% of UV energy respectively pass through coatings 16 and 18.
Coatings 16 and 18 are known in the art as “thin film” coatings. Such coatings are also known as multi-layer optical interference coatings. The material used for the coating would include those high index materials that are transparent to most wavelengths of UV energy and can handle the high temperatures encountered near the light source. HfO2, ZrO2, and AlO2 are all good choices for this coating. Coating could be done, for example, by sputtering machines like the MICRODYN sputtering machine, or by LPCVD machines like the ISODYN LPCVD machine, both sold by DSI of Santa Rosa, Calif.
Angle-to-area converters 20 and 24 preferably comprise a non-imaging collectors attached to respective left- and right-hand halves of arctube 10. Both converters are similar to current shape used in Product No. EFO-4+4-NC-120 sold by Fiberstars Corporation of Fremont, Calif. On the visible side converter 20, a cold mirror coating is optimized for reflecting visible light, instead of UV protection, so that efficiency is improved over the foregoing Fiberstars' product.
Converter 24 on the UV side of lamp 10 is designed for shorter (UV) wavelengths than the visible light converter 20 on other side; that is, the shape and length of the converter, as well as a UV-reflecting coating 27 on the interior of the converter are optimized for UV energy. Converter 24 preferably has a different shape than the visible light converter 20, and could be shorter than converter 20. A coating 27 for the UV converter is made to reflect UV energy, and could be made of thin film or metallic construction. The UV energy leaving converter 24 is controlled to an angle that allows efficient coupling to a solid converter 30, as shown in
Referring to
Light rays 35 emitted by phosphor 36 in the 2Pi steradians towards the left in
In brief,
Preferably, converter 30 is solid so that mirror 34 and phosphor layer 36 can be applied to the outlet of the converter. Alternatively, only the outlet of converter 30 could be solid, with the inlet to the converter being hollow. Further, converter 30 could be omitted, although this would reduce the conversion efficiency of UV energy to visible light, and would require the use of another substrate to hold mirror 34 and phosphor 36.
Additionally, mirror 34 could be omitted from any of the embodiments shown herein, with some loss to the total collection efficiency. This would require another substrate to hold phosphor 36.
Converter 40 has an interior coating 41 that is optimized for reflection of visible light. Converter 40 receives visible light at a 90 degree half angle, for instance, and converts it to a preferably 38 degree-half angle light 50. Because etendue is essentially preserved, converter 40 could be the same size and shape, and have the same coatings, as converter 20 used on the other half of the light source. Etendue is essentially maintained because converters 20, 24, 30 and 40 are properly designed as non-imaging optics with angle-to-area conversion, and because the angle of light is only slightly increased by phosphor 36, if at all.
The UV energy striking the phosphor has a broad angular distribution with extents at or near 90 degrees. That is, the phosphor absorbs light from all angles and then emits light that has a broad angular distribution with extents at or near 90 degrees. In this way, the phosphor may not have a large effect on the angular distribution of the light.
The foregoing light collection system increases efficiency of collection for visible light over existing system because substantially all of the visible light is maintained and new light is generated by converting UV energy into visible light.
The angular distribution of energy at both the arctube surface and output of solid converter 30 is very broad, with significant energy up to 80–90 degrees half angle. This requires a suitably designed thin film coating that responds differently to different groups of wavelengths (visible light vs. UV energy). This is within the ordinary skill of the art.
Collectors 65 and 67 in
While the invention has been described with respect to specific embodiments by way of illustration, many modifications and changes will occur to those skilled in the art. It is, therefore, to be understood that the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications and changes as fall within the true scope and spirit of the invention.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/452,822 filed Mar. 7, 2003.
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040174696 A1 | Sep 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60452822 | Mar 2003 | US |