1. Field
The following invention disclosure is generally concerned with light emitting diodes and more specifically, mounting and packaging for light emitting diodes.
2. Prior Art
Light Emitting Diode, LED, packaging arts is extensive well populated with various useful configurations. Indeed, each manufacture of specialty LED systems tends to re-design the package to accommodate the special features most interesting to a particular application at hand.
Recognized by some as industry leaders, 'Lumileds Lighting U.S. LLC. of California, make specialty packages to accommodate high performance features such as high brightness, specialty electrical contacts, color control, et cetera. Some of Lumileds LED system packages include unique lens or ‘cover’ elements. One of Lumileds' cover elements supports high brightness functionality. In another version, the cover element provides side extending electrical contacts for surface mounting assemblies. All manufactures of LED systems apply variations in packaging configurations to support particular functionality.
More particularly, and with reference to the art, one will note special configurations where LED semiconductors are combined with optical packages including Fresnel type lenses. U.S. Pat. No. 5,528,057 presents a first interesting instance of such combination. An exit window includes a lens to condense light from a source buried within the structure.
Inventors Hatakoshi et al teach in their U.S. Pat. No. 6,611,003 a special Fresnel zone plate device to concentrate and focus light produced at a semiconductor to a tiny spot. Thus, semiconductor output beams are manipulated with these special lenses to achieve preferred outputs.
An optics package to form highly collimated light includes a primary lens, a reflector, and a final output lens working in conjunction with each other to produce a highly controlled output beam. This invention is presented as U.S. Pat. No. 6,547,423 by Marshall et al.
Krames et al recognize the advantage of collecting side emitted light in their invention of U.S. Pat. No. 6,570,190. Angled sides increase side light extraction and couple that light into an output beam.
Canadian Martineau presents an LED using a single optical element with Fresnel optics on the inside surface of an output lens in U.S. Pat. No. 6,616,299.
Sasajima et al teach of highly collimated output beams from multiple point sources; these systems include use of Fresnel type optical elements. In U.S. Pat. No. 5,241,457, a rear window stop lamp for motor vehicles is described. These devices include an LED which emits light into a reflector element. Further, the light is thereafter reflected into a Fresnel type lens before propagating into an output beam.
While the field is widespread and busy, the present inventions have been devised and stand in contrast to those offered heretofore by others. While systems and inventions of the art are designed to achieve particular goals and objectives, some of those being no less than remarkable, these inventions have limitations which prevent their use in new ways now possible. Inventions of the art are not used and cannot be used to realize the advantages and objectives of these inventions taught herefollowing.
Comes now, Abramov, V. S.; Puysha, A. E.; Shishov, A. V.; Scherbakov, N. V.; and Poliakova, I. P. with inventions of LED system packages including devices and articles. These systems include highly specialized cover elements having compound optical systems with exceptionally high light collection efficiency. Each element of the multi-element optical arrangement is specified and arranged with particular attention to the nature of light emission from a semiconductor die like those used in light emitting diode configurations. In addition to these highly unique cover elements, these inventions may further include additional subsystems such as chromacity shifting media, precision indexing and alignment schemes, high performance substrate mountings, and electrical lead traces.
A first noticeably unique feature includes a complex Fresnel lens. A single Fresnel lens is arranged about two geometric bodies, a plane and a conic section. These arrangements promote most efficient coupling of light from the cover into a particularly specified beam such as a low divergence beam. In addition, special asymmetric Fresnel lenses are contemplated for beam shaping functionality.
Another important feature of these optical source packages includes aspheric concave lenses and reflectors. Operated with the object distance less than the focal length; a semiconductor emitter lies close to the lens surface on its axis, the lens axis being colinear with the Fresnel lens symmetry axis. In these special arrangements, a reflector is typically coupled to the side emitted light while the lens is strongly coupled to the normally emitted light.
Some versions include high precision indexing means which serve both alignment and mechanical coupling functionality. The cover additionally incorporates a special periphery for placing a plurality of similar devices efficiently next to one another which promotes highest density beams.
It is a primary object of these inventions to provide new and useful packaging for light emitting diode systems.
It is an object of these inventions to provide packaging for light emitting diode systems to produce a preferred optical output.
It is a further object to provide packaging for light emitting diode systems where said packaging promotes highly collimated optical beams as output.
A better understanding can be had with reference to detailed description of preferred embodiments and with reference to appended drawings. Embodiments presented are particular ways to realize these inventions and are not inclusive of all ways possible. Therefore, there may exist embodiments that do not deviate from the spirit and scope of this disclosure as set forth by appended claims, but do not appear here as specific examples. It will be appreciated that a great plurality of alternative versions are possible.
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with regard to the following description, appended claims and drawings where:
In accordance with each of preferred embodiments of these inventions, there is provided LED system packages. It will be appreciated that each of these embodiments described include both an apparatus and that the apparatus of one preferred embodiment may be different than the apparatus of another embodiment.
Generally when one refers to an ‘LED’ it is meant that electronic support, mounting systems and mechanical support, the lens or lenses and other assorted packaging features, are included along with the actual semiconductor—the ‘diode’ in the acronym. This is because these systems are tightly integrated and sometimes are formed integrally by a manufacturer. When LED units are commercially produced and sold, they are generally sold as a complete system including these necessary subsystems. While one might purchase bare die, reference to an ‘LED’ is directed to far more that the diode.
Standard LED packages of the art are typically build about a lead frame. A reflecting receiving cup or cavity is formed at the end of an electrical contact. A semiconductor die is affixed at the bottom of the reflector via glue or soldering. A wire bond connects a second pole to a second electrical lead; part of the lead frame. This assembly is put into a mold where a liquefied polymer resin is injected and envelopes the diode and contacts, and forms a lens thereabout. The lens and reflector operate to form a more concentrated output beam. In commonly available LED systems, it is possible to couple a majority of the output optical energy into a beam having a divergence of no less than about 30 degrees.
However in some applications, for example signaling systems used in railroads, it is desirable and even necessary to couple the optical output from the diode into a much tighter or ‘narrow’ output beam. Indeed, specialty applications may call for an output beam having just a few degrees of divergence. It is possible to create a narrow beam by placing a light emitting diode at the focus of a simple lens, however this solution requires an end user to add expensive optics to the LED packaged source and is accompanied by additional problems, such as alignment difficulties. It is preferred that LED packages be custom made to promote a narrow beam output. To answer this call, highly specialized and unique LED systems and packages are presented.
While LEDs having narrow beam outputs are in very high demand, other pre-specified beams and beam shapes are also necessary in some application specific projects. For example, asymmetric beam patterns may be required where illumination fields are not circular. Very high aspect ratio ‘ribbon’ beams may be useful in some systems while multiple spot arrays are useful in others. For these reasons, it is quite desirable to incorporate high efficiency optical systems directly within LED packages. This permits a user the luxury of not having to form an expensive complex optical system exterior to the LED.
Packages presented here are characterized as having exceptionally high optical collection efficiency. Further, they operate to couple optical energy into a highly collimated beam having low divergence or specialized particular divergence properties. These systems may also be arranged whereby they are highly cooperative in groups of similar devices to form a specialized light output. Further, the systems described are arranged in special configurations suitable for mass production.
With reference to
As it is a fundamental objective of these devices to couple light generated in a slab of semiconductor material into a highly controlled and well defined beam, it is useful to review the nature and profile of optical output which emanates from the chip.
Cover Elements
One will appreciate great advantages offered by modern polymer materials sciences. Cover elements of these inventions are meant to form part of an optical path and are necessarily transparent and of complex shape. Polymer materials can be prepared such that their final form is very clear with only slight defects and occlusions and accordingly make great optical components. Further, polymers support advanced molding processes which permit very complex integrated shapes. In the particular instance, a single piece polymer ‘cover element’ may actually be comprised of more than seven individual components. While common polymer lenses known in conventional LEDs usually have only a front spherical surface, i.e. the system is operated in an immersion lens configuration; in contrast, these inventions include a cover element which requires detailed complex integration of many cooperating components. Thus, polymer materials serve particularly well the present inventions in a manner not found previously in uses of polymers to form optical elements.
A preferred version of a cover element 31 of these inventions is shown in
Primary Lens
The primary lens 33 receives light emitted from several surfaces of the semiconductor and couples that light from a low index of refraction free space (or other medium) into the high index of refraction plastic medium of the cover. The high/low index interface in combination with the curved shape surface forms the refraction lens. In best versions, the semiconductor chip is located quite near the surface of the lens and in any case closer than the focal point of the lens. Thus in this configuration, the lens is said to be a ‘negative’ lens. While it is possible to deploy convex lens configurations as a primary lens in these inventions, it has been determined that the concave configurations as shown better couple light in a preferred way.
While some special case versions might include spherically shaped surfaces, preferred versions include a lens having an aspheric surface shape. Since this lens is formed in a molding process and is not ground as glass lenses are, it is relatively easy to enjoy the benefits aspheric optics offers. A mold tool is prepared with an aspheric shape and that shape is thereafter repeatedly passed to cover elements formed in the tool.
By careful calculation and tedious experimentation, it has been determined that optical beams emitted from semiconductors as shown may be best collected and refracted at lenses having aspheric surfaces described by the equation: x2+y2−Az−Bz2=0. Still further, the constants of proportionality when defined as A=6.587 and B=0.537, provide a preferred collection characteristic.
The primary lens is axially symmetric and concentric with a system axis 36.
Reflector
Reflectors 34 of these systems are special. These reflectors are preferably aspheric and take the shape described by the polynomial: x2+y2+Cz+Dz2=0. When C=−5.936 and D=−0.85, and these reflectors are used with semiconductors of predetermined form, the reflector performs a beam redirection which tends to most effectively further couple side beams into the system output. (Of course, the special case where C=0 renders the reflector spheric and is considered an exceptional included case)
While preferred versions of these reflectors are embodied as total internal reflection TIR mirrors, that is, a mirror formed at a high/low index of refraction junction and high angles of incidence, these are not the only configurations possible. Where TIR mirrors are not practical, it is possible to polish the surface and apply a metallic coating to form a reflective mirror. In either case, the means of reflection is less important than the shape of the reflecting surface which may in either case be formed in a molding process.
The reflector is also axially symmetric, and concentric with the primary lens. Further, its inside peripheral limit may correspond with the primarily lens outside periphery at a single circle.
One can more fully appreciate the relationship between the primary lens and reflector in preferred arrangements in view of
Output Lens
An output lens finally couples refracted and reflected beams into a final condensed output beam and transmits light propagating in the cover element into free space. Output lenses of these devices are disposed upon the top surfaces of these cover elements. By ‘top surfaces’ it is explicitly pointed out that the top of a cover element is comprised of at least two surface portions. Best arrangements include a first surface portion of circular area in a planar section and a second surface portion of annular area in a conic section. These two geometric bodies are made concentric and the outside diameter of the circle is identical to the inside diameter of the annulus. In this way, a very special geometric advantage is found to support a high performance lens with particular nature for coupling output of a semiconductor into a prescribed beam of precise dimension.
In best versions, surface relief patterns are molded into the top surfaces during manufacture. Since molding supports complex shapes, preferred arrangements include high efficiency Fresnel type lenses. Into a plurality of annular regions, a lens portion, i.e. a curved surface, is formed. The curved surface of each region cooperates with the curved surface of the other regions in that the nature of the curve for all regions is set by a mathematical relationship having radial dependence.
In
Aspheric Fresnel
While some preferred Fresnel lenses have simple r2 radial lens relationships, that is the relationships of spherical optics, it is also possible to form Fresnel lenses with aspherically defined surface shapes. The dependence may be different than simple r2 and may include a second term dependant upon the first order radius. Thus the Fresnel lens is also allowed to a be of non-spherical nature. A highly novel aspect to this approach includes tuning the curved surfaces in agreement with the non-spherical wavefront incident upon the lens. More particularly, tuning the curves of the Fresnel annuli to cooperate with the particular spatial optical output pattern natural to a light emitting semiconductor die which is necessarily a multi-faceted object typically a cube or cylinder having rectangular cross section.
Elliptical Fresnel
Further, the lens definition for the Fresnel lens is not required to be symmetric in the two transverse directions. The lens may have one curvature in a first direction and a different curvature in an orthogonal direction.
Diffractive Alternatives
Fresnel lenses offer considerable advantage in their ease of manufacture and high efficiency, alternatives output lenses may be used in some special versions of these inventions. Diffractive optics sometimes make excellent high performance beam shaping elements. Particularly when the output beam is of unusual or complex shape; for example ribbon beams, multiple spot arrays, et cetera. Further, diffractive optics such as gratings and kinoform can be formed in molding processes. Other diffractive optics, for example holographic optical elements, can be formed in other processes and applied later to molded covers of these inventions.
Periodic gratings formed into the top surfaces of the cover member of an LED device may be used to efficiently direct the collected light into a beam of prescribed definition. For example, a beam characterized by a spot array in the far field may be achieved via an appropriate grating. Gratings may also be used with simple outputs. A collimated beam may be supported by a grating having circular symmetry with increasing period as a function of distance from the system center i.e. in the radial direction.
Holograms are sometimes diffractive elements which may be formed in a medium with spatially varying index of refraction in a complex ‘fringe’ pattern. These devices may be formed on a thin film and bonded to the surface of a cover element in a two step process to form a highly specialized output lens. Holograms could couple light to any of a great variety of output beams of complex nature.
Finally, kinoform micro structures formed onto the top surface of a cover may operate as an output lens in some versions of these inventions.
Hex Peripheries in Plurality Systems
In some applications, it is desirable to maximize the amount of output light per unit area in an output beam produced by these inventions. To advance this objective, covers are formed with a view to arrangements of tightly packed units having minimal losses there between; i.e. minimal ‘dead space’. Unit devices can be formed with hexagonal peripheries which negligibly upset coupling of light from diode semiconductors into cylindrical output beams, but permit side-by-side arrangements of a plurality of unitary devices.
Of course, this paradigm can be extended to large areas where a great plurality of units pave the entire area.
Indexing and Alignment Means
Since these LED packages include high performance optical elements, i.e. lenses and mirrors, it is part of the entire package that precise alignment mechanisms be provided. Cover elements of these inventions are distinct with respect to common cover elements of most LEDs. Those cover elements are formed with the semiconductor and lead frame in place while the cover is molded. Cover elements taught herein are preferably molded and joined with the semiconductor and base substrate at a later time when the cover element is hard. As such, opportunity is presented for a highly precise alignment mechanism.
A base substrate includes receiving holes therein; said holes being well positioned and formed with precision. The bottom of a cover element cooperates with the substrate holes as it has thereon ‘pegs’ or ‘pins’. These pins are formed of the same material (i.e. plastic) as the cover element and they are formed integrally with the cover element. Where covers are made of polymers, these pins are ideal as they may be melted over after they are pushed through the holes of the substrate.
It is not necessary that each cover have its own set of pins. Indeed, it is not necessary that each cover element be formed individually and contrarily they may be formed as one compound system.
Base Substrate
The base substrate is primarily a mere flat surface. Best versions include alignment and affixing mechanisms in the form of holes well placed and precisely drilled through the flat surface clear through to the other side.
In some versions, a substrate is fashioned as a circuit board which includes printed electrical traces for electrical coupling. Further, the board may include mounting pads suitable for receiving thereon and bonding thereto a semiconductor die. These pads should be precisely located with respect to alignment holes in the substrate for lenses to operate to their full potential. Pads may be raised to permit an offset between the die and the surface of the substrate in designs of lenses which prefer such offset. If a semiconductor die is not well aligned with respect to the lens, light is not coupled properly into a desired output beam but rather distortion will greatly reduce the system efficiency. In best versions, these substrates support wave soldering manufacture processes. Indeed, A PC board may be processed with many electrical components, wave soldering, and other associated manufacturing steps, and thereafter joined with cover elements to form highly integral LEDs directly on PC boards.
One will now fully appreciate how high performance LED packages may be arranged with compound Fresnel type lenses in conjunction with aspheric optical elements. In particular, LED packages for producing highly collimated narrow beam optical outputs or another well defined beam shape of specific nature. Although the present inventions have been described in considerable detail with clear and concise language and with reference to certain preferred versions thereof including best modes anticipated by the inventors, other versions are possible. Therefore, the spirit and scope of the invention should not be limited by the description of the preferred versions contained therein, but rather by the claims appended hereto