1. Field of Invention
The present invention relates to a projector. More particularly, the present invention relates to a light-guiding apparatus for an illumination system.
2. Description of Related Art
Since optical projectors were developed, they have been applied in many fields. They serve an ever expanding range of purposes, from consumer products to high technology, such as by projecting and displaying enlarged still images or motion pictures of presentations on a projection screen during conferences. However, as projector applications broaden, demands on contrast and brightness of projectors increase. The contrast and brightness of a projector are mostly determined by its illumination system.
The square-section light passes through a relay lens 110 composed of several lenses and a light path turning device 112 to arrive at a digital micro-mirror device (DMD) chip 114. The light path turning device 112 in
The relay lens 110 in
Though the aberrations are reduced by optical designs to improve image quality, the multiple lenses are complicated in design and expensive. In addition, if more lenses are added to the relay lens 110 to compensate for the aberrations, light intensity is unavoidably lost, which lowers the performance of a projector.
It is therefore an objective of the present invention to provide a light-guiding apparatus for an illumination system that resolves the aberration problems of a conventional light-guiding apparatus of an illumination system in a projector.
In accordance with the foregoing and other objectives of the present invention, a light-guiding apparatus for an illumination system is described. The invention provides an ellipsoidal reflector to replace the conventional relay lens. Light emitted from the light tunnel is reflected to and focused on a DMD chip by the ellipsoidal reflector. The light tunnel and a long axis of the ellipsoidal reflector form an angle. The angle and an eccentricity of the ellipsoidal reflector are used to modify the light emitted from the light tunnel. Thus, the light is made to match an incident angle and an effective dimension of a digital micro-mirror device receiving the light.
In one preferred embodiment of the present inventions, the ellipsoidal reflector is a partial ellipsoid casing with a dimension larger than a dimension of light emitted thereon by a divergent angle of the light tunnel, thus reflecting light completely. Moreover, the invention further provides an optical compensation device, such as a wedge prism or a compensation lens, on a light path between the ellipsoidal reflector and the DMD chip to compensate for an asymmetric aberration generated by the ellipsoidal reflector.
In another preferred embodiment of the present inventions, two ellipsoidal reflectors are used to guide light in this preferred embodiment, and the asymmetric aberration is reduced by modifying relative angles and eccentricities of the two ellipsoidal reflectors to make the light spot uniform. Moreover, light in this preferred embodiment is completely transmitted by reflection and the chromatic aberration therefore does not exist.
The invention uses an ellipsoidal reflector to replace a conventional relay lens, so as to prevent the chromatic aberration caused by the conventional relay lens. In addition, an optical compensation device that affects the chromatic aberration less is provided to resolve the aberration at the same time. Furthermore, a framework with two ellipsoidal reflectors provides a light spot with no chromatic aberration and the smallest possible spherical aberration on the DMD chip.
The invention uses reflections to guide light, thus enhancing light intensity substantially and improving the efficiency of a light-guiding apparatus. Moreover, the light-guiding apparatus of the invention is easier to design than the conventional relay lens composed of several lenses. Since it includes fewer devices, the invention is easily maintained and cheaper to produce.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are examples and are intended to provide further explanation of the invention as claimed.
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with regard to the following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings where:
Reference will now be made in detail to the present preferred embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Wherever possible, the same reference numbers are used in the drawings and the description to refer to the same or like parts.
The present invention provides a light-guiding apparatus for an illumination system to resolve the aberration problems of a conventional light-guiding apparatus of an illumination system in a projector.
The invention provides an ellipsoidal reflector to replace the conventional relay lens 110 in
Because dimension and an divergent angle 216 of light emitted from the outlet of the light tunnel 108 are constant, the invention modifies the light emitted from the light tunnel 108 by the angle 214 and an eccentricity of the ellipsoidal reflector 210 to match an incident angle and an effective dimension of a digital micro-mirror device. The ellipsoidal reflector 210 is a partial ellipsoid casing with a dimension larger than a dimension of light emitted thereon from the divergent angle 216, thus reflecting light completely. In this embodiment, the light path turning device is a TIR prism; however, other light path turning devices of other types be used in the invention, which is not limited by this embodiment.
When the ellipsoidal reflector 210 of the invention is used to replace the conventional relay lens 110 (as illustrated in
Nevertheless, light from the light tunnel to the ellipsoidal reflector 210 is off-axis, which means that light is not emitted along an axis of symmetry of the ellipsoidal reflector 210, so a light spot reflected by the ellipsoidal reflector 210 on the DMD chip 114 is not uniform. This is called an asymmetric aberration. The invention further provides an optical compensation device on a light path between the ellipsoidal reflector 210 and the DMD chip 114 to make the light spot on the DMD chip 114 uniform.
The foregoing preferred embodiments provide an optical compensation device, such as a wedge prism 302 or a compensation lens 304 in the light path between the light tunnel 108 and the DMD chip 114 to compensate for the asymmetric aberration generated by the ellipsoidal reflector 210 due to different lengths of the light path along which light is transmitted in media. Though the optical compensation device still causes a chromatic aberration, a thickness of the single optical compensation device utilized here is very thin (concerning the wedge prism 302) and a curvature thereof is very small (concerning the compensation lens 304), so the effect of chromatic aberration is much less than that of the conventional relay lens 110 composed of several lenses.
An outlet of the light tunnel 108 is located on a focus 422 of the ellipsoidal reflector 210, and another focus 424 of the ellipsoidal reflector 210 overlays a focus of the ellipsoidal reflector 402. Light emitted from the light tunnel 108 is first collected and reflected to the focus 424 by the ellipsoidal reflector 210. After passing through the focus 424, light is collected by the ellipsoidal reflector 402 and then is reflected to another focus of the ellipsoidal reflector 402. As in the embodiment of
The light tunnel 108 and a long axis 412 of the ellipsoidal reflector 210 form an angle 404, the long axis 412 of the ellipsoidal reflector 210 and a main light path 416 of the light form an angle 406 at the focus 424, and the long axis 412 of the ellipsoidal reflector 210 and a long axis 414 of the ellipsoidal reflector 402 form an angle 408. The angles 404, 406 and 408, and an eccentricity of the ellipsoidal reflector 210 and an eccentricity of the ellipsoidal reflector 402 are used to modify the light emitted from the light tunnel 108 to match an incident angle and an effective dimension of the DMD chip 114.
The ellipsoidal reflectors 210 and 402 both are partial ellipsoid casings with dimensions larger than dimensions of light emitted thereby to make sure that light is entirely reflected by the ellipsoidal reflectors. In another preferred embodiment, the angle 408 is equal to the sum of the angle 404 and the angle 406, thus minimizing the aberration of the light spot received by the DMD chip 114.
In conclusion, the invention has the following advantages:
1. The invention replaces a conventional relay lens with an ellipsoidal reflector, so as to prevent the chromatic aberration caused by the conventional relay lens. In addition, an optical compensation device that affects the chromatic aberration less is provided to resolve the aberration at the same time. Furthermore, a framework as in the foregoing embodiment of
2. In the conventional framework with a relay lens, light needs to pass through several lenses, and the loss of light intensity is hard to avoid. The invention uses reflections to guide light, thus reducing light intensity loss substantially and improving the efficiency of the light-guiding apparatus.
3. The light-guiding apparatus of the invention is easier to design than the conventional relay lens composed of several lenses and includes fewer devices. It is therefore easily maintained and cheaper to produce.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made to the structure of the present invention without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention. In view of the foregoing, it is intended that the present invention cover modifications and variations of this invention provided they fall within the scope of the following claims and their equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
92202432 U | Feb 2003 | TW | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6883922 | Kurematsu et al. | Apr 2005 | B1 |
20040150793 | Chang et al. | Aug 2004 | A1 |
20040201898 | Chang et al. | Oct 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040160758 A1 | Aug 2004 | US |