The present invention relates to coupling light into a light guide. The present invention further relates to a backlight structure for an LCD (Liquid Crystal Display).
When light from a light source is incident on a flat unstructured light guide, no light will be coupled into the light guide. Some light will be reflected (indicated as so-called Fresnel reflection), and the remainder of the light will be transmitted through the light guide. Accordingly, in the prior art, when light is to be coupled into a light guide having a generally plate-shaped structure, special provisions are made at the light guide to allow a light source to couple the light into the light guide.
For example, if a side-emitting LED (Light Emitting Diode) is used as a light source, a hole or recession must be made in a main surface of the light guide to allow the light source to be accommodated at a location inside the light guide. To provide such a hole or recession, the light guide must be relatively thick, resulting in a relatively high mass and volume of the light guide. Further, optimum operation of the light source in the hole or recession requires a good registration of the light source and the hole or recession, which is complicated.
In another known structure, an LED is arranged at an edge of a light guide to allow light emitted by the LED to enter a surface of the light guide at right angles to a main surface of the light guide. Again, in such an arrangement, the light guide must be relatively thick.
A planar or plate-shaped light guide may be used as a luminaire for LCD (Liquid Crystal Display) backlighting as well as for general lighting. Light is transported inside the light guide by means of TIR (Total Internal Reflection), and light is coupled out of the light guide by outcoupling means known per se, such as a diffuser.
It is desirable to provide a lighting assembly comprising a light source and a light guide, in which assembly the light guide may be planar or plate-shaped (flat, with opposing main surfaces of the plate-shaped light guide being essentially parallel, or wedge-shaped, with opposing main surfaces of the plate-shaped light guide including a small angle) and very thin.
In an embodiment of the present invention, a lighting structure is provided, the lighting structure comprising: a light source emitting light; an angular filter having a main surface; and a light guide having a main surface. The main surface of the filter is parallel to the main surface of the light guide. In such a lighting assembly, the light guide may be made very thin, thus reducing its mass and volume. The light source is a light source emitting light in a relatively narrow wavelength range. An example of such a light source is an LED.
In this specification, the term angular filter may refer to a filter structure that reflects light rays incident at small angles with respect to a direction normal to a main surface of the filter, and transmits light rays incident at larger angles with respect to the direction normal to the main surface of the filter, or it may refer to a filter structure that transmits light rays incident at small angles with respect to a direction normal to a main surface of the filter, and reflects light rays incident at larger angles with respect to the direction normal to the main surface of the filter. An angular filter may be embodied as a dichroic filter, which may also be referred to as a dichroic mirror, or as a photonic crystal, or as any array of diffractive elements, or as a combination thereof.
The claims and advantages will be more readily appreciated as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description and the accompanying drawings showing exemplary embodiments, in which like reference symbols designate like parts. For clarity, various parts of the embodiments in the drawings are not drawn to scale.
a schematically depicts a cross-section of a fifth embodiment of a lighting assembly according to the present invention.
b schematically depicts a cross-section of a sixth embodiment of a lighting assembly according to the present invention.
The sapphire structure 13 is covered with a dichroic filter 14, i.e. a multi-layer filter structure that reflects light rays (generated in the light producing structure 12 and transmitted in the sapphire structure 13) travelling at small angles with respect to a direction normal to a main surface of the filter 14, and transmits light rays travelling at larger angles with respect to said normal direction. Thus, a main surface of the LED 10 is in mechanical and optical contact with a first main surface of the filter 14.
A second main surface of the filter 14 lying opposite to the first main surface is in mechanical and optical contact with a main surface of a light guide 15.
It is to be noted that mechanical contact between parts may be direct or indirect, such as by an intermediate layer of material, such as a layer of glue.
It is to be noted further that a ‘main surface’ of a part of a lighting assembly implies that said part has at least one dimension along the main surface being greater than a dimension normal to the main surface.
It is to be noted further that the sapphire structure 13 is optional, and need not be present in the lighting assembly. In a process of manufacture of the lighting assembly, it may e.g. be removed from the light-producing structure 12 before the dichroic filter 14 is applied. In that case, the dichroic filter 14 may have its first main surface in mechanical and optical contact with the light-producing structure 12.
The lighting assembly of
The dichroic filter 14 is configured such that it reflects light emitted by the light-producing structure 12 at small angles θguide inside the light guide to the direction normal to the main surface of the filter 14 and transmits light that is emitted at angles θguide larger than a critical angle θguide,critical into the light guide 15. The critical angle θguide,critical is the smallest possible angle that fulfils TIR (Total Internal Reflection) in the light guide 15. For a light guide 15 surrounded by air, TIR implies:
θguide≧θguide,critical=a sin(1/nguide) (1)
where nguide is the index of refraction of the light guide 15.
From Snell's law and formula (1), it follows that the dichroic filter 14 transmits light inside the LED 10 for angles θLED with respect to a direction normal to a main surface of the LED 10 that obey relation (2):
where nLED is the (effective) index of refraction in the LED 10.
Light emitted by the LED 10 that is reflected back to the LED 10 has a chance of being absorbed again, which has to be avoided as much as possible. The minimum thickness tmin of the light guide 15 that is needed to ensure that a light ray injected into the light guide 15 will not be able to reach the LED 10 again is given by formula (3):
where w is the effective width of the LED 10.
As an example, the width w of an LED typically is 1 mm, and nguide typically is 1.5, implying that the thickness of the light guide 15 may be as small as tmin=0.6 mm.
In the foregoing, the dichroic filter 14 has been presented as reflecting light for angles less than a critical angle θguide,critical with respect to a direction normal to a main surface of the filter, and transmitting light for angles larger than the critical angle θguide, critical. In the following, it will be explained that the critical angle may be chosen at will.
Reference is made to
In relation (4), nLED and nfilter are the indices of refraction of the LED material in contact with the filter, and an average index of refraction of the filter, respectively, and θ is an angle of light incidence relative to the normal direction. Relation (4) in combination with the measured LED spectrum as shown in
As an example, λ(0)=550 nm, nLED=1.8 and nfilter=1.75 were taken. In
In an embodiment of a lighting assembly illustrated in
In an embodiment of a lighting assembly illustrated in
In an embodiment of a lighting assembly illustrated in
In an embodiment of a lighting assembly illustrated in
In an embodiment of a lighting assembly illustrated in
Instead of a dichroic filter (a structure that is periodic in one dimension), a photonic crystal (i.e. an artificial structure that is periodic in two or three dimensions) may be used. Alternatively, instead of a dichroic filter, a periodic array of diffractive elements may be used. Both a photonic crystal and an array of diffractive elements allow the same function as a dichroic filter, as explained above in the different embodiments according to the present invention. Generically, the term ‘angular filter’ is used to indicate a dichroic filter, a photonic crystal, or an array of diffractive elements.
In the present invention, use of an LED showing a strong off-normal emission of light rays by tuning layer thicknesses of the LED, using the so-called cavity effect, allows less light to be reflected back by the dichroic filter to the LED, leading to a higher efficiency of the lighting assembly. Besides LEDs, other light sources may be used.
The terms “a” or “an”, as used herein, are defined as one or more than one. The term plurality, as used herein, is defined as two or more than two. The term another, as used herein, is defined as at least a second or more. The terms including and/or having, as used herein, are defined as comprising (i.e., open language). The term coupled, as used herein, is defined as connected, although not necessarily directly, and not necessarily mechanically.
While the invention has been described and illustrated in its preferred embodiments, it should be understood that departures therefrom may be made within the scope of the invention, which is not limited to the details disclosed herein.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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07114403.4 | Aug 2007 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2008/053210 | 8/11/2008 | WO | 00 | 2/8/2010 |