The invention relates to display systems compatible with night vision goggles and in particular to an optical light filter for the display system.
Pilots use night vision goggles (NVG) for night flying, in particular of aircraft such as planes or helicopters.
Night vision goggles comprise two identical goggle bodies placed in front of each eye of the pilot. Each body comprises essentially an objective lens, an electronic amplifying device and an eyepiece.
The night vision goggles amplify the light (light rays 14) originating from the area targeted by the pilot in a spectral band corresponding to the red and the very near infrared, i.e. optical wavelengths situated between 650 and 930 nanometers. The gain of the goggles in this band of optical frequencies is huge, of the order of 10 000. It is thus important for the illumination of the flight instruments positioned in the cockpit to emit very little light in the band in which the goggles are amplified in order not to interfere with their operation and damage their performance. Of course, the flight instruments have to remain directly visible to the pilot and thus have to emit sufficient light in the remainder of the visible spectrum.
The illumination of the flying instruments emitting in the visible region and virtually not in the red or near infrared region is described as “NVG compatible” and forms the subject of standards, in particular a United States standard MIL-L-85762A, which defines, inter alia, the acceptable colors and in particular the ratio of the energy emitted in the spectrum in which the goggles are amplified to the energy emitted in the visible spectrum by the display system placed in the cockpit.
The sources of illumination of the flight and display instruments which are used in aeronautics, lights, electroluminescent diodes, and the like, are not naturally compatible with the standards, emitting an excessively high level of light in the band in which the goggles are amplified. One means for reducing the interfering light energy emitted by the flying instruments in the band of optical frequencies of the goggles consists in optically filtering the source of illumination of the instruments in order to reduce this interfering energy received by the goggles.
An illumination compatible with night vision goggles or NVGs thus results from the combination of a source of visible light and of a filter. In other words, a specific light source, for example lights, electroluminescent diodes, and the like, will be combined with a filter suited to the characteristics of the light source in order to obtain a level of interfering light, in the optical band in which the goggles are amplified, compatible with the standards used.
The filters with which the sources of illumination of the flight instruments are combined are essentially colored films and sheets with a thickness which can vary according to the application. In the state of the art, the filters are obtained either by extruding and laminating a polymer or by polymerizing under hot conditions a mixture comprising at least one monomer and one dye. The filter obtained, usually in the form of a sheet with a side length of a few centimeters, is subsequently machined to adapt it to the shapes and dimensions of the source of illumination. Nevertheless, the methods for the manufacture of the filters compatible with the night vision goggles of the state of the art have a high manufacturing cost related in particular to the machining of the sheets of the filters necessary in order to adapt them to the instruments to be fitted with filters.
In order to overcome the disadvantages of the filters of the state of the art compatible with night vision goggles, the invention provides a process for the manufacture of a light filter compatible with night vision goggles having at least the following stages:
The dye exhibits a near infrared absorption.
In a first process for the manufacture of the filter, the solution comprises (in addition to the other components) a monomer from the family (A) of the diacrylates with the following chemical structure:
R1 being: either CH3 or H;
R2 being: (CH2-CH2—O)n;
R3 being: either CH3 or H or CF3;
R4 being: either CH3 or H or CF3;
n being an integer between 1 and 5
In a second manufacturing process, the solution comprises a monomer from the family (B) of the diacrylates with the following chemical structure:
In other manufacturing processes, the solution comprises monomers from different families, for example a mixture of monomers from the families (A) and (B) described above.
In this case of a mixture of monomers in the solution, the amount of monomers from the two families is substantially identical.
The invention will be better understood with the help of implementational examples of light filters compatible with night vision goggles (NVGs) with reference to the appended figures, in which:
We will subsequently describe an example of the process for the manufacture of the light filter according to the invention from the photocrosslinking of a solution comprising a diacrylate, bisphenol A ethoxylate (1 EO/phenol) diacrylate, two dyes selected by the applicant company, namely copper perchlorophthalocyanine and Epolight 2057, and a photoinitiator, Darocure 1173, added to the solution in order to initiate the photocrosslinking.
Bisphenol A ethoxylate (1 EO/phenol) diacrylate is a liquid difunctional monomer sold by the company with the commercial name “Aldrich” under the reference 41,355-0, the chemical structure (C) of which is represented below:
with Mn=424 g.mol−1.
The copper perchlorophthalocyanine chosen for this manufacturing example is that which is provided in the form of a suspension in a relatively nonvolatile solvent and which is sold by the company with the commercial name “BASF” under the name of “Liqui-Kolor green”, the spectrum of optical transmission Trs as a function of the wavelength λ in nm of which is represented in
Epolight 2057 is a powder sold by the company with the commercial name “Epolin Inc.”.
The chemical structure (D) of Darocure 1173, sold by the company with the commercial name “Merck”, is represented below by its chemical structure:
The manufacture of a filter according to the invention comprises at least the following stages:
The solution is stirred using a magnetic bar until a homogeneous mixture is obtained. This mixing operation can last several hours.
The irradiation device of
The solution S between two glass sheets V1, V2 is positioned at an equal distance from the parallel planes P1, P2 and substantially towards the middle of the fluorescent tubes.
In another device for the irradiation of the solution S between the two glass sheets V1, V2, represented in
The irradiation device of
The distance L between the support face and the lamp 24 can be adjusted in order to obtain the desired irradiation of the solution.
In a final stage which completes the process for the manufacture of the filter, the film resulting from the irradiation is heated at a temperature of 70° C. for twelve hours. This final stage provides curing of the film obtained, which is devoid of air bubbles and of good optical quality.
The manufacturing process described is given by way of example and can be optimized. In particular, it is possible to vary the amount of photoinitiator, the nature of the lamps and the annealing conditions (time, temperature) in order to further reduce the manufacturing time.
The process for the manufacture of the light filter according to the invention has the advantage of making it possible to obtain filtering components of any shape using molds comprising the solution which assumes the shape of the mold, which makes it possible to dispense with the stages of machining the filters of the state of the art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04 03767 | Apr 2004 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/51014 | 3/7/2005 | WO | 10/5/2006 |