The invention relates to an optical sensor device.
An optical sensor device comprising a photoconductor structure having first and second partial members and a coupling surface for coupling the optical sensor device to an opposing counter surface of a pane, particularly a windscreen of a motor vehicle, an optical transmitter coupling a beam of rays into the first partial member, an optical receiver receiving a beam of rays emerging from the second partial member, and a printed circuit board on which the transmitter and the receiver are arranged, is known from EP 0 833 764 B1. In this known device, the printed circuit board is arranged perpendicularly to the windscreen of a motor vehicle. The beam of light which is emitted from the transmitter parallel to the plane of the windscreen is coupled into the windscreen via an input section of a radiation conductor. To do this, the beam of light is initially deflected at a first deflection surface through 90 degrees in a direction parallel to the printed circuit board, before it emerges from the input section and enters into the windscreen via two further deflection surfaces through a coupling surface arranged parallel to the windscreen. After several reflections in the windscreen, the beam of light emerges from the windscreen and is directed onto the receiver on the printed circuit board via an output section formed symmetrically to the input section.
It is an object of the invention to provide an optical sensor device with a simpler and more compact construction which is able to be produced at a more favourable cost.
According to the invention, an optical sensor device comprises a photoconductor structure having first and second partial members and a coupling surface for coupling the optical sensor device to an opposing counter surface of a pane, particularly a windscreen of a motor vehicle. The optical sensor device further comprises an optical transmitter coupling a beam of rays into the first partial member, an optical receiver receiving a beam of rays emerging from the second partial member, and a printed circuit board arranged parallel to the coupling surface. The transmitter and the receiver are arranged on the printed circuit board. The photoconductor structure is designed so that the central ray of the transmitter enters into the first partial member perpendicularly to the coupling surface and emerges from the second partial member perpendicularly to the coupling surface. The arrangement of the printed circuit board with the transmitter and the receiver in accordance with the invention not only saves structural space in the direction perpendicular to the windscreen, but in addition makes possible a construction with fewer deflection surfaces. Compared with the construction known from EP 0 833 764 B1, in which the beam of light emitted from the transmitter is deflected three times before it enters into the windscreen, only two deflection surfaces are necessary in the construction according to the invention. The same applies to the directing of beams to the receiver after emergence from the windscreen.
a, 2b show sectional views of the sensor device according to the invention with different kinds of coupling to a pane; and
An unfolded two-dimensional illustration of the optical components of a sensor device is shown in
The sensor device has an optical transmitter 10 and an optical receiver 12 in the form of an infrared transmission diode and an infrared reception diode respectively, which are arranged on a printed circuit board 14 (not illustrated in
A beam of light emitted from the transmitter 10 enters into the first partial member 16 of the photoconductor structure through the first aspherical lens 24. Of this beam only the central ray 28, which enters into the first partial member 16 in a direction perpendicular to the coupling surface 20, will be discussed at this time. The central ray 28 is deflected under total reflection through 90 degrees at a first deflection surface 30 which is inclined at a 45 degree angle to the central ray 28, so that the said ray is oriented parallel to the coupling surface 20. After a further total reflection at a second deflection surface 32 which faces the first deflection surface 30 and is inclined at a specific acute angle α to the coupling surface 20, the central ray 28 emerges from the first partial member 16 through the coupling surface 20 and enters into the pane 22 under a defined entry angle β.
The central ray 28 undergoes a single total reflection on the inner surface of the pane 22 opposite the coupling surface 20, and emerges from the pane 22 at an exit angle γ, which corresponds to the entry angle β, and arrives through the coupling surface 20 into the second partial member 18 of the photoconductor structure. Owing to the symmetrical construction of the photoconductor structure, the path of rays in the second partial member 18 is symmetrical to the path of rays in the first partial member 16, i.e. the central ray 28 is oriented parallel to the coupling surface 20 after a first total reflection on a third deflection surface 34, and is oriented perpendicularly to the coupling surface 20 after a second total reflection on a fourth deflection surface 36. The central ray 28 therefore emerges from the second partial member 18 perpendicularly to the coupling surface 20 through the second aspherical lens 26 and strikes onto the receiver 12 which is arranged on the printed circuit board 14.
In
In
The optical sensor device is particularly suitable, but not exclusively, as a rain sensor which can be arranged on the windscreen of a motor vehicle.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20 2006 000 742 U | Jan 2006 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4676638 | Yasuda | Jun 1987 | A |
5661303 | Teder | Aug 1997 | A |
5898183 | Teder | Apr 1999 | A |
6018165 | Kerkmann et al. | Jan 2000 | A |
6064059 | Pientka et al. | May 2000 | A |
6802631 | Hog et al. | Oct 2004 | B1 |
6842271 | Sautter et al. | Jan 2005 | B2 |
20030074962 | Sautter et al. | Apr 2003 | A1 |
20060006318 | Ishikawa et al. | Jan 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
19713909 | Nov 1998 | DE |
19821335 | Jul 2000 | DE |
19933642 | Mar 2001 | DE |
19951831 | May 2001 | DE |
10060964 | Jun 2002 | DE |
10229200 | Jun 2003 | DE |
0833764 | Jul 2003 | EP |
9947396 | Sep 1999 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20070165232 A1 | Jul 2007 | US |