The disclosure of Japanese Patent Application No. 2005-69281 filed on Mar. 11, 2005 including specifications, drawings and claims is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a photoelectric encoder. In particular, the invention relates to improvements in a photoelectric encoder that has a telecentric optical system wherein a lens and an aperture are inserted between a main scale and a light receiving element.
2. Description of the Related Art
As described in Japanese Patent Laid-Open Publication No. 2004-264295 and as shown in
In the photoelectric encoder that uses this telecentric optical system 40, an image on the main scale 20 is made pass through the lens optical system (42, 44) and is projected onto the light receiving element array 34. Here, by positioning the aperture 44 at the focal position of the lens 42, even when the distance (gap) between the main scale 20 and the lens 42 changes, fluctuations in the magnification of the image formed on the light receiving element array 34 can be controlled if the positional relationship between the lens 42, the aperture 44, and the light receiving element array 34 does not change.
In Japanese Patent Laid-Open Publication No. Hei 10-82611, it is described that, utilizing the Scheimpflug rule, light is incident on a wafer from a lateral narrow slit provided in a reticle projection optical system.
When constituting a photoelectric encoder of a reflection type by using a telecentric optical system as described in Japanese Patent Laid-Open Publication No. 2004-264295, however, if a half mirror 46, at the center of which an aperture 44 is formed as shown in
When the optical axis is inclined as shown in
Until now, the feasibility of applying the Scheimpflug rule to a photoelectric encoder using a telecentric optical system has not been considered.
In view of the foregoing problems, various embodiments of this invention provide a photoelectric encoder that prevents a reduction in contrast by obtaining focus over the entire image plane even if the optical axis is inclined to make an optical system smaller.
The present invention achieves the object by providing a photoelectric encoder that has a lens optical system including a lens inserted between a main scale and a light receiving element, and wherein three planes extended from a surface of the main scale, a principal plane of the lens, and an image plane of the light receiving element are disposed so as to intersect at a single point and satisfy the Scheimpflug rule.
In the photoelectric encoder, angles formed between the surface of the main scale and the principal plane of the lens and between the principal plane of the lens and the image plane of the light receiving element may be equal to each other.
The lens optical system may be a telecentric optical system including a lens and an aperture arranged at the focal position of the lens.
The invention further provides a photoelectric encoder that has a lens inserted between a main scale and a light receiving element, and wherein: at least a second lens is inserted between the first lens and the light receiving element so that a focal point thereof is located at a focal point of the first lens; and three planes extended from a surface of the main scale, a focal plane which includes the focal points of the first and second lens and being perpendicular to an optical axis, and an image plane of the light receiving element are disposed so as to intersect at a single point and satisfy the Scheimpflug rule, thereby enabling a magnification to be adjustable as well.
In the photoelectric encoder, angles formed between the surface of the main scale and the aperture plane and between the aperture plane and the image plane of the light receiving element may be equal to each other.
The lens system may be a birateral telecentric optical system.
According to the present invention, as shown in
The magnifications at the points A′ and B′ in
These and other novel features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of preferred embodiments.
The preferred embodiments will be described with reference to the drawings, wherein like elements have been denoted throughout the figures with like reference numerals, and wherein;
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described in detail with reference to the attached drawings.
A first embodiment of the invention includes, as shown in
In the present embodiment, since θ1=θ2, the optical magnification of an image is given by
M=tan θ2/tan θ1=1
implying an optical system with 1× magnification.
In particular, when θ1=θ2=45°, the sum θ1+θ2 comes to 90°, so that assembly becomes easy.
Further, as a modification shown in
As in a second embodiment shown in
Next, a third embodiment of the present invention will be described in detail with reference to
The present embodiment relates to a photoelectric encoder that has a lens optical system 50 configured such that a second lens 48, which is the same as the lens 42 (referred to also as “first lens”), is inserted on the opposite side of the first lens 42 in a reverse fashion so that its focal point is located at focal point of the first lens 42. In this photoelectric encoder, the scale 20, the lens optical system 50, and the light receiving element 34 are disposed so that the subject plane, a plane (referred to as “focal plane”) which includes the focal points of the first lens 42 and the second lens 48 and being perpendicular to optical axis, and the image plane satisfy the Scheimpflug rule and the angle θ1 between the subject plane and the focal plane and the angle θ2 between the focal plane and the image plane match each other.
In the present embodiment, since the first lens 42 on the input side and the second lens 48 on the output side are identical to each other, an aberration occurring at the first lens 42 can be nearly completely compensated and canceled out by the second lens 48, thereby significantly improving the signal detection efficiency.
Further, since the second lens 48 is inserted so that its focal point is located at the focal point of the first lens 42, the light exiting the second lens 48 is collimated, so that the trapezium distortion (magnification) is compensated in comparison with the first embodiment.
In particular, when θ1=θ2=45°, the sum θ1+θ2 comes to 90°, so that assembly becomes easy.
Further, as a modification shown in
As in a fourth embodiment shown in
The reason will now be described why the focal plane, which includes focal points of two lenses and being perpendicular to optical axis, is used as a principle plane of the lens system in the lens optical optical system, wherein two lenses are combined with focal points of both lenses coincide with each other, when the Scheimpflug principle is applied. In a typical lens optical system 50 in which the input and output lenses 42 and 48 have respective focal lengths f1 and f2 as shown in
(i) When s1=−f1 (on the optical axis)
s2′=f2
(ii) When s1≠−f1 (off the optical axis)
Since
(1/s1′)=(1/s1)+(1/f1)
then
s1′=s1f1/(s1+f1).
Therefore, the object position for the output lens 48 is given by the following equation:
s2=−(f1+f2−s1′)=−(s1f2+f12+f1f2)/(s1+f1).
Accordingly, since (1/s2′)=(1/s2)+(1/f2), s2′ is described by the following equation.
Therefore,
s2′−f2=(f22/f12)(s1+f1)
Referring to
Δx′=(f22/f12)·Δx (1)
If the heights of the object and the image are denoted y and y′, respectively, their relationship is given by the following equation.
y′=βy=−(f2/f1)·y
If the substitution y=θ1Δx is made in the above equation, then the following equation is obtained from equation (1).
Accordingly, when the subject plane is inclined by an angle of θ1, if the image plane is inclined by an angle of θ1·(f1/f2), focus is obtained over the entire plane. This implies that the intersection of the planes extended from the subject plane and the image plane lies on the focal plane 46.
In all above embodiments, the light receiving element 34 must be assembled so as to be inclined with respect to the scale 20, so careful assembly is required. Therefore, a fifth embodiment of the invention, capable of arranging the scale 20 and the light receiving element 34 in parallel with each other, will be described in detail with reference to
The present embodiment relates to the photoelectric encoder similar to the third embodiment as shown in
In the present embodiment, especially when θ1=θ2=θ3=θ4=45°, the scale 20 and the light receiving element 34 can be arranged in parallel with each other, so that not only assembly becomes easy, but it is easy to ensure the installation space for the light source 10 because the scale 20 and the light receiving element 34 are apart from each other.
Further, as a modification shown in
Incidentally, since the numerical aperture NA is determined by the first aperture 44, it is possible to omit the second aperture 64.
A planoconvex lens and a biconvex lens, which are highly accurate but expensive may be used as the lenses 42, 48, 62, and 68. Further, a spherical ball lens, a refractive index distribution type of cylindrical GRIN lens (also called as “SELFOC lens”), which refracts light rays parabolically within the lens material; and a drum lens may be used, too. These lenses have a large distortion and aberration but is cheep. However, aberrations occurring due to these lenses can be canceled out by using the same lenses in pairs.
The invention can be applied to a photoelectric encoder either having an index grating and a light receiving element separated from each other or a light receiving element array in which they are integrated with each other.
It should be apparent to those skilled in the art that the above-described embodiments are merely illustrative which represent the application of the principles of the present invention. Numerous and varied other arrangements can be readily devised by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and the scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2005-069281 | Mar 2005 | JP | national |