The present invention relates to a planar illumination device with light-emitting illumination elements which are arranged on a carrier, containing an electrically conductive layer and an insulating layer, and which for the current supply are connected to current feed lines in the form of at least one conductor path.
Planar illumination devices are known from WO 2006/097225. Light-emitting illumination elements are described therein, arranged on a carrier. A metallic foil is called a carrier. The carrier is covered with an insulating layer. Conductor paths are arranged on the insulating layer as current feed lines and current discharge lines and illumination elements and series resistor faces are arranged in between in series connections.
The object of the present invention is to expand the application area of planar illumination devices and to propose new illumination devices with further possibilities for use.
According to the invention, this is achieved in that the light-emitting illumination elements are a succession of identical units on a continuous carrier path, arranged on the electrically insulating layer of the carrier, and the electrically conductive layer of the carrier represents the current discharge.
Diodes, such as so-called LEDs (light emitting diodes) are present, for example, as light-emitting illumination elements.
Carriers are, for example, foils of multi-layer construction. A foil-like structure may contain, lying adjacent to one another, an electrically conductive layer and, on one side of the electrically conductive layer, an electrically insulating layer.
The electrically conductive layer may, for example, be a metal layer or a metallic layer. The metal layer may be a metal foil, such as, for example, a gold, silver, iron, steel, copper, tin or aluminium foil. The metal foils may also be made of alloys containing at least one of said metals. Aluminium foils, or foils made of aluminium alloys are preferred. It is also possible to use multi-layer foils made of at least two different metals. Typically thicknesses of said metal foils extend from about 3 μm to 300 μm, thicknesses of 7 μm to 70 μm being particularly suitable for aluminium foils. Owing to the selection of, for example, the thickness, the hardness, the elasticity etc., of the carrier materials, in particular the carrier foils, flexible, bendable, rollable or other two- or three-dimensionally deformable illumination devices may be provided, from case to case provided with a prestressing. Instead of the metal foils, foils or materials thicker than the given 300 μm may be used, such as, for example, bands, metal sheets or profiles. This may be necessary, for example, when the electrically conductive layer is simultaneously to have a tarrying function or dimensional stability is to be achieved. To dissipate the heat produced by the light-emitting illumination elements, the surface of the metal foils or sheets may be increased by folds or by the application of cooling ribs on profiles. A metal layer may also be produced by means of an electrically conductive metal-containing lacquer, which is applied to a substrate, such as a plastics material substrate or paper, etc.
The metallic layer may be a metallic layer produced in particular on a plastics material, for example in a foil form and deposited by a chemical or physical depositing method. The coating may take place by a chemical method, such as plastics material galvanisation or by the application or spraying on of solutions, such as cathode sputtering. Examples of physical deposition are sputtering or vapour deposition in a vacuum. If the metal layer is sputtered on or the metal layer deposited in a thin layer vacuum method, the deposited or vapour-deposited metals, for example gold, silver, copper, iron, nickel, tin, zinc, aluminium etc, may be alloys or mixtures thereof or the layers may contain these metals. Sputtered on or vapour-deposited layers may, for example, have a thickness of 2 to 200 nm (nanometres).
The insulating layer may be a paper, a coated paper, cardboard tray, cardboard or paperboard or a plastics material. Coated papers may be papers coated with waxes, hot melt or plastics materials. Examples of the plastics materials which can be used are polyvinyl chloride, polyolefins, such as polyethylene or polypropylene, polycarbonates, polyamides, polyesters, polyacrylonitriles, polystyrenes or their copolymers or graft polymers etc. Rubber is also suitable as the insulating layer. The insulating layer made of plastics material is preferably present as a film. The films may also be laminates or layered materials of two or more plastics material layers and may have been produced, for example, by lamination or extrusion. Typical thicknesses of films of this type are 12 μm to 200 μm. The insulating layer may also be used in thicknesses above the 200 μm given, for example as a plate or moulded part, if the insulating layer is simultaneously to have a carrying function or dimensional stability is to be achieved.
The electrically insulating layer is preferably present as a plastics material film and the electrically conductive layer is preferably present as a metal foil. The two foils can be connected to one another by means of primers, by means of primers and adhesives, or by means of adhesives, by lamination. The plastics material may be extrusion-laminated as a layer onto the metal foil in a different manner. The parts supplying current of the light-emitting illumination elements are generally printed onto the electrically insulating layer, applied wet chemically or vapour-deposited or a whole-area conductor layer is removed on the insulating layer, such as evaporated or etched away, to such an extent that the required conductor paths and conductor path portions remain with the action of a series resistor.
Hard-rolled aluminium foils are particularly advantageously used as the carrier foil. The carrier foil is provided in a planar manner with an insulating layer, for example with an outer varnish layer as the insulating layer. The various conductor paths and connection contact faces can be printed onto the outer varnish layer, for example by the gravure printing method, in one or more layers with an electrically conductive paint, for example a silver conductive paint. From case to case, the series conductors can be printed on with a further conductive paint, such as a silver and/or graphite, preferably a graphite conductive paint. In this case, in one gravure printing operation, the conductor paths being used for current supply and current distribution in the face of the illumination device and also the connection faces for the light-emitting construction elements are printed on in the silver conductive paint. Advantageously, the resistor faces of the series resistors consisting, for example, of graphite conductive paint, which are fed by input and output lines preferably consisting of silver, are printed on by the gravure printing method. The required power loss of the series resistors is achieved by the relatively large-area configuration of the printed-on resistor faces. The light-emitting illumination elements are glued, for example, with a silver-containing conductive glue to the corresponding connection contact faces or soldered thereto. Silver-containing conductive adhesives have a very small coefficient of heat conduction, so good heat dissipation from the light-emitting illumination elements to the metal carrier foil takes place.
The individual illumination elements, for rn example light-emitting diodes, can dissipate the heat produced during operation into the carrier, for example the metallic carrier foils being used as carriers. The individual illumination elements may have a power consumption of, for example, 0.1 watts to 5 watts. Not only weak LEDs with, for example, 0.1 to 0.5 watts, but also so-called power LEDs with, for example, 2 to 5 watts, preferably 3 watts, may be used. Depending on their number, the LEDs may be operated at an operating voltage of, for example, 20 V. Thus, the operating voltage lies in the region of small voltages according to the VDE standards. The outlay for insulation is therefore advantageously kept low. The LEDs may also be semiconductor chips without a housing, which are directly glued on and bonded with wire, or connected.
The light-emitting illumination elements are a succession of units, preferably a succession of identical units, which extend in the area in one or both directions. The light-emitting illumination elements can be produced, for example, continuously in the form of a carrier path, the width and length of the carrier path being uncritical per se and dependent on the starting materials and the mechanical situation. Light-emitting illumination elements are typically arranged in a path-shape with, for example, 1 to 100 units over the width of the carrier path and 1 to any number of units, which extend over the length of the carrier path.
Planar illumination devices, the continuing carrier path of which is at least one unit wide and at least two units long, are expedient. 2 to 50 units are preferred in a carrier path width. 2 to 200 units are preferred in a carrier path length.
In a particularly favourable embodiment, the units of the planar illumination device are in each case aligned or in a repeat pattern in the longitudinal direction and/or in the transverse direction. The units may also have individual outer limitations. A later division of a planar illumination unit into selectively arranged groupings of units is correspondingly more laborious.
Each unit is advantageously surrounded by an endless conductor path in the planar illumination device. The surrounding conductor path is a part of the current supply, or current feed, within the planar illumination device. A current-conducting path leads from the surrounding conductor path to the LED. This current-conducting path, in its entire or in a partial length, is a resistor and thus forms the series resistor. The size of the resistor of the current-conducting path is achieved by the cross-sectional area and/or the conductivity of the path or a portion of the path.
Each unit may be connected to the adjacent unit(s) in a current-conducting manner by means of conductor paths.
Each unit of the light-emitting illumination element may be electrically conductively connected to the carrier through a recess in the insulating layer on the planar illumination device according to the invention. The carrier represents the current discharge. The recess through the insulating layer may be implemented, for example, by piercing by means of a needle-shaped instrument, by mechanical removal, such as punching or drilling, by etching or evaporation by means of an electron beam or laser beam. The current-discharging conductor of the light-emitting illumination element to the carrier foil may also be a conductor path, as described above. From case to case, it may prove to be necessary to improve the contact between the conductor path and the carrier foil, through the recess in the insulating layer, or even to set it up at all. This may take place by connecting the conductor path and the carrier foil by means of a conductive lacquer or by means of a solder point, which substantially pass through the recess.
The units are advantageously in alignment in each case in the longitudinal direction and/or in the transverse direction. Cutting zones are advantageously arranged between the units. The cutting zones are arranged between the individual units and thus form space for the cutting lines for the later isolating of the units or groups of units. As each unit is advantageously interconnected with the adjacent unit(s), in a current-conducting manner by means of conductor paths, any units can be cut off and function independently of one another.
An illumination device made of a large number of units may be provided. The illumination device may, for example, be a roll produced, in particular, mechanically and continuously or a sheet made of a sheet stack with a plurality of units. Cutting zones are advantageously arranged between the units. A separating cut may be placed between each unit inside the cutting zone and at least one unit may be removed from the illumination device or separated at the edge from the illumination device. The separation or removal of units or groups of units, or groups of units in a patterned arrangement, may take place by separating methods, such as punching or by means of blades or scissors. Separating methods, such as laser cutting methods, separation by means of a water jet and the like can also be used. Said separating methods may also be computer-assisted. This allows complex patterns to be separated or removed from the planar illumination device with the separating device or non-linear or curved cutting lines to be followed. Accordingly, the planar illumination devices may be divided into separate cutouts or portions of one or more units and be isolated. The portions or cutouts of one or more units may be loaded individually with current as desired and used and operated as illumination bodies.
To operate the planar illumination device according to the invention, at least one conductor path, for example one or more of the endless conductor paths or one or more of the conductor paths connecting the units, may be connected to the current by means of a current feed line. The electrically conductive layer is also connected to the current circuit by means of a current discharge line. Each diode or LED is now supplied by way of the endless conductor paths and the current-conducting path or series resistor with current and the current circuit is closed by means of the current discharge line to the electrically conductive layer.
In a further preferred configuration of the invention, the flexible metallic carrier foil is reinforced by a stable composite part, so self-supporting light panels can be produced. In this case, the carrier is fixed, for example on plates made of a compact, foamed or honeycomb-like material, such as a plastics material panel, a wood panel, a plastics material foam or a honeycomb plate, by adhesion, i.e. processed to form a composite part. The side with the light-emitting illumination elements may, for example, be covered by a plastics material protective layer which is optically transparent, changes the colouring of the light, or opaque, bringing about a diffused light distribution. Owing to the plastics material layer, the light-emitting illumination elements, conductor paths and resistors are also advantageously protected against mechanical and electrical influences. It is also possible to arrange, on one side of the planar illumination device, the stable composite part, and to arrange the plastics material protective layer on the side of the light-emitting illumination elements. A stable, dividable sandwich element with a heat-dissipating and/or a dimensionally stable rear and light-emitting front is produced. For the current supply of the LEDs, for example, a contact clip may be connected for current supply at at least one point on one of the conductor paths and, on the other hand, the current discharge may take place by way of a contact clip, which contacts the electrically conductive layer. Instead of one or more clips, the current conducting devices may also be soldered to the conductor paths or electrically conductive layer or otherwise fixed in a current-conducting manner.
The figures show, by way of example, embodiments of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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07405161.6 | Jun 2007 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2008/004070 | 5/21/2008 | WO | 00 | 7/26/2010 |