The present invention relates to a compact optical device for transporting wide field-of-view polychromatic images. One application of this device is to a head-up display device that enables a user to look in one direction and see both a projected image and the surroundings. Such devices are used in particular in infantry or pilot helmets or in virtual reality systems so that the user may view useful information while keeping the head up.
Transport devices exist based on the use of a waveguide in which an image beam is coupled into the waveguide, for example via entry/exit couplers based on diffraction gratings.
Thus the document U.S. Pat. No. 4,711,512 (Upatnieks) describes a device including a planar waveguide and entry and exit couplers based on diffraction gratings.
The operating principle of the device shown in
The waveguide device is an afocal device of unity angular magnification; it needs to operate over a certain range of angles, i.e. the incoming plane waves need to have angles of incidence varying over a range of ±Δθ about a zero mean angle of incidence. This range of angles is given for example by the usable visual field of the eye, i.e. typically a total field of around 20 to 30 degrees.
If color images are to be produced, the system must also operate over a wide spectral range from a wavelength λ1 to a wavelength λ3 with a central wavelength λ2.
Prior art systems have severe spectral and angular operating limitations. In fact, for the system to function, there are certain conditions that must be met for any angle of incidence in the range of angles and for any wavelength in the spectrum:
Moreover, for an image transport device:
If the above constraints are applied for a waveguide of index n, functioning at an angle of incidence in the range −Δθ to +Δθ over a spectral range Δλ=λ3−λ1 with a limit angle of incidence γ in the waveguide, the following minimum and maximum grating line densities are obtained:
There can be a solution only if Nmax>Nmin, which is reflected in the following condition on the index of the waveguide:
In this situation, a mean grating line density may be chosen:
Applying the above formulas for a full color system from red to blue: λ1=450 nanometers (nm), λ3=630 nm with a field Δθ of 15 degrees (i.e. a total angular field of 30 degrees) and a limit angle γ equal to 80 degrees gives:
Such an optical index for the waveguide is very high and not compatible with current low-cost materials. Moreover, the diffraction gratings are in optical contact with the waveguide and must also be manufactured in this very high index material, which enormously complicates their manufacture. Making n=2.10 to obtain a small margin leads to a line density of N=2900 lines per millimeter (lines/mm): thus the line density of the grating is high.
There are therefore severe constraints on the manufacture of such systems because it requires diffraction gratings with a high line density that are optically mounted on a waveguide having a very high index.
For an industrial solution with a waveguide in a low-cost material (glass or plastics material) and diffraction gratings replicated with transparent resins of the same index as the waveguide, this high index constraint is a problem.
The object of the invention is to provide a planar optical system for polychromatic imaging with a wide field-of-view that is preferably easier and less costly to manufacture than prior art systems.
To this end, the invention provides a planar optical system for wide angular field-of-view polychromatic imaging comprising a planar waveguide including two faces that are plane and parallel, an entry coupler including a first diffraction grating and an exit coupler including a second diffraction grating, the planar optical system being adapted to receive an incident optical beam having an optical spectrum of spectral width Δλ (Δλ=λ3−λ1) and an angular field ±Δθ and defining a mean angle of incidence i0 with the normal to a face of the waveguide, said first grating being adapted to couple said incident beam into the planar waveguide as a beam adapted to propagate in the waveguide by total internal reflection at the faces of the waveguide, and the second grating being adapted to receive the coupled beam and to diffract said coupled beam out of the waveguide as an exit beam. According to the invention the first grating is adapted to couple an entry beam of mean angle of incidence i0 in the range 30 degrees to 60 degrees into the waveguide by positive first order (+1) diffraction, said coupled beam defining an internal angle of incidence greater than the angle of total internal reflection and less than a limit angle γ, and the second grating being adapted to receive the coupled beam and to diffract it out of the waveguide by negative first order (−1) diffraction at a mean exit angle i1 relative to the normal to an exit face of the waveguide in the range 30 degrees to 60 degrees.
According to particular aspects of the invention:
According to different particular embodiments of the planar optical system of the invention:
The invention also relates to the use of any embodiment of a planar optical system to transport a wide field-of-view polychromatic image, comprising the following steps:
In a preferred use of the optical system of the invention, the mean directions of the incident beam and of the exit beam define an angle in the range 80 degrees to 100 degrees.
The waveguide imaging system of the invention functions over a wide spectral range with a large visual field and with few constraints on the waveguide and on the manufacture of the diffraction gratings.
The principle is to use a grating with lower line density so as to have smaller angular dispersion in the waveguide for the various wavelengths.
The present invention also provides features that emerge in the course of the following description, taken in isolation or in any technically feasible combination.
The description is given by way of non-limiting example with reference to the appended drawings and explains how the invention may be put into practice:
The invention provides a waveguide imaging system operating over a wide spectral band and over a large visual field but does not require the use of costly materials or treatments for the waveguide or for the manufacture of the coupling diffraction gratings.
Prior art devices use gratings of high line density so that the angle of incidence of the beam coupled into the waveguide with the plane faces of the waveguide is greater than the angle of total internal reflection.
Unlike prior art devices that use diffraction gratings of high line density for coupling the optical beams into and out of the waveguide, the device of the invention uses diffraction gratings having a low line density. This low line density advantageously enables limitation of angular dispersion in the waveguide at the various wavelengths.
However, to guide the beam coupled into the interior of the waveguide, it remains necessary for the angle of incidence of the beam coupled into the waveguide relative to the internal faces of the waveguide to remain greater than the limit angle of total reflection. Using the device inclined relative to the entry beam with a high angle of incidence makes it possible for the diffraction at the entry grating to be positive and of first order (+1) with an internal angle of incidence on the waveguide that exceeds the angle of total reflection.
There are the same total reflection and diffraction constraints with a limit internal angle of incidence γ of approximately 80 degrees.
The parameters of the imaging system are as follows. The mean angle of incidence on the waveguide is i0, the angular field is ±Δθ, the operating spectral band extends over Δλ=λ3−λ1; with an angle of incidence on the waveguide less than the limit angle γ, and the following minimum and maximum line densities are obtained:
There are solutions only if Nmax>Nmin, which yields for the refractive index n of the waveguide:
In this situation, a mean line density may be chosen:
The
It is thus seen that for an angle of incidence i0 of the order of 50 degrees, for example, the minimum index n is of the order of 1.55, which is a very common value for plastics materials, ordinary glass and transparent resins.
For an index n=1.6 with i0 equal to 50 degrees, the mean line density N is 1005 lines/mm.
The use of gratings 1 and 2 of low line density combined with a high angle of incidence i0 thus makes it possible to accommodate the constraints of the commonest industrial glasses, and also enables the system to be made compatible with operation over a wider spectral range. Prior art devices may operate at two close-together wavelengths, but they are not able to operate over a wide spectral range. The device of the invention makes it possible to transmit images over a wide spectral range, which makes it possible, in particular to transmit RGB color images.
For the same angular and spectral specifications, an index of 1.6 and a line density of 1005 lines/mm are required, which is much more favorable. In fact, because this line density causes much lower dispersion of the various wavelengths than a 2900 lines/mm grating, all wavelengths benefit from the phenomenon of total reflection (without loss of energy) in the interior of the waveguide. The thickness of the waveguide is generally of the order of 1 mm. The length of the waveguide is of the order of about 10 centimeters (cm) for a helmet application. The diameter of the beams and the pupil depends greatly on the presence of the entry and exit optical system (eye or optical system) and the characteristics of those optical systems.
The gratings 1 and 2 are therefore optimized to enable a beam of great spectral width and wide field-of-view to be coupled into a waveguide in a transparent material of relatively low index (<1.7).
The line density of the first grating 1 is advantageously equal to the line density of the second grating 2, which enables polychromatic operation of the imaging system.
In
In most applications, the exit grating 2 in front of the eye must be transparent and ineffective in respect of light coming from the visual scene.
An exit grating 2 with efficiency that varies in the longitudinal direction of the waveguide advantageously enables the energy to be rendered uniform over the exit pupil.
The first or entry waveguide 1 applies positive first order (+1) diffraction to all light beams in the waveguide above the limit angle of total reflection, thus enabling the image to be transported in the waveguide 3. In contrast, the second diffraction grating 2, with the same line density, applies negative first order (−1) diffraction so as to constitute the exit light beams and extract them from the waveguide.
In a first embodiment shown diagrammatically in
The entry diffraction grating 1 and the exit diffraction grating 2 are optimized to offer as uniform a luminous flux as possible at the exit. The exit grating 2 may be a grating with a diffraction efficiency that varies continuously to render the intensity of the exit beam uniform over the image field.
The system of the invention advantageously functions over a wide spectral range and with beams of large angular aperture. These angular and spectral constraints are looser using a design with a waveguide including two diffraction gratings of low line density functioning with a high mean angle of incidence (preferably >30°).
In a first preferred embodiment of the invention (
In a third embodiment of the invention (
Finally,
To summarize, there is proposed a compact planar optical imaging system using a waveguide and diffraction gratings, preferably associated with collimator optics. The waveguide system is an afocal system for transporting images from collimator optics to focusing optics, in particular to the eye. The waveguide system, constituted of a waveguide and two diffraction gratings, is specifically used at an angle of incidence close to 45° in order to function over a wide spectral range (the visible spectrum) and over a large angular range, using very common materials for the waveguide and common line densities for the diffraction gratings.
The invention finds one particularly advantageous application in a head-up display in which the user can look in a single direction and see both a projected image and the surroundings. Head-up displays are used in particular for piloting airplanes, helicopters, and any other aircraft.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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09 55397 | Jul 2009 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR2010/051622 | 7/29/2010 | WO | 00 | 1/31/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2011/012825 | 2/3/2011 | WO | A |
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20120127577 A1 | May 2012 | US |