The present invention relates generally to skylights.
In U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,896,713 and 6,035,593, both of which are owned by the same assignee as is the present invention and both of which are incorporated herein by reference, tubular skylights are disclosed. Both of the skylights can use the skylight dome disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,896,712 also owned by the same assignee as is the present invention and also incorporated herein by reference. These inventions represent advances over the prior art and one or more of them has found commercial success.
Briefly, a tubular skylight such as those mentioned above includes a tube assembly mounted between the roof and ceiling of a building. The top end of the tube assembly is covered by a roof-mounted dome or cover, such as the one disclosed in the above-mentioned '712 patent, while the bottom end of the tube assembly is covered by a ceiling-mounted diffuser plate. With this combination, natural light external to the building is directed through the tube assembly into the interior of the building to illuminate the interior.
Tubular skylights use a near specular finish reflective surface to transport sunlight down the tube from the roof to the interior ceiling. “Specular” means that reflected direct rays of sunlight maintain a near parallel beam of light as they reflect down the tube if the tube sides are parallel and the specular reflective surface is maintained.
The present invention understands that sunlight enters the tube at various incident angles based on time of day/year, latitude, and tube opening plane location. Despite the fixed position of the tube, direct beam sunlight reflects down the perimeter of the tube at approximately the same elevation angle as it enters the tube. As understood herein, this can result in the following undesirable outcomes. First, the parallel beam sunlight can converge at concentrated focal points at various locations down the tube, resulting in potentially dangerous hot spots that can cause fires particularly in the presence of combustible materials. Second, uneven illumination results at the base diffuser of the tube, because the perimeter path of the light rays in combination with the focal points can cause partial and non-uniform illumination of the diffuser. The result is poor illumination performance and glare from the diffuser. Additionally, the direct light beams passing through a prism in the diffuser can cause the separation of the wavelengths and project rainbows into the interior.
Accordingly, the present invention makes the following critical observations. Direct beam sunlight reflected from a specular surface in the approximate shape of a tube can create hot spots that are unsafe and that reduce product performance due to non-uniform illumination. As further understood herein, simply reducing the specularity of the tube results in reduced light transmission. Likewise, installing a diffuser above the tube to address glare and hot spots reduces the total system performance due to the transmission loss of this extra diffuser and the increased tube reflections caused by the light spread. Moreover, attempting to remedy the above-noted shortcomings using a random patterned reflector results in the light being diffused in a hemispherical shape that may send greater than 50% of the light back up the tube, therefore once again reducing performance. With the above observations in mind, the invention herein is provided.
The interior of a skylight tube is formed with structures that change sunlight beam angles to prevent the formation of a focal point, and/or that mix the light to uniformly illuminate the base diffuser and eliminate glare and color separation, and/or that control light direction to prevent retro-reflection and excessive reflections.
Accordingly, in a first aspect a skylight assembly has a transparent dome and a skylight shaft substrate extending away from the dome to convey light entering the dome through the shaft substrate. Surface irregularities are formed on the shaft substrate. The surface irregularities can be dimples or longitudinal corrugations.
In some implementations the shaft substrate is metal and is polished to provide a reflective surface without any reflective film incorporated into the assembly. In other implementations the shaft substrate is metal and a reflective metal is deposited as by vapor deposition directly on the inside surface of the shaft substrate to render the assembly internally reflective without incorporating an adhesive into the assembly. In yet other implementations the shaft substrate may be a reflective film with a metallic substance being vapor-deposited onto the film or with a reflective multi-layer polymer composite being adhered to the substrate.
When the surface irregularities are longitudinal corrugations, each corrugation defines a midline and opposed edges, and a first angle is formed between transverse tangents to edges of first corrugations. Also, a second angle different from the first angle is formed between transverse tangents to edges of second corrugations. The first and second corrugations alternate around the circumference of the shaft substrate, and may be V-shaped or U-shaped in transverse cross-section.
When the surface irregularities are plural dimples, each dimple defines a center and a periphery. A tangent to the periphery establishes an angle with respect to a tangent to the center of no more than two degrees.
In another aspect, a skylight assembly includes a transparent dome and a skylight shaft substrate extending away from the dome to convey light entering the dome through the shaft substrate. Surface irregularities are formed on the shaft substrate. In this aspect, the shaft substrate is metal, and a reflective metal is deposited directly on the inside surface of the shaft substrate to render the assembly internally reflective without incorporating an adhesive into the assembly.
In yet another aspect, a skylight assembly includes a transparent dome and a skylight shaft substrate extending away from the dome to convey light entering the dome through the shaft substrate. Surface irregularities are formed on the shaft substrate. In this aspect, the shaft substrate is metal and is polished to provide a reflective surface without any reflective film incorporated into the assembly.
In still another aspect, a skylight assembly includes a transparent dome and a skylight shaft substrate extending away from the dome to convey light entering the dome through the shaft substrate. Surface irregularities are formed on the shaft substrate. In this aspect, the shaft substrate is a reflective film with a metallic substance being vapor-deposited onto the film.
In another aspect, a skylight assembly includes a transparent dome and a skylight shaft substrate extending away from the dome to convey light entering the dome through the shaft substrate. Surface irregularities are formed on the shaft substrate. In this aspect, the shaft substrate is a reflective film including a reflective multi-layer polymer composite.
The details of the present invention, both as to its structure and operation, can best be understood in reference to the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals refer to like parts, and in which:
Referring initially to
As shown in
The cover 21 can be mounted to the roof 18 by means of a ring-like metal flashing 22 that is attached to the roof 18 by means well-known in the art. The metal flashing 22 can be angled as appropriate for the cant of the roof 18 to engage and hold the cover 21 in the generally vertically upright orientation shown.
As further shown in
The shaft assembly 24 extends to the ceiling 14 of the interior room 12. Per the present invention, the shaft assembly 24 directs light that enters the shaft assembly 24 downwardly to a light diffuser assembly, generally designated 26, that is disposed in the room 12 and that is mounted to the ceiling 14 or to a joist 20 as described in the above-mentioned '593 patent.
The shaft assembly 24 can be made of a metal such as an alloy of aluminum or steel, or the shaft assembly 24 can be made of plastic or other appropriate material. The interior of the shaft assembly 24 may be rendered reflective by means of, e.g., electroplating, anodizing, metalized plastic film coating, or other suitable means. In one preferred embodiment, the shaft assembly 24 is rendered internally reflective by laminating the inside surface of the shaft assembly with a multi-ply polymeric film made by Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing (3M). A single ply of such film is transparent, but when hundreds of layers are positioned flush together and then thermally laminated to the interior surface of the shaft assembly 24, the combination is specularly reflective.
Thus, in non-limiting implementations the shaft may be made of a composite of a metal substrate, e.g., aluminum or steel, with a reflective film adhered to the shaft using an adhesive. The shaft substrate can also be made of a polymer with the reflective film bonded to it.
Alternatively, if the shaft is metal, the shaft substrate can be polished to provide a reflective surface or have a highly reflective metal such as silver or aluminum vapor deposited directly to its surface without the need for a separate adhesive.
In yet other implementations a reflective film itself may be used as a shaft substrate. In such an implementation, metal is vapor-deposited onto the film surface. Or, the film can include a reflective multi-layer polymer composite.
In one preferred embodiment, the shaft assembly 24 is established by a single tube. However, as shown in
In any case, the present shaft assembly 24 is formed with surface irregularities on part or all of its inner surface for reflecting light in a way that minimizes the chance of hot spots while nonetheless maximizing light throughput. The surface irregularities may be those described in the present assignee's U.S. patent publication no. 2003/0061775, incorporated herein by reference, or the corrugations or dimples disclosed herein.
More specifically,
In general, each corrugation can vary in its included angle from less than one hundred eighty degrees to greater than one degree, and preferably the included angle is greater than one hundred twenty degrees to minimize reflections. Also, the angle can vary around the shaft to provide a greater amount of mixing of the light before it reaches the base diffuser, as will be made clearer momentarily in reference to
In addition to the controlled light spreading features, the corrugations 42 also allow easier bending of the substrate, when metal, to form a cylindrical shaft from a sheet, and to increase the lateral strength of the shaft 40 due to the increased moment of inertia this geometry provides. These two features allow easier assembly of small diameter tubing and the use of reduced caliper metal due to the increased strength.
With greater attention to preferred non-limiting details in
In any case,
Alternatively to corrugations,
A dimple 62 may have any suitable shape, e.g., one of the myriad of shapes of golf ball dimples, e.g., spherical, elliptical, parabolic, hyperbolic, etc. In the illustrative non-limiting embodiment shown best in
Accordingly, in the non-limiting implementation shown, each dimple 62 defines a center 64 and a preferably circular periphery 66. A tangent 68 to the periphery 66 establishes an angle β with respect to a tangent 70 to the center 64 of no more than two degrees (to give greater resolution for seeing the angle β in
In non-limiting embodiments the corrugations and/or dimples described above can be formed in any appropriate way. In one non-limiting example the metal shaft, or the reflective film, or the adhesive can be formed or patterned with an embossing roller. In another example the metal shaft, film, or adhesive can be extruded or coated with the required profile in the extrusion or coating die. Yet again, the metal shaft, film, or adhesive can be molded with the required pattern in a mold tool.
While the particular SKYLIGHT TUBE WITH REFLECTIVE STRUCTURED SURFACE is herein shown and described in detail, the invention is to be limited by nothing except the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 11438178 | May 2006 | US |
Child | 13049555 | US |