The present invention relates generally to a microdisplay system using a liquid crystal on silicon (LCOS) imager, and more particularly to a microdisplay system using two sequential LCOS imagers to provide a faster system.
In microdisplay systems, the brightness is determined by the type of system, and by the lamp wattage. Once the fundamental imager technology is determined, one usually only has the lamp wattage as a variable, but the higher the lamp wattage, the shorter the lamp lifetime. This problem is generally solved by increasing the lamp wattage (at the expense of lifetime) or by small incremental improvements to light engine architecture, or component performance. (e.g., improving mirror reflectivity, etc.)
The ability to enhance contrast in an LCOS microdisplay greatly depends upon how efficiently the polarization components can handle light coming from angles far from the “optimum” angle. In order to provide adequate contrast for a viewable image in existing LCOS microdisplay systems, the cone angle, and therefore the speed, of the projection system is limited (i.e., the f-number is high). The f-numbers for existing LCOS projection systems are determined by the largest cone angle that can be handled with acceptable contrast. In the current, state-of-the-art, this is somewhere around f/2.8. A slower system, however, significantly limits the brightness that can be achieved. For example, a system with f/2.8 projects about one-half as much light as a system with f/2.0.
This invention uses an imager-to-imager relay architecture to provide greatly enhanced contrast. A portion of the increased contrast is traded off to leave sufficient contrast, but with greatly increase total brightness. In an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, a light projection system having two sequential imagers is provided for projecting an image comprising a matrix of light pixels having modulated luminance, at a speed of about f/2.0. The first imager is configured to modulate a light band on a pixel-by-pixel basis proportional to gray scale values provided for each pixel of the image to produce a first output matrix. A second imager is positioned and configured to receive the first output matrix of modulated pixels of light and modulate the individual modulated pixels of light from the first imager on a pixel-by-pixel basis proportional to a second gray scale value provided for each pixel of the image to produce a second output matrix. A relay lens system projects the first output matrix from the first imager onto the second imager. A projection lens system projects the second output matrix onto a screen.
Various imager-to-imager relay systems have been proposed to improve contrast and decrease contouring. This invention assumes that more than sufficient contrast has been achieved, and trades some of this contrast for significant brightness improvement.
The present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which:
The inventors have determined that the most efficient way of improving brightness for a light engine system is to decrease the f-number (make the optical system faster). In existing Liquid Crystal on Silicon (LCOS) projection systems, the speed of the projection system is limited by the need for high contrast. The ability to provide adequate contrast is strongly a function of how efficiently the polarization components can handle light coming from angles far from the “optimum” angle. Thus, the f-number was determined by the largest cone angle that could be handled with respectable contrast.
In the present invention an imager-to-imager relay architecture provides contrast that is orders of magnitude higher than existing single LCOS architectures, and that therefore, a portion of this increased contrast can be sacrificed to provide a faster system, and thereby increase brightness.
The present invention provides a projection system, such as for a television display, with enhanced contrast ratio and reduced contouring. In an exemplary LCOS system, illustrated in
Alternatively, the white light 1 may be separated into RGB bands of light 2 in the time domain, for example, by a color wheel (not shown), and thus directed one-at-a-time into a single LCOS projection system 30.
An exemplary LCOS projection system 30 is illustrated in
In the exemplary embodiment, illustrated in
The first light matrix 5 of s-polarized light is reflected by the PBS 71 through a relay lens system 80, which provides 1-to-1 transmission of the first light matrix 5. In an exemplary embodiment, illustrated in
As shown in
After the first light matrix 5 leaves the relay lens system 80, it enters into a second PBS 72 through a first surface 72a. Second PBS 72 has a polarizing surface 72p that reflects the s-polarity first light matrix 5 through a second surface 72b onto a second imager 60. In the exemplary embodiment, illustrated in
The second imager 60 then produces an output matrix 6 of p-polarity light. Each pixel of light in the output matrix 6 is modulated in intensity by a gray scale value provided to the imager for that pixel of the second imager 60. Thus a specific pixel of the output matrix 6 (i,j) would have an intensity proportional to both the gray scale value for its corresponding pixel (i,j), in the first imager and its corresponding pixel (i,j)2 in the second imager 60.
The light output L of a particular pixel (i,j) is given by the product of the light incident on the given pixel of first imager 50, the gray scale value selected for the given pixel at first imager 50, and the gray scale value selected at second imager 60:
L=L0×G1×G2
L0 is a constant for a given pixel (being a function of the lamp 10, and the illumination system.) Thus, the light output L is actually determined primarily by the gray scale values selected for this pixel on each imager 50, 60. For example, normalizing the gray scales to 1 maximum and assuming each imager has a very modest contrast ratio of 200:1, then the bright state of a pixel (i,j) is 1, and the dark state of pixel (i,j) is 1/200 (not zero, because of leakage). Thus, the two stage projector architecture has a luminance range of 40,000:1.
Lmax=1×1=1;
Lmin=0.005×0.005=0.000025
The luminance range defined by these limits gives a contrast ratio of 1/0.000025:1, or 40,000:1. Importantly, the dark state luminance for the exemplary two-stage projector architecture would be only a forty-thousandth of the luminance of the bright state, rather than one two-hundredth of the bright state if the hypothetical imager were used in an existing single imager architecture. As will be understood by those skilled in the art, an imager with a lower contrast ratio can be provided for a considerably lower cost than an imager with a higher contrast ratio. Thus, a two-stage projection system using two imagers with a contrast ratio of 200:1 will provide a contrast ratio of 40,000:1, while a single-stage projection system using a much more expensive imager with a 500:1 ratio will only provide a 500:1 contrast. Also, a two-stage projection system with one imager having a 500:1 contrast ratio and an inexpensive imager with a 200:1 ratio will have a system contrast ratio of 100,000:1. Accordingly, a cost/performance trade-off can be performed to create an optimum projection system.
Output matrix 6 enters the second PBS 72 through second surface 72b, and since it comprises p-polarity light, it passes through polarizing surface 72p and out of the second PBS 72 through third surface 72c. After output matrix 6 leaves the second PBS 72, it enters the projection lens system 40, which projects a display image 7 onto a screen (not shown) for viewing.
The projection lens system 40 comprises, sequentially, an first acrylic aspheric lens 41 having first surface 41a and second surface 41b, a first acromat 42 having first surface 42a second surface 42b and third surface 42c, a second acromat 46 having first surface 46a second surface 46b and third surface 46c, a system stop 43, a third acromat 44 having first surface 44a second surface 44b and third surface 44c, and a second acrylic aspheric lens 45 having first surface 45a and second surface 45b. The surface data for an exemplary projection lens system is provided in Table 3, and asymmetric coefficients for surfaces 41a, 41b, 46a, 46b, 46c, 42a, 42b, 42c, 44a, 44b, 44c, 45a and 45b are provided in Table 4.
By trading off some of the increased contrast provided by the two-stage imager architecture, the exemplary relay lens system 80 and projection lens system 40 can operate at a speed of f/2.0 with an ensquared energy of greater than 60 percent at a half-width of 9 microns. That is to say, greater than 60 percent of the energy from a single pixel is projected into a square having a half-width of 9 microns. Because each pixel of the projected image is modulated by both the first and second imagers, the projection system can provide a contrast greater than the contrast of an individual imager while providing a speed of at least f/2.0, thereby greatly enhancing brightness of the projected image.
The foregoing illustrates some of the possibilities for practicing the invention. Many other embodiments are possible within the scope and spirit of the invention. It is, therefore, intended that the foregoing description be regarded as illustrative rather than limiting, and that the scope of the invention is given by the appended claims together with their full range of equivalents.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US04/09100 | 3/26/2004 | WO | 9/25/2006 |