The present invention generally relates to the field of vehicle headlamps, in particular motor vehicle headlamps, and in particular the field of front headlamps comprising two light sources, one generating a high beam and the other a low beam.
Vehicle headlamps or headlights generally comprise adjustment means arranged to ensure adjustment of the azimuth and elevation of the optical module. The elevation corresponds to the attitude or the inclination in the vertical plane of the optical module. Such adjustment means are described for example in Patent Application Pub. Nos. FR3032513A and FR3026688A, which in particular refer to headlamps without glass. In such a headlamp, the front face of the optical module is delimited by an outer lens, which has the advantage of reducing the absorption of part of the light (up to 10%) by the material making up the glass.
The adjustment of the elevation of the projection beam may depend for example on the load transported at the rear of the vehicle, a load which causes the front of the vehicle to lift and which typically must be compensated by such an adjustment. More sophisticated systems also allow dynamic adjustment when driving the vehicle so that the beam is never dazzling for oncoming road users. These systems are generally configured to keep an inclination of the beam constant in the vertical plane with respect to a reference horizontal line. Patent Application Pub. No. FR3015003A describes a motor vehicle headlamp devoid of glass and comprising two lighting modules equipped with elevation adjustment.
Patent Application Pub. No. FR2745061A describes a motor vehicle headlamp allowing generation of two light beams in a simple and economical way, one for a low-beam function and the other for a high-beam function, from a single source and from a mirror.
More recently, there are also matrix light beams, comprising a matrix of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) arranged on a flat support, such as a printed circuit, for example. These LEDs may be distributed in vertical bands (sometimes called a “matrix beam”) where each band operates independently of the other bands. As a variant, these LEDs may be divided into pixels (“pixel light”), where each LED may be switched on or off independently.
These matrix lights are referred to as adaptive lights, known by the acronym ADB for “Adaptive Driving Beam,” because they allow optimized lighting of the road without dazzling the oncoming vehicle or user. Indeed, in these types of lighting intended mainly for the high beam, lighting regions independent of one another have been created within the same beam, so as to be able to activate or switch off these regions as required. The management of the activation of the LEDs, associated with these lighting sectors or regions, may typically be controlled by an electronic unit coupled to a means of detecting the location of a target not to be dazzled within the high beam. Such detection means may be an infrared camera, for example.
An ADB-type (“matrix” or “pixel”) lighting module makes the mechanical movements necessary for on-site adjustment technically complex. For this reason, headlamps fitted with an ABD module, for the high beam, and a standard module, for the low beam, only offer elevation adjustments on the standard module associated with the low beam. The ABD module therefore remains a fixed module, that is to say, immobile.
The main drawback of these headlamps lies in the fact that if only one of the two modules is adjustable in elevation, a shadow region located between the high and low beams may sometimes occur and become bothersome for the driver.
Consequently, there is an interest in finding an efficient and more adequate solution that, while remaining economical, makes it possible at least in part to resolve the aforementioned drawback.
For this purpose, a headlamp for a vehicle is disclosed which is configured to generate a lighting region in front of the In a first aspect, the headlamp comprises:
The vehicle headlamp further comprises a dioptric prism configured to remove at least one shadow region that may occur, in said lighting region, between the high beam and the low beam.
Advantageously, the headlamp allows improvement to the comfort and safety of the driver of the vehicle when driving at night while offering a simple and economical solution to headlamps equipped with a two-beam architecture, one of which constitutes a matrix-array light source. In fact, the shadow region or at least a part thereof that may occur between the high and low beams, in particular when the low beam is corrected in elevation, may be eliminated using a simple compensating optical means, while keeping the ADB module fixed.
In one embodiment, the dioptric prism is movably mounted, in front of the first light source, between:
Preferably, the dioptric prism comprises an angle, defined by said incident face and said flat diopter, configured to induce a vertical deviation of said incident rays of between 1 and 4 degrees.
In one embodiment, the rest position is a retracted position of the dioptric prism with respect to the incident rays.
According to one embodiment, the dioptric prism is rotatably mounted about an axis of rotation located outside said incident rays.
According to another embodiment, the dioptric prism is mounted to move in translation along a translation axis.
Preferably, the first light source comprises a plurality of light-emitting diodes arranged in a matrix fashion on a flat support and in that the incident face of the dioptric prism is parallel to said flat support.
In one embodiment, a primary optic, comprised of a matrix of converging lenses, is arranged in front of said flat support and the incident face of the prism is located in a focal plane of said converging lenses.
In a preferred embodiment, the dioptric prism constitutes a deflecting member that may be activated and/or deactivated by a control signal from a control member configured to prevent or detect said shadow region.
In a second aspect, a vehicle, in particular a motor vehicle, comprises a headlamp according to one of the embodiments of this headlamp or according to any possible combination of these embodiments.
is an illustration of another embodiment of the first light source according to a representation similar to that of
An orthonormal reference formed by a horizontal axis H and a vertical axis V is illustrated superimposed on the lighting region 3. The lighting of the first source 10 is of the matrix array type and is formed by a plurality of vertical lighting strips 10′ aligned adjacently one beside the other. Each vertical lighting strip 10′ may typically be obtained from a column of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) constituting a portion of the first source 10. The advantage of this type of lighting lies in the fact that each vertical lighting strip 10′ may be switched on or off independently.
By coupling the first light source 10 to a matrix-array lighting management member 60 (
While the matrix-array first light source 10 is typically used as a high beam, the second, more modest light source is generally dedicated to the low beam. This second source 20 is usually not of the matrix array type, but is more conventionally made up of a bulb, for example a halogen or xenon bulb.
To improve the driver's night vision and avoid dazzling oncoming road users, an additional measure is applied to the headlamps of recent vehicles. This measure consists in dynamically correcting the elevation lighting of the second source 20 dedicated to low-beam headlights. For information, such an adjustment consists in varying the average angle of projection of the low-beam light beam in the vertical plane, so as to correct the height of the partial lighting region 32 with respect to a reference horizontal line or axis H. The correction takes place dynamically, i.e. at all times while the vehicle is in motion. Typically, the upper radius of the high beam will usually be set so that it is at an inclination of 0.57° below the reference horizontal line H. This inclination corresponds to an angle having a slope of 1% pointing downward from the source.
It should be noted that due to the complexity of the optical module necessary for the matrix-array first light source 10, this lighting is preferably made fixed or immobile. Consequently, the first source 10 generating the high beam must be considered as not being able to be inclined in elevation, unlike the second source 20 generating the low beam.
As shown very schematically in
The headlamp 1 comprises:
The headlamp 1 further comprises a dioptric prism 40 configured to remove at least one shadow region 5 that may occur in said lighting region 3 between the high beam 11 and the low beam 12.
It will be noted that the movable second light source 20 is in no way limited to being able to provide a correction in elevation, namely a correction in the vertical plane, but could also be configured to be able to provide a correction in azimuth, namely a correction in the horizontal plane. The elevation and/or azimuth correction is therefore also a dynamic correction, that is to say, a correction that is carried out, preferably continuously, when the vehicle is in motion. Thus, such a correction will not be confused with an occasional adjustment of the optics conferred by a system for occasional adjustment of said optics. Such an adjustment may, for example, be aimed at compensating the attitude of the vehicle in a single or occasional manner due to the load it is carrying, or may consist of a manual adjustment of the optics by means of adjustment screws generally manipulated by a mechanic, during technical inspections of the vehicle, for example. Finally, the vertical inclination (namely in elevation) of the low beam 12 with respect to the reference horizontal line V is preferably not zero, as schematically illustrated in
Owing to the dioptric prism comprised by the headlamp 1, the shadow region(s) 5 illustrated in
The dioptric nature of the prism 40 gives it the ability to be able to refract light and, therefore, to be able to deflect the high beam 11 from a certain vertical inclination directed downward, as schematically illustrated in
According to a preferred embodiment of the headlamp illustrated by
Additionally, and as best illustrated in
It will be understood that the incident rays 11′ are more precisely rays located at the source of the high beam 11.
Preferably, the incident face 41 is perpendicular to the optical axis X of the matrix-array first light source 10. In other words, the incident rays 11′ form an incident beam that is preferably perpendicular to the incident face 41 of the dioptric prism. The flat diopter 42 constitutes a surface separating the transparent media, i.e., the air and the prism material. These media are considered to be homogeneous and isotropic.
As shown in
In one embodiment, the rest position R is a retracted position of the dioptric prism 40 with respect to the incident rays 11′.
Independent of the way in which the prism 40 is made movable, this mobility may easily be obtained from a simple mechanism using, for example, an actuator such as a stepper motor, a DC motor, a solenoid or a piezoelectric device.
As illustrated in
Preferably again, the primary optic 17 is comprised of a matrix of converging lenses 17′. In a preferred embodiment, this primary optic is arranged in front of the flat support 14 and the incident face 41 of the prism 40 is located in a focal plane F of the converging lenses 17′. Preferably again, these converging lenses are all identical and therefore all have identical focal lengths. Therefore, the matrix of converging lenses 17′ of the primary optic 17 is preferably arranged in coincidence with the matrix of LEDs so that each LED is associated with a converging lens of the primary optic. Preferably again, the focal plane F of the primary optic 17 also comprises the focal point of the secondary optic 18 (projection lens).
As shown in
In one embodiment, the control member 50 could be a control member for the angle of inclination (elevation) of the correcting mechanism 30 and could be configured to generate and transmit, to the deflecting member (prism 40), the control signal 51 when the angle of inclination (in the vertical plane) reaches a threshold value. This threshold value could be a predefined value corresponding for example to an angle having a slope (oriented downward) of 2% or less than this value. The above-mentioned angle of inclination typically corresponds to the attitude of the vehicle 2 and could be determined by the correcting mechanism 30 and/or come from the latter.
The control signal 51 could be a binary signal or a more complex signal conveying at least one complementary piece of information or data.
In one embodiment, the control signal 51 comprises:
As a variant, the control signal could consist of a single activation or deactivation signal in the case where the default position of the deflecting member is the rest position R or the working position T, respectively.
In one embodiment, the control member 50 is a member for detecting the shadow region 5. Such a member could be a camera or another member of the electro-optical type in particular.
In another embodiment, the control signal 51 is configured to be subordinated to a management member 60 of the matrix-array light of the first source 10. By this means, it could be possible to deactivate the deflecting member (prism 40) in the presence of a target located or detected in the lighting region 3, between the high beam 11 and the low beam 12. Such a target could be an oncoming pedestrian or vehicle that should not be dazzled so as not to hinder its movement. The management member 60 could be the same unit as that dedicated to managing the LEDs of the matrix-array first light source. Such a management member 60 could therefore include a microcomputer or at least one processor provided with firmware.
In a second aspect, a vehicle 2, in particular a motor vehicle, comprises a headlamp 1 according to one of the embodiments of this headlamp or according to any possible combination of these embodiments.
Additional features of the headlamp relate, in a first aspect, to a vehicle headlamp, configured to generate a lighting region in front of the vehicle and comprising:
Here, the vehicle headlamp further comprises a dioptric lens, having at least one flat incident face, configured to remove at least one shadow region that may occur, in said lighting region, between the high beam and the low beam.
Advantageously, the headlamp according to the first aspect of the additional features allows improvement to the comfort and safety of the driver of the vehicle when driving at night while offering a simple and economical solution to headlamps equipped with a two-beam architecture, one of which constitutes a matrix-array light source. In fact, the shadow region or at least part of the latter that may occur between the high and low beams, in particular when the latter is corrected in elevation, may be eliminated using a simple compensating optical means, while keeping the ADB module fixed.
In one embodiment of the first aspect of the additional features, the dioptric prism is movably mounted, in front of the first light source, for movement between:
In an embodiment of the first aspect of the additional features, the dioptric lens is mounted movably along a translation axis, and said emerging face constitutes an at least partially curved diopter, having a variable deflection power of the refracted beam that depends on the position of the dioptric lens on said translation axis.
In an embodiment of the first aspect of the additional features, said diopter also comprises a portion parallel to the incident face of the dioptric lens, and said parallel portion comprises the rest position of the dioptric lens.
Preferably, the first light source comprised of a plurality of light-emitting diodes arranged in a matrix fashion on a flat support and in that the incident face of the dioptric lens is parallel to said flat support.
In one embodiment of the first aspect of the additional features, a primary optic, comprised of a matrix of converging lenses, is arranged in front of said flat support and in that the flat incident face of the dioptric lens is located in a focal plane of said converging lenses.
In a preferred embodiment of the first aspect of the additional features, the dioptric lens constitutes a deflecting member that may be activated and/or deactivated by a control signal from a control member configured to prevent or detect said shadow region.
Preferably, the control member is a control member of an angle of inclination of the correcting mechanism and this member is configured to generate said control signal and transmit it to the deflecting member when said angle of inclination reaches a threshold value.
In another embodiment of the first aspect of the additional features, said control signal is configured to be subordinated to a matrix-array light management member of the first source, in order to be able to deactivate the deflecting member in the presence of a target located, in the lighting region, between the high beam and the low beam.
A second aspect of the additional features also relates to a vehicle, in particular a motor vehicle, comprising a headlamp according to one of the embodiments of this headlamp or according to any possible combination of these embodiments.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1910235 | Sep 2019 | FR | national |
1910236 | Sep 2019 | FR | national |
This application is the US National Stage under 35 USC § 371 of International Application No. PCT/FR2020/051516, filed 31 Aug. 2021 which claims priority to French Application Nos. 1910235 and 1910236, both of which were filed on17 Sep. 2019 and all of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2020/051516 | 8/13/2020 | WO |