Electrical rotary joints, or electrical slip rings, are electromechanical devices that consist of rotational (rotors) and stationary (stators) members. They allow the transmission of electrical signals and power from their rotors to stators or vise verse.
A conventional electrical slip ring consists of conductive rings mounted on a rotor and insulated from it. Fixed brushes run in contact with the rings, rubbing against the peripheral surfaces of the rings, transferring electrical power to the stator. The sliding contact between the rings and brushes during this continuous rotation of the rotor causes the wear on the slip rings and generate heat, even noise in the system.
There are also so called brushless slip rings that use inductive coils to create a magnetic field in one end of the slip ring then uses a matching inductive coil to turn that magnetic field back into an electric signal or power. However, these devices are relatively heavy due to the large amount of metal required for the inductive coils.
Often times an electrical slip ring is paired with a fiber optic rotary joint created a hybrid rotary joint, where a data and/or video signal is sent through the fiber optic rotary joint and the power is sent through the electrical slip ring. These hybrid units are often an assembly composed of a fiber optic rotary joint and an electrical slip ring manufactured separately then mounted together either in a single larger enclosure or with one nested within the other. Either way the net result is an oversized device that weighs much more then it needed.
However, continued advances in wireless power transmission are making laser power beaming an increasingly efficient way of transmitting power. This method of power transmission uses high intensity lasers to generate a light beam which is then focused on photovoltaic cells which converts that light beam into electrical power in much the same way that a solar panel converts the sunlight into electrical power. Using this method of power transmission the power can be transmitted through the fiber optic rotary joint with the data/video signals, thereby eliminating the need for the electrical slip ring and greatly reducing both the total size and weight of the device needed to transmit both the data signal and the power.
FIG. 1—A representative depiction of the basic optical components of a multichannel rotary joint
FIG. 2—A representative depiction of the optical and electro-optical components contained within one possible embodiment of the invention described herein
FIG. 3—A representative description of a second possible embodiment of the invention described herein
FIG. 4—A representative description of a third possible embodiment of the invention described herein
FIG. 5—A representative description of a fourth possible embodiment of the invention described herein
FIG. 6—A representative description of a fifth possible embodiment of the invention described herein
A typical multi-channel fiber optic rotary joint consist of three basic parts: a stator side collimator array, a rotor side collimator array and a de-rotating mechanism. As shown in
By replacing one of the stator side collimators (111, 112 or 113) in
Both of the configurations illustrated in
The configuration in
Another possible configuration that would maximize weight, space and cost savings is to multiplex the data signals with the laser power beam. In this configuration, shown in
A fourth possible configuration, as shown in
A fifth possible configuration, as shown in
It should be noted that in all of the aforementioned configurations the photovoltaic cells and/or the laser power beaming sources may be replaced by an array or photovoltaic cells and/or array of laser power beaming sources without significantly changing any aspect of the overall device and/or process reference herein.
This application claims benefit to provisional application No. 61/684,361, filed on Aug. 17, 2012, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.