U.S. patent application number 17/404045 was filed with the patent office on 2022-03-03 for planar remote phosphor illumination apparatus.
The applicant listed for this patent is Pierre Avner BADEHI, Dafna BORTMAN-ARBIV, Tania KOSOBURD, Yigal MALYANKER, Inna MISHUSTIN, Gadi SEGAL, Yosi SHANI. Invention is credited to Pierre Avner BADEHI, Dafna BORTMAN-ARBIV, Tania KOSOBURD, Yigal MALYANKER, Inna MISHUSTIN, Gadi SEGAL, Yosi SHANI.
Application Number | 20220066084 17/404045 |
Document ID | / |
Family ID | |
Filed Date | 2022-03-03 |
United States Patent
Application |
20220066084 |
Kind Code |
A1 |
SHANI; Yosi ; et
al. |
March 3, 2022 |
PLANAR REMOTE PHOSPHOR ILLUMINATION APPARATUS
Abstract
In various embodiments, an illumination apparatus features
spatially separated input and output regions, a light source, a
phosphor for light conversion, and an out-coupling structure.
Inventors: |
SHANI; Yosi; (Maccabim,
IL) ; KOSOBURD; Tania; (Lod, IL) ; BADEHI;
Pierre Avner; (Nataf, IL) ; BORTMAN-ARBIV; Dafna;
(Zichron Yaacov, IL) ; SEGAL; Gadi; (Kiryat Ono,
IL) ; MISHUSTIN; Inna; (Beit Shemesh, IL) ;
MALYANKER; Yigal; (Beit Arieh, IL) |
|
Applicant: |
Name |
City |
State |
Country |
Type |
SHANI; Yosi
KOSOBURD; Tania
BADEHI; Pierre Avner
BORTMAN-ARBIV; Dafna
SEGAL; Gadi
MISHUSTIN; Inna
MALYANKER; Yigal |
Maccabim
Lod
Nataf
Zichron Yaacov
Kiryat Ono
Beit Shemesh
Beit Arieh |
|
IL
IL
IL
IL
IL
IL
IL |
|
|
Appl. No.: |
17/404045 |
Filed: |
August 17, 2021 |
Related U.S. Patent Documents
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Application
Number |
Filing Date |
Patent Number |
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16508386 |
Jul 11, 2019 |
11125926 |
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17404045 |
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15825370 |
Nov 29, 2017 |
10379279 |
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16508386 |
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14409195 |
Dec 18, 2014 |
9857519 |
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PCT/IB2013/001651 |
Jun 28, 2013 |
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15825370 |
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61667432 |
Jul 3, 2012 |
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61684762 |
Aug 19, 2012 |
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International
Class: |
F21V 8/00 20060101
F21V008/00; F21V 9/30 20180101 F21V009/30; G02F 1/1335 20060101
G02F001/1335; F21V 9/32 20180101 F21V009/32 |
Claims
1.-42. (canceled)
43. An illumination apparatus comprising: a waveguide having (i)
top and bottom opposed surfaces, (ii) a side surface spanning the
top and bottom surfaces, (iii) an input region for receiving light,
and (iv) spatially separated from the input region, an output
region for emitting light, the output region having an output
surface comprising at least a portion of the top surface of the
waveguide; at least partially embedded within the bottom surface of
the waveguide in the input region proximate the side surface, a
light source for emitting light into the input region; disposed on
at least one of the top surface or the side surface of the
waveguide in the input region, a layer of phosphor material for
converting a portion of light emitted from the light source to a
different wavelength; and an out-coupling structure, disposed in
the output region, for causing light to be emitted from the output
surface.
44. The apparatus of claim 43, wherein the output surface comprises
only a portion of the top surface of the waveguide.
45. The apparatus of claim 43, wherein the side surface of the
waveguide is perpendicular to the top surface of the waveguide.
46. The apparatus of claim 43, wherein the waveguide comprises
silicone.
47. The apparatus of claim 43, wherein the out-coupling structure
is disposed at the bottom surface of the waveguide.
48. The apparatus of claim 43, wherein the waveguide is
substantially planar.
49. The apparatus of claim 43, wherein the output surface is
substantially planar.
50. The apparatus of claim 43, wherein no phosphor material is
disposed within the output region or on the output surface.
51. The apparatus of claim 43, wherein the layer of phosphor
material is disposed on the top surface of the waveguide.
52. The apparatus of claim 51, wherein the layer of phosphor
material is also disposed on the side surface of the waveguide.
53. The apparatus of claim 43, wherein the layer of phosphor
material is disposed on the side surface of the waveguide.
54. The apparatus of claim 43, further comprising one or more
reflectors (i) disposed over a portion of the top surface of the
waveguide and/or (ii) disposed over the side surface of the
waveguide.
55. The apparatus of claim 54, wherein each reflector is disposed
over at least a portion of the layer of phosphor material.
56. The apparatus of claim 43, wherein the light source is disposed
on a substrate, a top surface of the substrate (i) facing the
waveguide and (ii) being reflective.
57. The apparatus of claim 43, wherein the light source comprises a
light-emitting diode.
58. An illumination apparatus comprising: a waveguide having (i)
top and bottom opposed surfaces, (ii) a first side surface spanning
the top and bottom surfaces, (iii) a second side surface, opposite
the first side surface, spanning the top and bottom surfaces, (iv)
a first input region for receiving light, (v) a second input region
for receiving light, and (vi) spatially separated from the first
and second input regions, an output region for emitting light, the
output region having an output surface comprising at least a
portion of the top surface of the waveguide; at least partially
embedded within the bottom surface of the waveguide in the first
input region proximate the first side surface, a first light source
for emitting light into the first input region; at least partially
embedded within the bottom surface of the waveguide in the second
input region proximate the second side surface, a second light
source for emitting light into the second input region; disposed on
at least one of the top surface or the side surface of the
waveguide in the first input region, a first layer of phosphor
material for converting a portion of light emitted from the first
light source to a different wavelength; disposed on at least one of
the top surface or the side surface of the waveguide in the second
input region, a second layer of phosphor material for converting a
portion of light emitted from the second light source to a
different wavelength; and an out-coupling structure, disposed in
the output region, for causing light to be emitted from the output
surface.
59. The apparatus of claim 58, wherein the output surface comprises
only a portion of the top surface of the waveguide.
60. The apparatus of claim 58, wherein: the first side surface of
the waveguide is perpendicular to the top surface of the waveguide;
and the second side surface of the waveguide is perpendicular to
the top surface of the waveguide.
61. The apparatus of claim 58, wherein the output surface is
substantially planar.
62. The apparatus of claim 58, further comprising one or more
reflectors (i) disposed over the first layer of phosphor material
and/or (ii) disposed over the second layer of phosphor material.
Description
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application claims priority to and the benefit of U.S.
Provisional Patent Application No. 61/667,432, filed on Jul. 3,
2012, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/684,762, filed
on Aug. 19, 2012, the entire disclosure of each of which is
incorporated by reference herein.
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0002] In various embodiments, the present invention relates to
artificial illumination, and in particular to an illumination
apparatus incorporating a remote phosphor.
BACKGROUND
[0003] Light-emitting diodes (LEDs) are gradually replacing
incandescent light bulbs in various applications, including traffic
signal lamps, large-sized full-color outdoor displays, various
lamps for automobiles, solid-state lighting devices, flat panel
displays, and the like. Conventional LEDs typically include a
light-emitting semiconductor material, also known as the bare die,
and numerous additional components designed for improving the
performance of the LED. These components may include a
light-reflecting cup mounted below the bare die, a transparent
encapsulation (typically silicone) surrounding and protecting the
bare die and the light reflecting cup, and electrical leads for
supplying the electrical current to the bare die. The bare die and
the additional components are efficiently packed in an LED
package.
[0004] The advent of blue- and ultraviolet-emitting LEDs has
enabled the widespread deployment of LED-based white light sources
for, e.g., general lighting applications and backlights for liquid
crystal displays. In many such light sources, a portion the
high-frequency light of the LED is converted to light of a
different frequency, and the converted light combines with
unconverted light to form white light. Yellow-emitting phosphors
have been advantageously combined with blue LEDs in this manner.
One popular configuration for LEDs and phosphors is the
"remote-phosphor" arrangement, in which the phosphor and the LED
are spatially separated to (1) maintain the phosphor at a lower
temperature during LED operation and thereby improves efficiency of
the phosphor and (2) reduce the amount of light that is
backscattered from the phosphor and absorbed by the LED itself
(which lowers the overall efficiency of the device).
[0005] Planar remote-phosphor LED-based devices have additional
advantages. In such devices, the phosphor is typically located at a
greater distance from the LEDs and is thus exposed to much lower
temperatures during operation, and light reflected from the
phosphor may not propagate back to the light-absorbing LED. In
addition, planar devices are very attractive due to their slim
appearance; in contrast to LEDs, which are point sources of light,
a planar device emits light from a larger area.
[0006] FIG. 1 schematically depicts a conventional planar
remote-phosphor LED lighting device 100, in which the LED 110 is
spatially separated from a phosphor layer 120 on a waveguide 130.
In some configurations, scattering elements (e.g., located at the
bottom surface of waveguide 130) disrupt the
total-internal-reflection (TIR) confinement of light within
waveguide 130 so that the light may be emitted through the phosphor
layer 120. (As used herein, TIR confinement refers to confinement
of light due to the index-of-refraction difference between the
confining waveguide and the surrounding ambient, e.g., air, rather
than via an opaque reflector.) While the distance between the LED
110 and the phosphor layer 120 improves illumination efficiency, as
described above, this configuration does have disadvantages. First,
as shown in FIG. 1, the phosphor layer is often applied to the exit
surface of the waveguide (as that is typically the farthest point
from the LED), but the exit surface is often quite large. Thus, a
large amount of phosphor material, which is typically exotic and/or
expensive, is required. For example, the planar lighting device 100
has a large exit surface that requires a significant amount of
phosphor in the coating phosphor layer 120. This results in low
utilization of the phosphor (in terms of light intensity emitted
per amount of phosphor in the coating), which may be expensive.
Second, since the particular LED/phosphor combination in the
lighting device constrains the choice of suitable phosphor
materials, the lighting device may require use of a phosphor
material that has an undesirable color when the lighting device is
in the off state (i.e., not emitting light). For example, many
conventional phosphors have yellow and/or green hues that dictate
the color of (at least a large portion of) the lighting device
itself in the off state. In many applications it may be desirable
for the lighting device to have a different (or even controllable)
appearance in the off state. Thus, there is a need for
remote-phosphor lighting devices that utilize less phosphor
material without significantly impacting performance and the
off-state color of which may be controlled and/or unconstrained by
the color of the phosphor material itself. Furthermore, such
devices preferably have a slim geometry and also minimize the
amount of light reflected back from the remote phosphor into the
LED itself, which tends to absorb such light and reduce overall
efficiency.
SUMMARY
[0007] In accordance with various embodiments of the present
invention, LED-based illumination devices incorporate remotely
situated phosphors in configurations utilizing less phosphor
material that traditional devices and that enable control over the
off-state appearance of the device. In general, preferred
embodiments of the invention have configurations in which a remote
phosphor (i.e., a phosphor spatially separated from the LED light
source, which may be one or more bare-die LEDs, and/or any lenses
or packages included therein) is located within a waveguide but not
within the output region or at the output surface thereof. Rather,
the phosphor is located within the input region of the waveguide,
which is spatially separated from the output region and receives
light from one or more LEDs, or the phosphor is located within a
discrete conversion region disposed between (and spatially separate
from) the input and output regions. Embodiments of the invention
featuring a conversion region typically include an aperture (i.e.,
one or more small openings formed within the waveguide or by the
geometry of the waveguide itself) that separates the input region
from the conversion region and that permits propagation of light
into the conversion region but that substantially prevents light
within the conversion region from reflecting back into the input
region (and reaching the LED, which may be light absorbing).
[0008] Light from the LED (e.g., blue or ultraviolet light) is
converted by the phosphor to light of a different wavelength (i.e.,
is wavelength-converted), and the converted light mixes with
additional unconverted light to form mixed light that may be, for
example, white light or light of another desired color. The
unconverted light may originate from the LED and/or from one or
more other LEDs emitting at wavelengths at which wavelength
conversion does not occur, e.g. red light. Such mixing occurs
within the input and/or conversion regions, and thus the mixed
light typically is substantially uniform in intensity and/or color
prior to propagating into the output region and being emitted
therefrom. Because the phosphor material is not disposed within the
output region or at the emitting surface of the waveguide, the
phosphor does not impact the appearance of the illumination device
when it is not illuminated.
[0009] In an aspect, embodiments of the invention feature an
illumination apparatus including or consisting essentially of a
substantially planar waveguide, a light source, a layer of phosphor
material for converting a portion of light emitted from the light
source to a different wavelength, a reflector, and an out-coupling
structure. The waveguide has (i) top and bottom opposed surfaces,
(ii) an input region for receiving light, and (iii) spatially
separated from the input region, an output region for emitting
light, the output region including or consisting essentially of at
least a portion of the top surface of the waveguide. At least a
portion of the waveguide confines light by total internal
reflection from an interface between a surface of the waveguide and
the surrounding ambient. The light source emits light into the
input region. The layer of phosphor material is disposed on a
surface of the waveguide in the input region. The reflector is
disposed on the layer of phosphor material in the input region. The
reflected converted light and reflected unconverted light combine
with unconverted light from the light source to form, within the
input region, mixed light that is substantially uniform in at least
one of intensity or color. The out-coupling structure is disposed
in the output region and disrupts total internal reflection of
substantially uniform mixed light received from the input region
such that the substantially uniform mixed light is emitted from the
output region.
[0010] Embodiments of the invention may feature one or more of the
following in any of a variety of combinations. The mixed light may
increase in uniformity within the input region along a direction
toward the output region and may be substantially uniform entering
the output region. The out-coupling structure may include or
consist essentially of a plurality of discrete optical elements
(e.g., prisms, hemispheres, scattering particles, and/or diffusive
dots). The out-coupling structure may be disposed, in the output
region, proximate the top surface of the waveguide, proximate the
bottom surface of the waveguide, and/or within the waveguide. The
light source may be partially or fully embedded within the
waveguide material. The light source may include or consist
essentially of a light-emitting diode, e.g., a bare-die
light-emitting diode (i.e., the semiconductor light-emitting die
absent packaging elements such as a heat sink or lenses) or a
packaged light-emitting diode. The light-emitting diode may be
disposed on a substrate, and a second reflector may be disposed
over the substrate. A surface of the waveguide in the input region
may have a curvature for reflecting light toward the output region.
An optical cavity may be disposed within the input region of the
waveguide. The optical cavity may include or consist essentially of
a material having an index of refraction different from an index of
refraction of the waveguide. At least a portion of a boundary of
the optical cavity may be reflective. The optical cavity may
include or consist essentially of a hollow space within the
waveguide. The waveguide may include or consist essentially of at
least two discrete parts attached together. Some of, or even each
of, the parts may define a portion of the optical cavity.
[0011] A heat sink may be thermally connected to (i.e., positioned
to conduct heat away from, even if not in direct physical contact
with) the phosphor material. A surface of the waveguide may
inwardly protrude in the input region to form a protrusion.
Reflection of light from the protrusion may promote light mixing in
the input region. The layer of phosphor material may be in optical
contact (i.e., not merely in physical contact and with no air gap
in between) with the waveguide. The waveguide may have a side
surface spanning the top and bottom surfaces. A second reflector
may be disposed over at least a portion of the top, bottom, and/or
side surface of the waveguide. The apparatus may include a second
input region (i) for receiving light, (ii) disposed within the
waveguide, and (iii) spatially separated from the input and output
regions. A second light source, different from the light source,
may emit light into the second input region. A second layer of
phosphor material for converting a portion of light emitted from
the second light source to a different wavelength may be disposed
on a surface of the waveguide in the second input region. A second
reflector for reflecting converted light back into the second input
region may be disposed on the second layer of phosphor material in
the second input region. The reflected converted light may combine
with unconverted light from the second light source to form, within
the second input region, mixed light that is substantially uniform
in at least one of intensity or color. The apparatus may include a
second output region (i) for emitting light, (ii) disposed within
the waveguide, and (iii) spatially separated from the input and
output regions. The input region may be disposed between the output
region and the second output region. A second out-coupling
structure for disrupting total internal reflection of substantially
uniform mixed light received from the input region such that the
substantially uniform mixed light is emitted from the second output
region may be disposed in the second output region.
[0012] In another aspect, embodiments of the invention feature an
illumination apparatus including or consisting essentially of a
substantially planar waveguide, a light source, an aperture, a
phosphor material, and an out-coupling structure. The waveguide has
(i) top and bottom opposed surfaces, (ii) an input region for
receiving light, (iii) spatially separated from the input region,
an output region for emitting light, the output region including or
consisting essentially of at least a portion of the top surface of
the waveguide, (iv) spatially separated from and disposed between
the input and output regions, a conversion region for receiving
light from the input region, mixing the received light with light
generated in the conversion region, and propagating the mixed light
to the output region. At least a portion of the waveguide confines
light by total internal reflection from an interface between a
surface of the waveguide and the surrounding ambient. The light
source emits light into the input region. The aperture separates
the input region from the conversion region and permits propagation
of light from the input region while substantially preventing
reflection of light within the conversion region back into the
input region. The phosphor material is disposed in the conversion
region and converts a portion of light received from the input
region to a different wavelength. The converted light mixes with
unconverted light within the conversion region to form, within the
conversion region, mixed light that is substantially uniform in at
least one of intensity or color. The out-coupling structure is
disposed in the output region and disrupts total internal
reflection of substantially uniform mixed light received from the
conversion region such that the substantially uniform mixed light
is emitted from the output region.
[0013] Embodiments of the invention may feature one or more of the
following in any of a variety of combinations. The mixed light may
increase in uniformity within the conversion region along a
direction toward the output region and may be substantially uniform
entering the output region. The out-coupling structure may include
or consist essentially of a plurality of discrete optical elements
(e.g., prisms, hemispheres, scattering particles, and/or diffusive
dots). The out-coupling structure may be disposed, in the output
region, proximate the top surface of the waveguide, proximate the
bottom surface of the waveguide, and/or within the waveguide. The
light source may be partially or fully embedded within the
waveguide material. The light source may include or consist
essentially of a light-emitting diode, e.g., a bare-die
light-emitting diode or a packaged light-emitting diode. The light
source may include an optic for focusing light toward the aperture.
The phosphor material may be disposed within the waveguide or on an
inner or outer surface of the waveguide. A reflector for reflecting
light into the waveguide may be disposed on the phosphor material.
The phosphor material may be in optical contact with the waveguide.
A heat sink may be thermally connected to the phosphor material. A
surface of the waveguide in the input region may have a curvature
for reflecting light toward the aperture.
[0014] An optical cavity may be disposed within the waveguide. At
least a portion of the aperture may be disposed between the optical
cavity and a surface of the waveguide. The optical cavity may
include or consist essentially of a material having an index of
refraction different from an index of refraction of the waveguide.
At least a portion of a boundary of the optical cavity may be
reflective. The optical cavity may include or consist essentially
of a hollow space within the waveguide. The waveguide may include
or consist essentially of at least two discrete parts attached
together. Some of, or even each of, the parts may define a portion
of the optical cavity. The aperture may be at least partially
defined by an inward protrusion of a surface of the waveguide. The
waveguide may have a side surface spanning the top and bottom
surfaces. A reflector may be disposed over at least a portion of
the top, bottom, and/or side surface of the waveguide. The
apparatus may include a second input region (i) for receiving
light, (ii) disposed within the waveguide, and (iii) spatially
separated from the input, conversion, and output regions. A second
light source, different from the light source, may emit light into
the second input region. A second conversion region, spatially
separated from the input, conversion, output, and second input
regions, may receive light from the second input region, mix the
received light with light generated in the second conversion
region, and propagate the mixed light to the output region. A
second aperture may separate the second input region from the
second conversion region, and the second aperture may substantially
prevent propagation of light from the second input region while
substantially preventing reflection of light within the second
conversion region back into the second input region. A second
phosphor material for converting a portion of light received from
the second input region to a different wavelength may be disposed
in the second conversion region. The converted light may mix with
unconverted light within the second conversion region to form,
within the second conversion region, mixed light that is
substantially uniform in at least one of intensity or color. The
apparatus may include a second output region (i) for emitting
light, (ii) disposed within the waveguide, and (iii) spatially
separated from the input, conversion, and output regions. The input
region may be disposed between the output region and the second
output region. A second conversion region for receiving light from
the input region, mixing the received light with light generated in
the second conversion region, and propagating the mixed light to
the second output region may be disposed between and spatially
separated from the input and second output regions. A second
out-coupling structure may be disposed in the second output region
and may disrupt total internal reflection of substantially uniform
mixed light received from the input region such that the
substantially uniform mixed light is emitted from the second output
region.
[0015] These and other objects, along with advantages and features
of the present invention herein disclosed, will become more
apparent through reference to the following description, the
accompanying drawings, and the claims. Furthermore, it is to be
understood that the features of the various embodiments described
herein are not mutually exclusive and may exist in various
combinations and permutations. As used herein, the term
"approximately" means+10%, and in some embodiments, .+-.5%, unless
otherwise indicated. As used herein, the term "substantially" means
at least 50%; in some embodiments, "substantially" means at least
60%, at least 80%, or even at least 90%. The term "consists
essentially of" means excluding other materials or structures that
contribute to function, unless otherwise defined herein. The term
"photoluminescent material" is commonly used herein to describe one
or a plurality of photoluminescent materials (which exhibit, for
example, chemoluminescence, fluorescence, and/or phosphorescence),
e.g., in layered or mixed form, and is utilized interchangeably
with "phosphor" and "phosphor material." Additionally, a
photoluminescent material may comprise one or more types of
photoluminescent molecules. In any event, a photoluminescent
material is characterized by an absorption spectrum (i.e., a range
of wavelengths of light which may be absorbed by the
photoluminescent molecules to effect quantum transition to a higher
energy level) and an emission spectrum (i.e., a range of
wavelengths of light which are emitted by the photoluminescent
molecules as a result of quantum transition to a lower energy
level). The emission spectrum of the photoluminescent layer is
typically wider and shifted relative to its absorption
spectrum.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0016] In the drawings, like reference characters generally refer
to the same parts throughout the different views. Also, the
drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead generally
being placed upon illustrating the principles of the invention. In
the following description, various embodiments of the present
invention are described with reference to the following drawings,
in which:
[0017] FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional schematic of a conventional
remote-phosphor LED-based illumination device;
[0018] FIGS. 2A-2C are cross-sectional schematics of illumination
devices in accordance with various embodiments of the
invention;
[0019] FIGS. 3 and 4 are cross-sectional schematics of illumination
devices in accordance with various embodiments of the
invention;
[0020] FIGS. 5-7 are cross-sectional schematics of input and
conversion regions of illumination devices in accordance with
various embodiments of the invention;
[0021] FIGS. 8, 9, and 10A are cross-sectional schematics of input
and partial output regions of illumination devices in accordance
with various embodiments of the invention;
[0022] FIG. 10B is an enlarged portion of FIG. 10A;
[0023] FIG. 11 is a cross-sectional schematic of an input and a
partial output region of an illumination device in accordance with
various embodiments of the invention;
[0024] FIG. 12 is a cross-sectional schematic of an illumination
device fabricated from multiple parts in accordance with various
embodiments of the invention;
[0025] FIGS. 13 and 14 are cross-sectional schematics of input
regions of illumination devices in accordance with various
embodiments of the invention;
[0026] FIGS. 15A and 15B are cross-sectional schematics of
illumination devices in accordance with various embodiments of the
invention; and
[0027] FIG. 16 is a cross-sectional schematic of an illumination
device in accordance with various embodiments of the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0028] FIGS. 2A-2C schematically depict aspects of illumination
devices in accordance with various embodiments of the present
invention. FIG. 2A illustrates an illumination device 200 that
features an input region 205, a conversion region 210, and an
output region 215 within a waveguide 220. As shown, the input
region 205, conversion region 210, and output region 215 are
spatially separate and discrete from each other. Light from an LED
225 (which may include or consist essentially of one or more
bare-die LEDs and/or packaged LEDs; references herein to a singular
LED may refer to multiple LEDs unless otherwise indicated) is
in-coupled into waveguide 220 within input region 205. The LED 225
may be at least partially (or even fully) embedded within (i.e.,
surrounded by) the input region 205, and the LED 225 may be located
at a side facet (or "face" or "surface," which are herein utilized
interchangeably with "facet") of waveguide 220 (as shown in FIG.
2A) and/or at the bottom facet of waveguide 220 (as shown in FIG.
2B), and/or at a different location within the input region 205.
The light from LED 225 is confined within the input region 205 via
TIR and/or reflection from one or more reflectors 230, which may be
reflectors or reflective coatings on the waveguide surfaces, and
propagates to the conversion region 210 through an aperture 235. As
shown, the aperture 235 may be defined by a physical structure
(e.g., a reflector or other structure formed from a material
different from the waveguide material) disposed within the
waveguide 220, or the aperture 235 may be defined by the geometry
of the waveguide 220 itself (as discussed below). The waveguide 220
may include or consist essentially of, for example, one or more
polymeric materials, e.g., silicone, latex, polyvinylchloride,
nitrile, chloroprene (Neoprene), poly(cis-isoprene),
poly(2,3-dimethylbutadiene), poly(dimethylsiloxane), ethylene/vinyl
acetate copolymer-40% vinyl acetate, ethylene/vinyl acetate
copolymer-30% vinyl acetate, poly(butadiene-co-acrylonitrile),
natural rubber, poly(chloroprene), polymethylmethacrylate, and/or
polycarbonate.
[0029] Within the conversion region 210, a phosphor 240
wavelength-converts some of the light from LED 225, and the
converted light mixes with additional unconverted light to form,
e.g., white light. The phosphor 240 may be disposed within the
conversion region 210 (as shown in FIG. 2A) or on an inner and/or
outer surface of the waveguide 220 in the conversion region 210 (as
shown in FIG. 2B). Light within the conversion region 210 is
confined via TIR and/or reflection from one or more reflectors 242
and propagates to the output region 215. Although some light in the
conversion region 210 may be back-reflected through the aperture
235 into the input region 205, most light (or even substantially
all of the light) in the conversion region 210 will propagate to
the output region 215 due to the small size of the aperture 235.
Furthermore, in preferred embodiments, the light within the
conversion region 210 mixes to form mixed light that is
substantially uniform in intensity and/or color, such that the
light that enters the output region 215 and is emitted from device
200 is substantially uniform in intensity and/or color over
substantially the entire surface(s) of emission.
[0030] After the mixed light enters the output region 215, any TIR
confinement thereof is broken by an out-coupling structure 245,
which thus causes the light to be out-coupled from one (as shown in
FIG. 2A) or more (as shown in FIG. 2B) surfaces of the waveguide
220 (as indicated by arrows 250). The out-coupling structure 245
may include or consist essentially of, e.g., a feature such as a
wedge and/or a plurality of optical elements (e.g., prisms,
hemispheres, scattering particles, diffusive dots, etc.). As shown
in FIGS. 2A-2C, the out-coupling structure 245 may be located at a
surface of the waveguide 220 (e.g., the bottom surface), or the
out-coupling structure 245 may be located at multiple surfaces of
the waveguide 220, within the waveguide 220 itself, or a
combination of any of these locations. Thus, the output region 215
is the region from which light is coupled out of the waveguide 220,
and the area of output region 215 is, in various embodiments,
approximately the area occupied by the out-coupling structure 245.
In some embodiments, the area of the output region 215 may be
smaller than the area occupied by the out-coupling structure 245
if, e.g., the user is not interested in out-coupling all of the
available light. In other embodiments, the area of the output
region 215 may be larger than the area occupied by the out-coupling
structure 245 if, e.g., the user is less concerned with the
uniformity at the periphery of the output region 215.
[0031] Due at least in part to the mixing occurring within the
conversion region 210, the out-coupled light 250 is preferably
substantially laterally uniform (i.e., uniform in a direction
substantially perpendicular to a longitudinal propagation direction
extending from the input region to the output region) in color
and/or intensity over the entirety of the emission surface(s) of
the output region 215. As recognized by those of skill in the art,
longitudinal uniformity may be achieved via proper design of the
out-coupling structure 245. As shown in FIG. 2A, a reflector 255
may coat, may be placed in close proximity to, or may otherwise be
disposed on one or more surfaces of the waveguide 220 in the output
region 215 in order to prevent light emission from such
surfaces.
[0032] As mentioned above, the aperture 235 typically allows only a
small amount of light to propagate from the conversion region 210
into the input region 205. This is primarily due to the nature of
light emission from the LED 225 and the phosphor 240. Typically
light is emitted from an LED die substantially omnidirectionally;
however, the LED 225 is typically small relative to the dimensions
of the waveguide 220 and the aperture 235, and thus light emitted
therefrom may be focused toward the aperture 235 (or toward a
reflector or reflective surface to be reflected toward the aperture
235 thereby) by, e.g., an optic (e.g., a lens) that may be part of
a packaged LED 225 or that may be part of the input-region
geometry. Even without such an optic, most light within the input
region 205 may eventually travel through the aperture 235 even if
it first reflects from one or more surfaces within the input region
205. Within the conversion region 210, the light strikes the
phosphor 240, which emits converted light in multiple directions
(e.g., diffusively) and may even scatter unconverted light in
multiple directions. Thus, substantially all of the light within
the conversion region 210 will propagate away from the aperture 235
and will instead propagate toward the output region 215.
[0033] FIG. 2C illustrates an illumination device 260 in accordance
with various other embodiments of the present invention. In
illumination device 260, the input region 205 and conversion region
210 of illumination device 200 of FIGS. 2A and 2B are combined into
a single input region 265 that contains the phosphor 240 and into
which light from the LED 225 is in-coupled. In preferred
embodiments, the phosphor 240 is disposed near or on an inner or
outer surface of the waveguide in the input region 265, and a
reflector 270 (e.g., a reflective coating or a discrete reflector)
reflects converted light and/or unconverted light passing through
the phosphor 240 back into the waveguide 220. The input region 265
is discrete and spatially separate from the output region 215, and
converted and unconverted light mix within the input region 265 to
form mixed light (e.g., white light) that is preferably
substantially uniform in intensity and/or color upon entry into the
output region 215. As shown in FIG. 2C, the LED 225 may be
positioned at, e.g., the bottom surface of the waveguide 220, and
the phosphor 240 may be positioned at the top surface of the
waveguide 220. In other embodiments the LED 225 is positioned at a
side facet of the waveguide 220 (as in FIG. 2A), which may be
slanted or otherwise non-perpendicular to the top surface of the
waveguide 220. In addition, the phosphor 240 may be, in general,
disposed at any one or more facets within the input region 265.
[0034] FIGS. 3 and 4 depict illumination apparatuses 200 in
accordance with embodiments of the present invention. As shown by
the dashed lines, light is emitted from the LED 225, some of which
is reflected by TIR (FIG. 3) and/or reflector 230 (which may
include or consist essentially of, e.g., a reflective coating, as
shown in FIG. 4) through the aperture 235. In the embodiments
illustrated in FIGS. 3 and 4, the apertures 235 are defined by the
geometry of the waveguide 220 itself, i.e., the waveguide is shaped
to form the aperture 235 having a substantially smaller
cross-sectional area that that of waveguide 220 away from aperture
235 (e.g., in the output region 215). In FIG. 3, light from the
input region 205 strikes the phosphor 240, and at least a portion
of the light is wavelength-converted. Portions of the light
striking the phosphor 240 may reflect from (before or after
conversion) and/or be transmitted through (with or without
conversion) the phosphor 240. The light is generally dispersed
along multiple directions (even substantially omnidirectionally)
and guided toward the output region 215 via TIR at the surfaces of
waveguide 220 and/or reflector 242.
[0035] In FIG. 4, the phosphor 240 is disposed on the surface of
the waveguide 220, and thus light striking the phosphor 240 may
only be reflected within the hemisphere of directions within the
waveguide 220 (rather than, e.g., diffused omnidirectionally). In
FIG. 4, the input region 205 is designed such that light emitted
from the LED 225 is directed toward aperture 235 after a minimum
number of reflections within the input region 205. In preferred
embodiments, light is confined within the input region 205 and/or
the conversion region 210 by TIR; however, in some embodiments the
input region 205 may include one or more reflectors 230 for light
confinement. In FIG. 3, the portion of the conversion region 210
proximate the aperture 235 (i.e., toward input region 205) features
a reflector having a curvature shaped to reflect light into a TIR
condition. In FIG. 4, the conversion region 210 lacks reflectors,
and instead the waveguide itself has curved surfaces shaped to
reflect light toward the output region 215. (That is, in FIG. 4,
the phosphor 240 is placed within conversion region 210 such that
substantially all light is confined in the waveguide by TIR.) The
skilled practitioner will recognize that the configurations
detailed above are exemplary, and the scope of the invention
encompasses other combinations and geometries of LEDs, phosphors,
reflectors, and/or waveguide facets.
[0036] Additional embodiments of the present invention are depicted
in FIGS. 5-7, which illustrate only the input region 205 and
conversion region 210 of the illumination devices 200 for
simplicity. In FIG. 5, light (indicated by the dashed lines) is
emitted by the LED 225 and directed toward the aperture 235. The
light rays labeled (a) are reflected toward aperture 235 by
reflector 230, and the light rays labeled (b) reflect from and are
confined within the waveguide 220 by TIR. Various embodiments of
the invention confine at least some light within the waveguide 220
by TIR and thus obviate the need for reflectors 230 on at least
some portions of the surface of the waveguide 220, thereby
advantageously decreasing costs related to the reflector material;
in addition, many reflectors 230 are not 100% reflective, and thus
light may be more efficiently reflected and confined by TIR than by
reflectors. Some of the light is wavelength-converted by the
phosphor 240, and the solid arrows represent converted and/or mixed
light that (A) is reflected by a reflector 500 in the conversion
region 210 and then propagates in a TIR condition to the output
region or (B) is already in a TIR condition after propagating away
from the phosphor 240. As shown in FIG. 5, preferred embodiments of
the invention feature a reflector 242 (which may be a portion of
reflector 230 extending from the input region 205) disposed on the
phosphor 240 to reflect converted and unconverted light. The
reflector 242 may be thermally connected to a heat sink in order to
cool the phosphor 240, which may be heated by the flux of light
from the input region 205; cooling the phosphor 240 may improve its
performance and/or efficiency, which may degrade at elevated
temperatures.
[0037] FIG. 6 depicts an illumination device 200 in which the
aperture 235 is not defined by the external geometry of the
waveguide 220; rather, the aperture 235 is defined by an optical
cavity (or "polyhedron") 600 disposed within the waveguide. The
polyhedron 600 may include or consist of a material different from
the material of the waveguide 220 (and/or may have an index of
refraction different from that of the waveguide 220) or may be
empty or filled with air or one or more other gases or liquids. (As
utilized herein, a "polyhedron" or "optical cavity" refers to any
solid object, or enclosed space defined by surrounding solid
material, and may be substantially spherical or may have multiple
planar and/or curved faces.) As shown, at least a portion of the
polyhedron 600 may be coated by one or more reflectors 605. In FIG.
6, the light from LED 225 is side-coupled (i.e., input from the
side facet of the waveguide), although this and other embodiments
of the invention may feature either side or bottom coupling of the
LED 225. As also shown in FIG. 6, the aperture is annular, and thus
light propagates to the conversion region 210 around multiple sides
of the polyhedron 600. In other embodiments of the invention, the
polyhedron 600 is attached to or is an integral portion of a
surface of the waveguide. In some embodiments, at least a portion
of the polyhedron 600 is outside of the waveguide 220, which is
consequently shaped in a fashion similar to that shown in FIG.
5.
[0038] The waveguide 220 and polyhedron 600 may be fabricated by
any of a variety of techniques. For example, the waveguide 220 may
be molded in at least two discrete pieces that are attached
together to define the waveguide 220; any or all of the pieces may
also define the polyhedron 600--FIG. 6 depicts two pieces 610, 620
that fit together to define the waveguide 220 and the polyhedron
600. As shown in FIG. 6, the piece 610 may include the input region
205, and the piece 620 may include the conversion region 210 and
output region 215 (not shown). Prior to assembly of the pieces 610,
620, all or a portion of the inside surface of the polyhedron 600
may be coated with a reflector 230, as shown in FIG. 6, or the
polyhedron 600 may be partially or substantially completely filled
with another material.
[0039] In FIG. 6, light rays (a) are emitted from the LED 225 and
directed toward the aperture 235 and phosphor 240 via reflections
from the waveguide facets and the surface of the polyhedron 600
facing the input region 205. Other embodiments of the invention may
incorporate different facet and surface curvatures and/or
utilization of additional reflectors. In the conversion region 210,
converted or mixed light may (A) reflect from a surface of the
polyhedron 600 (and/or a reflector 605 thereon) and propagate
toward the output region in a TIR condition or (B) be already
confined in a TIR condition after propagating away from the
phosphor 240. Preferably converted and mixed light in the
conversion region 210 not striking a surface of the polyhedron 600
is already confined inside waveguide 220 in a TIR condition.
[0040] FIG. 7 depicts an illumination device 200 in which, in the
conversion region 210, the polyhedron 600 is shaped to enable light
to propagate across the waveguide 220 from one portion of phosphor
240 to another (the phosphor 240 may be disposed on the waveguide
surface in two or more discrete regions or may wrap around the
waveguide in a single continuous region). In such embodiments,
phosphor utilization is enhanced, as light not converted by one
portion of the phosphor 240 may strike another portion of the
phosphor 240 and be converted. For example, a light ray (D) not
converted by the top phosphor region 240 propagates to the bottom
phosphor region 240 and is wavelength-converted, forming light ray
(D'). Also shown in FIG. 7 are light ray (A) that strikes the
polyhedron 600 in a TIR condition and propagates to the bottom
phosphor region 240, as well as light ray (B) that reflects away
from the phosphor 240 already in a TIR condition (i.e., confined by
TIR). Light ray (C) represents light reflected from the phosphor
240 not in a TIR condition but that does not strike another portion
of phosphor 240. In order to decrease the amount of light falling
into this category, the illumination device 200 may incorporate one
or more diffusive reflectors 700 along portions of the surface of
waveguide 220 between phosphor 240 and points on the surface of
waveguide 220 sufficiently distant from the phosphor 240 such that
light striking them is confined by TIR. At least a portion of the
light reflecting from the diffusive reflector 700 reflects into a
TIR condition, as represented by light ray (C'). In some
embodiments, for convenience, reflectors 700 and 242 may be
portions of a single reflector.
[0041] FIG. 8 depicts an illumination device 260, in accordance
with various embodiments of the invention, which features an input
region 265 containing phosphor 240. In FIG. 8, the phosphor 240
covers most, or even substantially all, of the surface of the
waveguide 220 in the input region 265, and light from input region
265 propagates directly to the output region 215. In other
embodiments of the invention, the phosphor 240 is disposed on the
surface of the waveguide 220 in only a portion of the input region
265. As shown, the LED 225 is mounted on a substrate 800 and
electrically connected thereto by, e.g., one or more wires 810. The
substrate 800 may dissipate at least a portion of heat generated by
the LED 225 during operation and may include or consist essentially
of any suitable rigid material, e.g., a metal-core printed circuit
board. Substrate 800 is preferably coated with a reflective coating
820 (or the top surface 820 is itself reflective) such that any
light striking substrate 800 propagates into the waveguide 220. As
shown, the LED 225 may be disposed within a recess 830 defined by
the waveguide 220. The recess 830 defines an interface 835 with the
waveguide 220, and the recess 830 may be partially or substantially
completely filled with an encapsulating material 840 that
preferably has an index of refraction substantially the same as
that of the waveguide 220. In other embodiments the LED 225 is
disposed outside of the recess 830 or the waveguide 220 may not
define a recess 830. In the input region 265, a surface 850 of the
waveguide 220 may be shaped to minimize optical loss therein; for
example, the surface 850 may be substantially parabolic as shown in
FIG. 8.
[0042] The phosphor 240 is disposed on the surface 850, for example
by incorporating it in an adhesive paint or via a transparent
adhesive or other attachment mechanism, thereby reducing or
substantially eliminating Fresnel reflections between the waveguide
220 and the phosphor 240. Preferably the phosphor 240 is in optical
contact with the waveguide 220; thus, there is no air gap between
the phosphor 240 and the waveguide 220, and light confined by TIR
propagates to the phosphor 240. A reflector 230 is disposed over
the phosphor 240, and may be attached to the phosphor 240 via a
transparent adhesive or encapsulant. In some embodiments the
reflector 230 is in optical contact with phosphor 240, and thus
there is no air gap therebetween. In other embodiments the
reflector 230 is in mechanical but not optical contact with the
phosphor 240, and there is thus an air gap therebetween. The
reflector 230 may be specular (e.g., a mirror) or diffusive, and
may be deposited over phosphor 240 by, e.g., electroplating,
electroless plating, evaporation, sputtering, or chemical vapor
deposition. The reflector 230 may include or consist essentially of
a thin reflective sheet or layer that is applied by e.g., bonding,
lamination, or via an adhesive.
[0043] In FIG. 8 the illumination device 260 also features an
optical cavity 600 within the waveguide 220 in the input region
265. As shown, the optical cavity is empty (e.g., filled with air)
and thus surrounded by the material of waveguide 220 that has a
larger refractive index. Thus, light propagating within waveguide
220 and striking the optical cavity 600 will be refracted or
totally reflected, depending on the angle of incidence. The optical
cavity 600 may have substantially planar surfaces, as shown in FIG.
8, and/or curved surfaces, as shown in FIG. 9.
[0044] FIGS. 10A and 10B illustrate various light-ray trajectories
for light emitted by the LED 225 in accordance with various
embodiments of the present invention. Light ray 1000 is emitted by
the LED 225 such that it propagates directly to the phosphor 240 at
a location 1010. Once it strikes the phosphor 240, the light ray
enters phosphor 240 and strikes photoluminescent particles therein,
exciting the particles and generating secondary light that is
emitted in all directions 1020. As shown in FIG. 10B, approximately
half of the secondary radiation is emitted back into the waveguide
220. For example, a light ray 1030 propagates toward the output
region 215, and a light ray 1040 strikes the optical cavity 600 at
an angle of total reflection and is redirected toward output region
215. A light ray 1050 strikes the optical cavity 600 at a location
1060 at an angle such that it is not totally reflected by the
surface of the optical cavity 600, enters the optical cavity 600 at
location 1060, exits the optical cavity at a location 1070, and
propagates toward the output region 215. A light ray 1080 strikes
the reflector 230 and is reflected back toward the output region
215. As understood by those of skill in the art, there are many
possible paths for light emission, refraction, and reflection
within waveguide 220, and those described above are merely
exemplary.
[0045] As shown in FIG. 10B, approximately half of the secondary
radiation is emitted from the phosphor 240 in the direction away
from the waveguide 220. As these light rays propagate in the
phosphor 240 (i.e., a scattering medium), some of the rays will
change direction and propagate toward output region 215. Others of
these light rays will reach the reflector 230 and will be reflected
back toward phosphor 240 and the waveguide 220. Light emitted by
the LED 225 that traverses the phosphor 240 without being
wavelength-converted (e.g., by not being absorbed by
photoluminescent particles) will generally reach the reflector 230
and be redirected toward the phosphor 240; this effective doubling
of the light-ray trajectory within the phosphor 240 increases the
probability of wavelength-conversion, thus enabling thinner
phosphors 240 to be utilized in accordance with embodiments of the
present invention. Thus, in general, secondary light emitted by the
phosphor 240 away from the waveguide 220 will be scattered toward
the waveguide 220 or reflected toward the waveguide 220 by the
reflector 230. However, in some embodiments of the invention, some
light may not propagate to the output region 215, as it may be
absorbed by the waveguide, the phosphor 240, the reflector 230,
and/or the LED 225 itself. Thus, preferred embodiments of the
invention reduce total optical loss by utilizing a low-loss
waveguide and reflectors that have high reflectivity (i.e., as
close to 100% reflectivity as possible), and/or by utilizing as few
LEDs 225 as possible (and/or LEDs 225 with small sizes), and/or by
utilizing discrete conversion regions as detailed above.
[0046] FIG. 11 depicts an embodiment of the present invention in
which a light ray 1100 is emitted by the LED 225, strikes the
optical cavity 600 at an angle of total internal reflection, and is
reflected toward the phosphor 240. A light ray 1110 is emitted by
the LED 225 and propagates toward the output region 215 without
striking the phosphor 240 or the optical cavity 600. The light ray
1110, not being wavelength-converted, may be emitted from the
waveguide 220 as part of the mixed light as it mixes with converted
light in the input region 265. Similarly, a light ray 1120
traverses the phosphor 240 without being wavelength-converted, is
reflected by the reflector 230, remains unconverted as it traverses
phosphor 240 again, and propagates toward output region 215. Such
light may be emitted from the waveguide 220 as part of the mixed
light as it mixes with converted light in the input region 265.
[0047] In various embodiments of the present invention, the optical
cavity 600 extends along substantially the entire width (i.e., the
direction into the page in the figures) of the waveguide 220 and/or
the waveguide and associated optical cavity are difficult to
fabricate by conventional molding techniques. FIG. 12 depicts one
method of fabricating a waveguide 220 with an optical cavity 600
therein. As shown, the waveguide 220 is fabricated by joining two
portions 1200, 1210 at an interface 1220. Portion 1210 includes the
majority of the waveguide 220 and defines the bottom portion of the
optical cavity 600, which the portion 1200 mates with portion 1210
and defines the top portion of the optical cavity 600. Once joined
(e.g., via a transparent optical adhesive), the two portions 1200,
1210 collectively constitute the illumination device 260.
[0048] FIG. 13 depicts an illumination device 260 in accordance
with various embodiments of the present invention, in which the
optical cavity 600 is replaced by a protrusion 1300 that may itself
be reflective (or may be utilized in combination with a reflector
or reflective surface beneath it). In the illustrated embodiment,
the protrusion 1300 is a protruding portion of the bottom waveguide
surface, and the LED 225 is also located at the bottom surface of
waveguide 220. As shown, a light ray 1310 emitted by the LED 225
that strikes the protrusion 1300 is directed toward a surface 1320
of the waveguide 220 along which the phosphor 240 and reflector 230
are located. The protrusion 1300 may reflect light via TIR or may
be coated with a reflective coating.
[0049] In the configuration of FIG. 13, many light rays tend to
strike a bottom facet 1330 of the waveguide 220, and thus it is
preferable that facet 1330 is reflective and/or that the surface
820 of the LED substrate 800 is reflective (e.g., coated with a
reflective coating). In FIG. 13 an air gap is shown between the
waveguide 220 and the LED substrate 800. This air gap is optional,
although in preferred embodiments the air gap reduces or minimizes
optical loss from the waveguide 220. Within the waveguide 220, many
light rays are already propagating within TIR conditions, and
realistic reflectors have reflectivities less than 100%. Thus,
preferred embodiments of the present invention do not alter the
propagation condition of the light rays already propagating in TIR
conditions by disposing the air gap between the waveguide 220 and
the LED substrate 800 and by coating the surface 820 of the LED
substrate 800 with a reflective coating rather than coating the
bottom surface of the waveguide 200.
[0050] In FIG. 13 the surface 1320 is illustrated as having a
curved profile; however, this need not be the case, and other
planar or non-curved configurations are possible. While the
protrusion 1300 is not required in many embodiments of the present
invention, the protrusion 1300 does prevent some unconverted light
from LED 225 from propagating directly to the output region 215 and
thus facilitates light mixing and the attainment of substantial
uniformity of color and/or intensity within an input region 265
having a small lateral extent. (Thus, in some embodiments of the
invention, the need for protrusion 1300 is obviated by utilizing a
longer phosphor layer 240 and input region 265.)
[0051] FIG. 14 depicts another illumination device 260 in
accordance with embodiments of the present invention. Rather than a
protrusion at the bottom surface of the waveguide, the illustrated
embodiment features a protrusion 1300 on the top facet of waveguide
220 opposite the LED 225. Such a protrusion 1300 serves to enhance
mixing of converted and unconverted light within the input region
265. This illustrated embodiment also incorporates a wedge 1400
near the interface between the input region 265 and the output
region 215 to promote uniformity of the light within the output
region 215.
[0052] Configurations of embodiments of the invention without
protrusions or curved waveguide surfaces are depicted in FIGS. 15A
and 15B. In FIG. 15A, the illumination device 260 features a single
input region 265 and multiple output regions 215, and in FIG. 15B,
the illumination device 260 features multiple input regions 265 and
a single output region 215. Reflectors and other various elements
are not depicted in FIGS. 15A and 15B for simplicity; however, in
various embodiments, reflectors are disposed over the phosphors 240
and may even extend over the entirety of the input region(s) 265 or
only a portion thereof, and over the bottom, top, and/or side
facets. For example, in FIG. 15A the phosphor 240 is located only
over the top surface 1500 of the waveguide 220, while in FIG. 15B
the phosphor 240 is located over top surface 1500 and side surfaces
1510 of the waveguide 220. Embodiments of the invention also
include illumination devices having multiple input and conversion
regions propagating light to a single output region, as well as
illumination devices having a single input region, a single
conversion region, and multiple output regions receiving light from
the input and conversion regions.
[0053] FIG. 16 depicts an embodiment of the present invention in
which the LED 225 and phosphor 240 are both thermally connected to
a heat sink 1600. Embodiments of the invention feature small-area
phosphors 240, and thus the optical density of light striking the
phosphor 240 tends to be high. As the light is
wavelength-converted, heat is released due to the energy difference
between the absorbed (typically higher-frequency) light and the
emitted converted (typically lower-frequency) light, i.e., due to
the Stoke's shift. Such heat may degrade the efficiency of the
phosphor 240 in the absence of heat dissipation through the heat
sink 1600, which may include or consist essentially of one or more
metals or other materials with high thermal conductivity, and may
feature protruding features such as fins and/or even active cooling
mechanisms such as fans. The configuration illustrated in FIG. 4
may also feature a heat sink thermally connected to the phosphor
240, and the heat sink may also be thermally connected to the LED
225.
[0054] The terms and expressions employed herein are used as terms
and expressions of description and not of limitation, and there is
no intention, in the use of such terms and expressions, of
excluding any equivalents of the features shown and described or
portions thereof. In addition, having described certain embodiments
of the invention, it will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in
the art that other embodiments incorporating the concepts disclosed
herein may be used without departing from the spirit and scope of
the invention. Accordingly, the described embodiments are to be
considered in all respects as only illustrative and not
restrictive.
* * * * *