Inhomogeneous source uniformization using a shell mixer Köhler integrator

Descripción (resumen): 

High flux and high CRI may be achieved by combining different chips and/or phosphors. This, however, results in inhomogeneous sources that, when combined with collimating optics, typically produce patterns with undesired artifacts. These may be a combination of spatial, angular or color non-uniformities. In order to avoid these effects, there is a need to mix the light source, both spatially and angularly. Diffusers can achieve this effect, but they also increase the etendue (and reduce the brightness) of the resulting source, leading to optical systems of increased size and wider emission angles. The shell mixer is an optic comprised of many lenses on a shell covering the source. These lenses perform Kohler integration to mix the emitted light, both spatially and angularly. Placing it on top of a multi-chip Lambertian light source, the result is a highly homogeneous virtual source (i.e, spatially and angularly mixed), also Lambertian, which is located in the same position with essentially the same size (so the average brightness is not increased). This virtual light source can then be collimated using another optic, resulting in a homogeneous pattern without color separation. Experimental measurements have shown optical efficiency of the shell of 94%, and highly homogeneous angular intensity distribution of collimated beams, in good agreement with the ray-tracing simulations.


Tipo publicación: 
Dissertation by Invitation
Publicado en: 
Optical Design and Engineering V (Conference OSD01),Procc. SPIE Vol. 8550 85502X-85502X-12. Barcelona, España
ISBN/ISSN: 
ISBN-10: 0819493023 ISBN-13: 978-0819493026
Ingeniería óptica
Fecha de Publicacion: 
Noviembre 2012
Autores CeDInt: 
Otros Autores: 
J. Chaves, O. Dross, J. F. Vilaplana