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Proceedings ArticleDOI

High-efficiency free-form nonimaging condenser overcoming rotational symmetry limitations

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TLDR
In this paper, a free-form design of a rotational symmetric image of the source projected image is proposed to control the shape and rotation of the projected image, which achieves a geometrical efficiency of 1.8 times that of an elliptical condenser for a 4:1 target aspect ratio and for the range of target and 1.5 for 16:9.
Abstract
The importance of condenser optics is the fact that it is the bottleneck limiting efficiency in commercially available projection systems. Efficiency is a key parameter of projector performance, since it augments screen luminance, enabling the system to perform well under increasing levels of ambient light. Conventional condensers use rotational symmetric devices, most of them being elliptic or parabolic mirrors. They perform very far from the theoretical limits for sources such as arc lamps or halogen bulbs. Typical small displays in the 5-15 mm2 etendue range have geometrical efficiencies about 40-50% for the best condensers; although theory allows about 100% (no reflection nor absorption losses are considered). The problem is in the coma aberration of the reflectors and the rotational symmetric image of the source making the source projected image to unfit with the target. Thus, the only way to improve this performance is to generate a free form design that is able to control the shape and rotation of the source projected images. As yet, this can only be done with the SMS3D design method. We present here two of such designs types; one of them achieving a geometrical efficiency that is 1.8 times that of an elliptical condenser for a 4:1 target aspect ratio and for the range of target etendue with practical interest and 1.5 for 16:9 target. The other design type is more adequate for circular targets and gets a geometrical efficiency up to 1.4 that of an elliptical condenser. These designs use only 1 additional reflection, i.e., use a total of 2 reflections from the source to the target. A prototype of one type of free form condenser has already been built.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Design of a Novel Free-Form Condenser overcoming rotational symmetry limitations

TL;DR: This work presents a free form condenser design achieving a geometrical efficiency that is 1.8 times that of an elliptical condenser for a 4:1 target aspect ratio and for the range of target etendue with practical interest and 1.5 for 16:9 target.
References
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Book

Introduction to Nonimaging Optics

Julio Chaves
TL;DR: In this article, the theoretical foundations and design methods of non-imaging optics, as well as key concepts from related fields, are discussed, including wavefronts for a prescribed output (irradiance or intensity), infinitesimal etendue optics (generalization of the aplanatic optics), and Kohler optics and color mixing.
Journal ArticleDOI

New method of design of nonimaging concentrators

TL;DR: A ray tracing of three-dimensional concentrators (with rotational symmetry) is done, showing that the lens-mirror combination has a total transmission as high as that of the full compound parabolic concentrators, while their depth is much smaller than the classical parabolic mirror-nonimaging concentrator combinations.
Journal ArticleDOI

A high-gain, compact, nonimaging concentrator: RXI

TL;DR: The design procedure of a new nonimaging concentrator (called an RXI) is explained and Ray-tracing analysis of a rotational symmetric RXI shows total transmissions of greater than 94.5% when the acceptance angle of the incoming rays is small and the receiver area is the smallest possible (maximal concentration).
Journal ArticleDOI

RX: a nonimaging concentrator

TL;DR: The RX is ideal in two-dimensional geometry and when the average angular spread of the input bundle is small: up to 95% of the power of theinput bundle can be transferred to the output bundle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultrahigh-numerical-aperture imaging concentrator

TL;DR: In this paper, a monochromatic analysis of the RX non-imaging concentrators as imaging optical systems is presented, which shows that the combination of simplicity, compactness, imaging capability, and high concentration makes the RX an exceptionally good optical device for high-sensitivity focal plane array applications.
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