Light-emitting diodes save energy. In terms of their light output,
however, they have so far been unable to compete with light bulbs. A
new, low-priced optical component is set to change that situation: It
concentrates the light and directs it precisely to where it is needed.
Light-emitting diodes are unbeatable in terms of energy efficiency. A
one-watt LED delivers roughly the same optical output as a hundred-watt
light bulb. If a high light output is required, however, the tiny light
sources are not the preferred means of illumination. A novel optical
component is set to change that situation. It directs the light to the
exact spot where it is needed. In the case of a desk lamp, for
instance, the light can be concentrated in such a way that only a
DIN-A4-sized surface in the middle of the table is brightly lit. The
LED evenly illuminates the required area, while everything else stays
in the dark.
“A light-emitting diode is a single-point light source that emits
light in a large, uncontrolled area,” says Dr. Christian Wenzel,
head of department at the Fraunhofer Institute for Production
Technology IPT in Aachen. “We use special lenses to direct all of
the light to the place where it is needed, thus increasing the
efficiency of the LEDs. The spot of light created by the light source
does not therefore fade out at the edges, but has a sharply defined
edge.”
This channeling of light is based on a free-form system of optics
– a plastic lens whose geometry can be shaped in any way desired.
“The lenses are cast using an injection-molding technique. The
two halves of the tool that serve as a mold have to be aligned with
extreme precision just once – they have an accuracy of a few
microns, or less than a tenth of the diameter of a hair. Once the tools
have been tared, the lens can be manufactured in large batches at low
cost,” says Dr. Wenzel. The researchers at the IPT have optimized
the entire process chain: from planning and manufacturing the lens
systems to checking their accuracy. “There’s nothing like
it anywhere else in Europe,” the expert claims. There is just one
challenge that had to be mastered: The plastic, which is inserted into
the mold when hot, shrinks as it cools – the finished lenses are
therefore slightly smaller than dictated by the mold. The researchers
take this effect into account by repeated, gradual improvement –
to an accuracy of a few microns. When the lenses are finished, the
scientists check them. To do this, they project a pattern of stripes
onto the lens. The distortion of the stripes reveals the curvature,
inclination and shape of the lens. The researchers will demonstrate the
entire process chain along with optical systems for practical
application at the Optatec trade fair in Frankfurt from June 17 to 20
(Hall 3, Stand D53).