Background of the Invention
[0001] Human beings have grown accustomed to controlling their environment. Nature is unpredictable
and often presents conditions that are far from a human being's ideal living conditions.
The human race has therefore tried for years to engineer the environment inside a
structure to emulate the outside environment at a perfect set of conditions. This
has involved temperature control, air quality control and lighting control.
[0002] The desire to control the properties of light in an artificial environment is easy
to understand. Humans are primarily visual creatures with much of our communication
being done visually. We can identify friends and loved ones based on primarily visual
cues and we communicate through many visual mediums, such as this printed page. At
the same time, the human eye requires light to see by and our eyes (unlike those of
some other creatures) are particularly sensitive to color.
[0003] With today's ever increasing work hours and time constraints, less and less of the
day is being spent by the average human outside in natural sunlight. In addition,
humans spend about a third of their lives asleep, and as the economy increases to
24/7/365, many employees no longer have the luxury of spending their waking hours
during daylight. Therefore, most of an average human's life is spent inside, illuminated
by manmade sources of light.
[0004] Visible light is a collection of electromagnetic waves (electromagnetic radiation)
of different frequencies, each wavelength of which represents a particular "color"
of the light spectrum. Visible light is generally thought to comprise those light
waves with wavelength between about 400 and about 700 nm. Each of the wavelengths
within this spectrum comprises a distinct color of light from deep blue/purple at
around 400 nm to dark red at around 700 nm. Mixing these colors of light produces
additional colors of light. The distinctive color of a neon sign results from a number
of discrete wavelengths of light. These wavelengths combine additively to produce
the resulting wave or spectrum which makes up a color. One such color is white light.
[0005] Because of the importance of white light, and since white light is the mixing of
multiple wavelengths of light, there have arisen multiple techniques for characterization
of white light that relate to how human beings interpret a particular white light.
The first of these is the use of color temperature which relates to the color of the
light within white. Correlated color temperature is characterized in color reproduction
fields according to the temperature in degrees Kelvin (K) of a black body radiator
which radiates the same color light as the light in question. FIG. 1 is a chromaticity
diagram in which Planckian locus (or black body locus or white line) (104) gives the
temperatures of whites from about 700 K (generally considered the first visible to
the human eye) to essentially the terminal point. The color temperature of viewing
light depends on the color content of the viewing light as shown by line (104). Thus,
early morning daylight has a color temperature of about 3,000 K while overcast midday
skies have a white color temperature of about 10,000 K. A fire has a color temperature
of about 1,800 K and an incandescent bulb about 2848 K. A color image viewed at 3,000
K will have a relatively reddish tone, whereas the same color image viewed at 10,000
K will have a relatively bluish tone. All of this light is called "white," but it
has varying spectral content.
[0006] The second classification of white light involves its quality. In 1965 the Commission
Intemationale de l'Eclairage (CIE) recommended a method for measuring the color rendering
properties of light sources based on a test color sample method. This method has been
updated and is described in the CIE 13.3-1995 technical report "Method of Measuring
and Specifying Colour Rendering Properties of Light Sources," the disclosure of which
is herein incorporated by reference. In essence, this method involves the spectroradiometric
measurement of the light source under test. This data is multiplied by the reflectance
spectrums of eight color sainples. The resulting spectrums are converted to tristimulus
values based on the CIE 1931 standard observer. The shift of these values with respect
to a reference light are determined for the uniform color space (UCS) recommended
in 1960 by the CIE. The average of the eight color shifts is calculated to generate
the General Color Rendering Index, known as CRI. Within these calculations the CRI
is scaled so that a perfect score equals 100, where perfect would be using a source
spectrally equal to the reference source (often sunlight or full spectrum white light).
For example a tungsten-halogen source compared to full spectrum white light might
have a CRI of 99 while a warm white fluorescent lamp would have a CRI of 50.
[0007] Artificial lighting generally uses the standard CRI to determine the quality of white
light. If a light yields a high CRI compared to full spectrum white light then it
is considered to generate better-quality white light (light that is more "natural"
and enables colored surfaces to be better rendered). This method has been used since
1965 as a point of comparison for all different types of light sources.
[0008] The correlated color temperature, and CRI, of viewing light can affect the way in
which an observer perceives a color image. An observer will perceive the same color
image differently when viewed under lights having different correlated color temperatures.
For example, a color image which looks normal when viewed in early morning daylight
will look bluish and washed out when viewed under overcast midday skies. Further,
a white light with a poor CRI may cause colored services to appear distorted.
[0009] The color temperature and/or CRI of light is critical to creators of images, such
as photographers, film and television producers, painters, etc., as well as to the
viewers of paintings, photographs, and other such images. Ideally, both creator and
viewer utilize the same color of ambient light, ensuring that the appearance of the
image to the viewer matches that of the creator.
[0010] Additionally, color temperature of ambient light affects how viewers perceive a display,
such as a retail or marketing display, by changing the perceived color of such items
as fruits and vegetables, clothing, furniture, automobiles, and other products containing
visual elements that can greatly affect how people view and react to such displays.
One example is a tenet of theatrical lighting design that strong green light on the
human body (even if the overall lighting effect is white light) tends to make the
human look unnatural, creepy, and often a little disgusting. Thus, variations in the
color temperature of lighting can affect how appealing or attractive such a display
may be to customers.
[0011] Moreover, the ability to view a decoratively colored item, such as fabric-covered
furniture, clothing, paint, wallpaper, curtains, etc., in a lighting environment or
color temperature condition which matches or closely approximates the conditions under
which the item will be viewed would permit such colored items to be more accurately
matched and coordinated. Typically, the lighting used in a display setting, such as
a showroom, cannot be varied and is often chosen to highlight a particular facet of
the color of the item leaving a purchaser to guess as to whether the item in question
will retain an attractive appearance under the lighting conditions where the item
will eventually be placed. Differences in lighting can also leave a customer wondering
whether the color of the item will clash with other items that cannot conveniently
be viewed under identical lighting conditions or otherwise directly compared.
[0012] In addition to white light, the ability to generate specific colors of light is also
highly sought after. Because of humans' light sensitivity, visual arts and similar
professions desire colored light that is specifiable and reproducible. Elementary
film study classes teach that a movie-goer has been trained that light which is generally
more orange or red signifies the morning, while light that is generally more blue
signifies a night or evening. We have also been trained that sunlight filtered through
water has a certain color, while sunlight filtered through glass has a different color.
For all these reasons it is desirable for those involved in visual arts to be able
to produce exact colors of light, and to be able to reproduce them later.
[0013] Current lighting technology makes such adjustment and control difficult, because
common sources of light, such as halogen, incandescent, and fluorescent sources, generate
light of a fixed color temperature and spectrum. Further, altering the color temperature
or spectrum will usually alter other lighting variables in an undesirable way. For
example, increasing the voltage applied to an incandescent light may raise the color
temperature of the resulting light, but also results in an overall increase in brightness.
In the same way, placing a deep blue filter in front of a white halogen lamp will
dramatically decrease the overall brightness of the light. The filter itself will
also get quite hot (and potentially melt) as it absorbs a large percentage of the
light energy from the white light.
[0014] Moreover, achieving certain color conditions with incandescent sources can be difficult
or impossible as the desired color may cause the filament to rapidly bum out. For
fluorescent lighting sources, the color temperature is controlled by the composition
of the phosphor, which may vary from bulb to bulb but cannot typically be altered
for a given bulb. Thus, modulating color temperature of light is a complex procedure
that is often avoided in scenarios where such adjustment may be beneficial.
[0015] In artificial lighting, control over the range of colors that can be produced by
a lighting fixture is desirable. Many lighting fixtures known in the art can only
produce as a single color of light instead of range of colors. That color may vary
across lighting fixtures (for instance a fluorescent lighting fixture produces a different
color of light from a sodium vapor lamp). The use of filters on a lighting fixture
does not enable a lighting fixture to produce a range of colors, it merely allows
a lighting fixture to produce its single color, which is then partially absorbed and
partially transmitted by the filter. Once the filter is placed, the fixture can only
produce a single (now different) color of light, it still cannot produce a range.
[0016] In control of artificial lighting, it is further desirable to be able to specify
a point within the range of color producible by a lighting fixture which will be the
point of highest intensity. Even on current technology lighting fixtures whose colors
can be altered, the point of maximum intensity cannot be specified by the user, but
is usually determined by unalterable physical characteristics of the fixture. Thus,
an incandescent light fixture can produce a range of colors, but the intensity necessarily
increases as the color temperature increases which does not enable control of the
color at the point of maximum intensity. Filters further lack control of the point
of maximum intensity as the point of maximum intensity of a lighting fixture will
be the unfiltered color as any filter absorbs some of the intensity.
Summay of the Invention
[0017] There is provided according to the present invention a light source for generating
essentially white light, comprising: at least one first white LED having a first spectrum;
and at least one second white LED having a second spectrum, the first spectrum being
different than the second spectrum.
[0018] The light source may further comprise at least one optical filter configured to selectively
transmit a portion of light emitted from at least one of the first and second white
LEDs.
[0019] The at least one optical filter may be a high pass filter.
[0020] The at least one optical filter may comprise a plurality of optical filters, each
of the plurality of optical filters being configured to selectively transmit a portion
of the light emitted from at least one of the first and second white LEDs.
[0021] The selectively transmitted portion of the light emitted from the at least one of
the first and second LEDs may include at least a portion of the Planckian locus.
[0022] The at least one of the plurality of optical filters may be a yellow filter.
[0023] At least a first one of the plurality of optical filters may be adapted to transmit
a portion of the light corresponding to a color temperature of approximately 4745
Kelvin; and at least a second one of the plurality of optical filters may be adapted
to transmit a portion of the light corresponding to a color temperature of approximately
3935 Kelvin.
[0024] The first white LED may have a color temperature of approximately 20000 Kelvin, and
the second white LED may have a color temperature of approximately 5750 Kelvin.
[0025] The at least one first white LED and the at least one second white LED may be configured
in a substantially linear arrangement.
[0026] The light source may further comprise at least one further LED having a third spectrum
different from the first spectrum and the second spectrum.
[0027] The at least one further LED may have a chromaticity to the right of the 2300 Kelvin
point of a Planckian locus on a conventional chromaticity chart.
[0028] The at least one further LED may include at least one amber LED.
[0029] The light source may further comprise: at least one fourth LED having a fourth spectrum;
and at least one fifth LED having a fifth spectrum, wherein the first, second, third,
fourth and fifth spectra are respectively different.
[0030] The light source may further comprise: at least one sixth LED having a sixth spectrum;
and at least one seventh LED having a seventh spectrum, wherein the first, second,
third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh spectra are respectively different.
[0031] A first quantity of the at least one first white LED may be different than a second
quantity of the at least one second white LED.
[0032] The at least one first white LED, the at least one second white LED, and the at least
one further LED may be arranged to provide a combined spectrum that is substantially
continuous over wavelengths visible to the human eye.
[0033] The light source may be configured such that the combined spectrum includes at least
a portion of the Planckian locus over the range from 2300 Kelvin to 4500 Kelvin.
[0034] The light source may be configured such that the combined spectrum at a color temperature
of 2300 Kelvin does not have any substantial valleys at wavelengths below a wavelength
corresponding to a maximum peak of the combined spectrum.
[0035] The light source may be configured such that the combined spectrum at a color temperature
of 2300 Kelvin may have a color rendering index (CRI) value of greater than 50, and
the combined spectrum at a color temperature of 4500 Kelvin may have a color rendering
index (CRI) value of greater than 80.
[0036] A lighting fixture may comprise: a processor; and at least one light source as described
above.
[0037] The processor may be adapted to control a first intensity of the at least one first
white LED having the first spectrum, and a second intensity of the at least one second
white LED having the second spectrum.
[0038] The at least one first white LED may comprise a plurality of first white LEDs and
the at least one second white LED comprises a plurality of second white LEDs.
[0039] The lighting fixture may further comprise: a housing; and a mounting for the light
source.
[0040] The lighting fixture may be configured to resemble an Edison-mount light bulb.
[0041] The lighting fixture may be configured to resemble a fluorescent light bulb.
[0042] The lighting fixture may be configured to resemble a halogen MR-16-type light bulb.
[0043] The processor may be configured to independently control the at least one first white
LED and the at least one second white LED so as to controllably vary a color temperature
of essentially white light generated by the lighting fixture.
[0044] The lighting fixture may further comprise at least one user interface coupled to
the processor and configured to facilitate an adjustment of the color temperature
of the essentially white light generated by the lighting fixture.
[0045] The lighting fixture may further comprise at least one sensor.
[0046] The at least one sensor may be configured to measure at least color characteristics
of light generated by the lighting fixture, and wherein the lighting fixture may further
include a calibration system to vary the light generated by the lighting fixture based
on the measured color characteristics.
[0047] The lighting fixture may further comprise at least one of a receiver and a transmitter
coupled to the processor and configured to communicate at least one control signal
to or from the lighting fixture.
[0048] The processor may be configured to control the at least one light source using a
pulse width modulation (PWM) technique.
[0049] The processor may be configured to receive at least one network signal.
[0050] The processor may be configured to receive at least one wireless control signal.
[0051] The processor may be configured to receive at least one control signal formatted
using a DMX protocol.
[0052] According to a second aspect of the present invention there is provided a method
for generating essentially white light in a light source comprising the steps of:
generating a first spectrum by at least one first white LED; and generating a second
spectrum by at least one second white LED, the first spectrum being different than
the second spectrum.
[0053] The method may further comprise the step of selectively transmitting a portion of
light emitted from at least one of the first and second white LEDs using at least
one optical filter.
[0054] The at least one optical filter may comprise a plurality of optical filters, and
the step of selectively transmitting may comprise selectively transmitting using each
of the plurality of optical filters a portion of the light emitted from at least one
of the first and second white LEDs.
[0055] The selectively transmitted portion of the light emitted from the at least one of
the first and second LEDs may include at least a portion of the Planckian locus.
[0056] At least one of the plurality of optical filters may be a yellow filter.
[0057] At least a first one of the plurality of optical filters may be adapted to transmit
a portion of the light corresponding to a color temperature of approximately 4745
Kelvin; and at least a second one of the plurality of optical filters may be adapted
to transmit a portion of the light corresponding to a color temperature of approximately
3935 Kelvin.
[0058] The at least one first white LED may have a color temperature of approximately 20000
Kelvin, and the at least one second white LED may have a color temperature of approximately
5750 Kelvin.
[0059] The method may further comprise the step of generating a third spectrum by at least
one further LED, the third spectrum being different from the first spectrum and the
second spectrum.
[0060] The at least one further LED may have a chromaticity to the right of the 2300 Kelvin
point of a Planckian locus on a conventional chromaticity chart.
[0061] The at least one further LED may include at least one amber LED.
[0062] The method may further comprise the step of controlling a first intensity of the
at least one first white LED having the first spectrum, and a second intensity of
the at least one second white LED having the second spectrum.
[0063] The method may further comprise the steps of: measuring at least color characteristics
of generated light, and calibrating the generated light based on the measured color
characteristics.
[0064] Embodiments of the present invention relates to systems and methods for generating
and/or modulating illumination conditions to generate light of a desired and controllable
color, for creating lighting fixtures for producing light in desirable and reproducible
colors, and for modifying the color temperature or color shade of light produced by
a lighting fixture within a prespecified range after a lighting fixture is constructed.
In one embodiment, LED lighting units capable of generating light of a range of colors
are used to provide light or supplement ambient light to afford lighting conditions
suitable for a wide range of applications.
[0065] Disclosed is a first embodiment which comprises a lighting fixture for generating
white light including a plurality of component illumination sources (such as LEDs),
producing electromagnetic radiation of at least two different spectrums (including
embodiments with exactly two or exactly three), each of the spectrums having a maximum
spectral peak outside the region 510 rim to 570 nm, the illumination sources mounted
on a mounting allowing the spectrums to mix so that the resulting spectrum is substantially
continuous in the photopic response of the human eye and/or in the wavelengths from
400 run to 700 ran.
[0066] In an embodiment, the lighting fixture can include illumination sources that are
not LEDs possibly with a maximum spectral peak within the region 510 nm to 570 nm.
In another embodiment the fixture can produce white light within a range of color
temperatures such as, but not limited to, the range 500K to 10,000K and the range
2300 K to 4500 K. The specific color in the range may be controlled by a controller.
In an embodiment the fixture contains a filter on at least one of the illumination
sources which may be selected, possibly from a range of filters, to allow the fixture
to produce a particular range of colors. The lighting fixture may also include in
one embodiment illumination sources with wavelengths outside the above discussed 400
nm to 700 nm range.
[0067] In another embodiment, the lighting fixture can comprise a plurality of LEDs producing
three spectrums of electromagnetic radiation with maximum spectral peaks outside the
region of 530 nm, to 570 nm (such as 450 nm and/or 592 nm) where the additive interference
of the spectrums results in white light. The lighting fixture may produce white light
within a range of color temperatures such as, but not limited to, the range 500K to
10,000K and the range 2300 K to 4500 K. The lighting fixture may include a controller
and/or a processor for controlling the intensities of the LEDs to produce various
color temperatures in the range.
[0068] Another embodiment comprises a lighting fixture to be used in a lamp designed to
take fluorescent tubes the lighting fixture having at least one component illumination
source (often two or more) such as LEDs mounted on a mounting, and having a connector
on the mounting that can couple to a fluorescent lamp and receive power from the lamp.
It also contains a control or electrical circuit to enable the ballast voltage of
the lamp to be used to power or control the LEDs. This control circuit could include
a processor, and/or could control the illumination provided by the fixture based on
the power provided to the lamp. The lighting fixture, in one embodiment, is contained
in a housing, the housing could be generally cylindrical in shape, could contain a
filter, and/or could be partially transparent or translucent. The fixture could produce
white, or other colored, light.
[0069] Another embodiment comprises a lighting fixture for generating white light including
a plurality of component illumination sources (such as LEDs, illumination devices
containing a phosphor, or LEDs containing a phosphor), including component illumination
sources producing spectrums of electromagnetic radiation. The component illumination
source being mounted on a mounting designed to allow the spectrums to mix and form
a resulting spectrum, wherein the resulting spectrum has intensity greater than background
noise at its lowest valley. The lowest spectral valley within the visible range can
also have an intensity of at least 5%, 10%, 25%, 50%, or 75% of the intensity of its
maximum spectral peak. The lighting fixture may be able to generate white light at
a range of color temperatures and may include a controller and/or processor for enabling
the selection of a particular color in that range.
[0070] Another embodiment of a lighting fixture could include a plurality of component illumination
sources (such as LEDs), the component illumination sources producing electromagnetic
radiation of at least two different spectrums, the illumination sources being mounted
on a mounting designed to allow the spectrums to mix and form a resulting spectrum,
wherein the resulting spectrum does not have a spectral valley at a longer wavelength
than the maximum spectral peak within the photopic response of the human eye and/or
in the area from 400 nm to 700 nm.
[0071] Another embodiment comprises a method for generating white light including the steps
of mounting a plurality of component illumination sources producing electromagnetic
radiation of at least two different spectrums in such a way as to mix the spectrums;
and choosing the spectrums in such a way that the mix of the spectrums has intensity
greater than background noise at its lowest spectral valley.
[0072] Another embodiment comprises a system for controlling illumination conditions including,
a lighting fixture for providing illumination of any of a range of colors, the lighting
fixture being constructed of a plurality of component illumination sources (such as
LEDs and/or potentially of three different colors), a processor coupled to the lighting
fixture for controlling the lighting fixture, and a controller coupled to the processor
for specifying illumination conditions to be provided by the lighting fixture. The
controller could be computer hardware or computer software; a sensor such as, but
not limited to a photodiode, a radiometer, a photometer, a colorimeter, a spectral
radiometer, a camera; or a manual interface such as, but not limited to, a slider,
a dial, a joystick, a trackpad, or a trackball. The processor could include a memory
(such as a database) of predetermined color conditions and/or an interface-providing
mechanism for providing a user interface potentially including a color spectrum, a
color temperature spectrum, or a chromaticity diagram.
[0073] In another embodiment the system could include a second source of illumination such
as, but not limited to, a florescent bulb, an incandescent bulb, a mercury vapor lamp,
a sodium vapor lamp, an arc discharge lamp, sunlight, moonlight, candlelight, an LED
display system, an LED, or a lighting system controlled by pulse width modulation.
The second source could be used by the controller to specify illumination conditions
for the lighting fixture based on the illumination of the lighting fixture and the
second source of illumination and/or the combined light from the lighting fixture
and the second source could be a desired color temperature.
[0074] Another embodiment comprises a method with steps including generating light having
color and brightness using a lighting fixture capable of generating light of any of
a range of colors, measuring illumination conditions, and modulating the color or
brightness of the generated light to achieve a target illumination condition. The
measuring of illumination conditions could include detecting color characteristics
of the illumination conditions using a light sensor such as, but not limited to, a
photodiode, a radiometer, a photometer, a colorimeter, a spectral radiometer, or a
camera; visually evaluating illumination conditions, and modulating the color or brightness
of the generated light includes varying the color or brightness of the generated light
using a manual interface; or measuring illumination conditions including detecting
color characteristics of the illumination conditions using a light sensor, and modulating
the color or brightness of the generated light including varying the color or brightness
of the generated light using a processor until color characteristics of the illumination
conditions detected by the light sensor match color characteristics of the target
illumination conditions. The method could include selecting a target illumination
condition such as, but not limited to, selecting a target color temperature and/or
providing an interface comprising a depiction of a color range and selecting a color
within the color range. The method could also have steps for providing a second source
of illumination, such as, but not limited to, a fluorescent bulb, an incandescent
bulb, a mercury vapor lamp, a sodium vapor lamp, an arc discharge lamp, sunlight,
moonlight, candlelight, an LED lighting system, an LED, or a lighting system controlled
by pulse width modulation. The method could measure illumination conditions including
detecting light generated by the lighting fixture and by the second source of illumination.
[0075] In another embodiment modulating the color or brightness of the generated light includes
varying the illumination conditions to achieve a target color temperature or the lighting
fixture could comprise one of a plurality of lighting fixtures, capable of generating
a range of colors.
[0076] In yet another embodiment there is a method for designing a lighting fixture comprising,
selecting a desired range of colors to be produced by the lighting fixture, choosing
a selected color of light to be produced by the lighting fixture when the lighting
fixture is at maximum intensity, and designing the lighting fixture from a plurality
of illumination sources (such as LEDs) such that the lighting fixture can produce
the range of colors, and produces the selected color when at maximum intensity.
Brief Description of the Figures
[0077] The following figures depict certain illustrative embodiments of the invention in
which like reference numerals refer to like elements. These depicted embodiments are
to be understood as illustrative of the invention and not as limiting in any way.
The invention will be appreciated more fully from the following further description
thereof, with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
FIG. 1 is a chromaticity diagram including the black body locus.
FIG. 2 depicts an embodiment of a lighting fixture suitable for use in this invention.
FIG. 3 depicts the use of multiple lighting fixtures according to one embodiment of
the invention.
FIG. 4 depicts an embodiment of a housing for use in one embodiment of this invention.
FIGS. 5a and 5b depict another embodiment of a housing for use in one embodiment of
this invention.
FIG. 6 depicts an embodiment of a computer interface enabling a user to design a lighting
fixture capable of producing a desired spectrum.
FIG. 7 shows an embodiment for calibrating or controlling the light fixture of the
invention using a sensor.
FIG. 8a shows a general embodiment of the control of a lighting fixture of this invention.
FIG. 8b shows one embodiment of the control of a lighting fixture of this invention
in conjunction with a second source of light.
FIG. 9 shows an embodiment for controlling a light fixture of the invention using
a computer interface.
FIG. 10a shows another embodiment for controlling a lighting fixture of this invention
using a manual control.
FIG. 10b depicts a close up of a control unit such as the one used in FIG. 10a.
FIG. 11 shows an embodiment of a control system which enables multiple lighting control
to simulate an environment.
FIG. 12 depicts the CIE spectral luminosity function Vλ which indicates the receptivity
of the human eye.
FIG. 13 depicts spectral distributions of black body sources at 5,000 K and 2,500
K.
FIG. 14 depicts one embodiment of a nine LED white light source.
FIG. 15a depicts the output of one embodiment of a lighting fixture comprising nine
LEDs and producing 5,000 K white light.
FIG. 15b depicts the output of one embodiment of a lighting fixture comprising nine
LEDs and producing 2,500 K white light.
FIG. 16 depicts one embodiment of the component spectrums of a three LED light fixture.
FIG. 17a depicts the output of one embodiment of a lighting fixture comprising three
LEDs and producing 5,000 K white light.
FIG. 17b depicts the output of one embodiment of a lighting fixture comprising three
LEDs and producing 2,500 K white light.
FIG. 18 depicts the spectrum of a white Nichia LED, NSP510 BS (bin A).
FIG. 19 depicts the spectrum of a white Nichia LED, NSP510 BS (bin C).
FIG. 20 depicts the spectral transmission of one embodiment of a high pass filter.
FIG. 21a depicts the spectrum of FIG. 18 and the shifted spectrum from passing the
spectrum of FIG. 18 through the high pass filter in FIG. 20.
FIG. 21b depicts the spectrum of FIG. 19 and the shifted spectrum from passing the
spectrum of FIG. 19 through the high pass filter in FIG. 20.
FIG. 22 is a chromaticity map showing the black body locus (white line) enlarged on
a portion of temperature between 2,300 K and 4,500 K. Also shown is the light produced
by two LEDs in one embodiment of the invention.
FIG. 23 is the chromaticity map further showing the gamut of light produced by three
LEDs in one embodiment of the invention.
FIG. 24 shows a graphical comparison of the CRI of a lighting fixture of the invention
compared to existing white light sources.
FIG. 25 shows the luminous output of a lighting fixture of the invention at various
color temperatures.
FIG. 26a depicts the spectrum of one embodiment of a white light fixture according
to the invention producing light at 2300K.
FIG. 26b depicts the spectrum of one embodiment of a white light fixture producing
light at 4500K.
FIG. 27 is a diagram of the spectrum of a compact fluorescent light fixture with the
spectral luminosity function as a dotted line.
FIG. 28 shows a lamp for using fluorescent tubes as in known in the art.
FIG. 29 depicts one possible LED lighting fixture which could be used to replace a
fluorescent tube.
FIG. 30 depicts one embodiment of how a series of filters could be used to enclose
different portions of the black body locus.
Detailed Description of the Illustrated Embodiments
[0078] The description below pertains to several illustrative embodiments of the invention.
Although many variations of the invention may be envisioned by one skilled in the
art, such variations and improvements are intended to fall within the scope of this
disclosure. Thus, the scope of the invention is not to be limited in any way by the
disclosure below.
[0079] As used in this document, the following terms generally have the following meanings;
however, these definitions are in no way intended to limit the scope of the term as
would be understood by one of skill in the art.
[0080] The term "LED" generally includes light emitting diodes of all types and also includes,
but is riot limited to, light emitting polymers, semiconductor dies that produce light
in response to a current, organic LEDs, electron luminescent strips, super luminescent
diodes (SLDs) and other such devices. The term LEDs does not restrict the physical
or electrical packaging of any of the above and that packaging could include, but
is not limited to, surface mount, chip-on-board, or T-package mount LEDs.
[0081] "Illumination source" includes all illumination sources, including, but not limited
to, LEDs; incandescent sources including filament lamps; pyro-luminescent sources
such as flames; candle-luminescent sources such as gas mantles and carbon arc radiation
sources; photo-luminescent sources including gaseous discharges; fluorescent sources;
phosphorescence sources; lasers; electro-luminescent sources such as electro-luminescent
lamps; cathode luminescent sources using electronic satiation; and miscellaneous luminescent
sources including galvano-luminescent sources, crystallo-luminescent sources, kine-luminescent
sources, thermo-luminescent sources, tribo-luminescent sources, sono-luminescent sources,
and radio-luminescent sources. Illumination sources may also include luminescent polymers.
An illumination source can produce electromagnetic radiation within the visible spectrum,
outside the visible spectrum, or a combination of both. A component illumination source
is any illumination source that is part of a lighting fixture.
[0082] "Lighting fixture" or "fixture" is any device or housing containing at least one
illumination source for the purposes of providing illumination.
[0083] "Color," "temperature" and "spectrum" are used interchangeably within this document
unless otherwise indicated. The three terms generally refer to the resultant combination
of wavelengths of light that result in the light produced by a lighting fixture. That
combination of wavelengths defines a color or temperature of the light. Color is generally
used for light which is not white while temperature is for light that is white, but
either term could be used for any type of light. A white light has a color and a non-white
light could have a temperature. A spectrum will generally refer to the spectral composition
of a combination of the individual wavelengths, while a color or temperature will
generally refer to the human perceived properties of that light. However, the above
usages are not intended to limit the scope of these terms.
[0084] The recent advent of colored LEDs bright enough to provide illumination has prompted
a revolution in illumination technology because of the ease with which the color and
brightness of these light sources may be modulated. One such modulation method is
discussed in US Patent 6,016,038 the entire disclosure of which is herein incorporated
by reference. The systems and methods described herein discuss how to use and build
LED light fixtures or systems, or other light fixtures or systems utilizing component
illumination sources. These systems have certain advantages over other lighting fixtures.
In particular, the systems disclosed herein enable previously unknown control in the
light which can be produced by a lighting fixture. In particular, the following disclosure
discusses systems and methods for the predetermination of the range of light, and
type of light, that can be produced by a lighting fixture and the systems and methods
for utilizing the predetermined range of that lighting fixture in a variety of applications.
[0085] To understand these systems and methods it is first useful to understand a lighting
fixture which could be built and used in embodiments of this invention. FIG. 2 depicts
one embodiment of a lighting module which could be used in one embodiment of the invention,
a lighting fixture (300) is depicted in block diagram format. The lighting fixture
(300) includes two components, a processor (316) and a collection of component illumination
sources (320), which is depicted in FIG. 2 as an array of light emitting diodes. In
one embodiment of the invention, the collection of component illumination sources
comprises at least two illumination sources that produce different spectrums of light.
The collection of component illumination sources (320) are arranged within said lighting
fixture (300) on a mounting (350) in such a way that the light from the different
component illumination sources is allowed to mix to produce a resultant spectrum of
light which is basically the additive spectrum of the different component illumination
sources. In FIG. 2, this is done my placing the component illumination sources (320)
in a generally circular area, it could also be done in other any other manner as would
be understood by one of skill in the art, such as a line of component illumination
sources, or another geometric shape of component illumination sources. The term "processor"
is used herein to refer to any method or system for processing, for example, those
that process in response to a signal or data and/or those that process autonomously.
A processor should be understood to encompass microprocessors, microcontrollers, programmable
digital signal processors, integrated circuits, computer software, computer hardware,
electrical circuits, application specific integrated circuits, programmable logic
devices, programmable gate arrays, programmable array logic, personal computers, chips,
and any other combination of discrete analog, digital, or programmable components,
or other devices capable of providing processing functions.
[0086] The collection of illumination sources (320) is controlled by the processor (316)
to produce controlled illumination. In particular, the processor (316) controls the
intensity of different color individual LEDs in the array of LEDs, composing the collection
of illumination sources (320) to produce illumination in any color within a range
bounded by the spectra of the individual LEDs and any filters or other spectrum-altering
devices associated therewith. Instantaneous changes in color, strobing and other effects,
can also be produced with lighting fixtures such as the light module (300) depicted
in FIG. 2. The lighting fixture (300) may be made capable of receiving power and data
from an external source in one embodiment of the invention. The receipt of such data
being over data line (330) and power over power line (340). The lighting fixture (300),
through the processor (316), may be made to provide the various functions ascribed
to the various embodiments of the invention disclosed herein. In another embodiment,
the processor (316) may be replaced by hard wiring or another type of control whereby
the lighting fixture (300) produces only a single color of light.
[0087] Referring to FIG. 3, the lighting fixture (300) may be constructed to be used either
alone or as part of a set of such lighting fixtures (300). An individual lighting
fixture (300) or a set of lighting fixtures (300) can be provided with a data connection
(350) to one or more external devices, or, in certain embodiments of the invention,
with other light modules (300). As used herein, the term "data connection" should
be understood to encompass any system for delivering data, such as a network, a data
bus, a wire, a transmitter and receiver, a circuit, a video tape, a compact disc,
a DVD disc, a video tape, an audio tape, a computer tape, a card, or the like. A data
connection may thus include any system or method to deliver data by radio frequency,
ultrasonic, auditory, infrared, optical, microwave, laser, electromagnetic, or other
transmission or connection method or system. That is, any use of the electromagnetic
spectrum or other energy transmission mechanism could provide a data connection as
disclosed herein. In an embodiment of the invention, the lighting fixture (300) may
be equipped with a transmitter, receiver, or both to facilitate communication, and
the processor (316) may be programmed to control the communication capabilities in
a conventional manner. The light fixtures (300) may receive data over the data connection
(350) from a transmitter (352), which may be a conventional transmitter of a communications
signal, or may be part of a circuit or network connected to the lighting fixture (300).
That is, the transmitter (352) should be understood to encompass any device or method
for transmitting data to the light fixture (300). The transmitter (352) may be linked
to or be part of a control device (354) that generates control data for controlling
the light modules (300). In one embodiment of the invention, the control device (354)
is a computer, such as a laptop computer. The control data may be in any form suitable
for controlling the processor (316) to control the collection of component illumination
sources (320). In one embodiment of the invention, the control data is formatted according
to the DMX-512 protocol, and conventional software for generating DMX-512 instructions
is used on a laptop or personal computer as the control device (354) to control the
lighting fixtures (300). The lighting fixture (300) may also be provided with memory
for storing instructions to control the processor (316), so that the lighting fixture
(300) may act in stand alone mode according to pre-programmed instructions.
[0088] The foregoing embodiments of a lighting fixture (300) will generally reside in one
of any number of different housings. Such, housing is, however, not necessary, and
the lighting fixture (300) could be used without a housing to still form a lighting
fixture. A housing may provide for lensing of the resultant light produced and may
provide protection of the lighting fixture (300) and its components. A housing may
be included in a lighting fixture as this term is used throughout this document. FIG.
4 shows an exploded view of one embodiment of a lighting fixture of the present invention.
The depicted embodiment comprises a substantially cylindrical body section (362),
a lighting fixture (364), a conductive sleeve (368), a power module (372), a second
conductive sleeve (374), and an enclosure plate (378). It is to be assumed here that
the lighting fixture (364) and the power module (372) contain the electrical structure
and software of lighting fixture (300) a different power module and lighting fixture
(300) as known to the art, or as described in United States Patent Application Ser.
No. 09/215,624 the entire disclosure of which is herein incorporated by reference.
Screws (382), (384), (386), (388) allow the entire apparatus to be mechanically connected.
Body section (362), conductive sleeves (364) and (374) and enclosure plate (378) are
preferably made from a material that conducts heat, such as aluminum. Body section
(362) has a emission end (361), a reflective interior portion (not shown) and an illumination
end (363). Lighting module (364) is mechanically affixed to said illumination end
(363). Said emission end (361) may be open, or, in one embodiment may have affixed
thereto a filter (391). Filter (391) may be a clear filter, a diffusing filter, a
colored filter, or any other type of filter known to the art. In one embodiment, the
filter will be permanently attached to the body section (362), but in other embodiments,
the filter could be removably attached. In a still further embodiment, the filter
(391), need not be attached to the emission end (361) of body portion (362) but may
be inserted anywhere in the direction of light emission from the lighting fixture
(364). Lighting fixture (364) may be disk-shaped with two sides. The illumination
side (not shown) comprises a plurality of component light sources which produce a
predetermined selection of different spectrums of light. The connection side may hold
an electrical connector male pin assembly (392). Both the illumination side and the
connection side can be coated with aluminum surfaces to better allow the conduction
of heat outward from the plurality of component light sources to the body section
(362). Likewise, power module (372) is generally disk shaped and may have every available
surface covered with aluminum for the same reason. Power module (372) has a connection
side holding an electrical connector female pin assembly (394) adapted to fit the
pins from assembly (392). Power module (372) has a power terminal side holding a terminal
(398) for connection to a source of power such as an AC or DC electrical source. Any
standard AC or DC jack may be used, as appropriate.
[0089] Interposed between lighting fixture (362) and power module (372) is a conductive
aluminum sleeve (368), which substantially encloses the space between modules (362)
and (372). As shown, a disk-shaped enclosure plate (378) and screws (382), (384),
(386) and (388) can seal all of the components together, and conductive sleeve (374)
is thus interposed between enclosure plate (378) and power module (372). Alternatively,
a method of connection other than screws (382), (384), (386), and (388) may be used
to seal the structure together. Once sealed together as a unit, the lighting fixture
(362) may be connected to a data network as described above and may be mounted in
any convenient manner to illuminate an area.
[0090] FIGS. 5a and 5b show an alternative lighting fixture including a housing that could
be used in another embodiment of the invention. The depicted embodiment comprises
a lower body section (5001), an upper body section (5003) and a lighting fixture (5005).
Again, the lighting fixture can contain the lighting fixture (300), a different lighting
fixture known to the art, or a lighting fixture described anywhere else in this document.
The lighting fixture (5005) shown here is designed to have a linear track of component
illumination devices (in this case LEDs (5007)) although such a design is not necessary.
Such a design is desirable for an embodiment of the invention, however. In addition,
the linear track of component illumination sources in depicted in FIG 5a as a single
track, multiple linear tracks could be used as would be understood by one of skill
in the art. In one embodiment of the invention, the upper body section (5003) can
comprises a filter as was discussed above, or may be translucent, transparent, semi-translucent,
or semitransparent. Further shown in FIG 5a is the optional holder (5010) which may
be used to hold the lighting fixture (5000). This holder (5010) comprises clip attachments
(5012) which may be used to frictionally engage the lighting fixture (5000) to enable
a particular alignment of lighting fixture (5000) relative to the holder (5010). The
mounting also contains attachment plate (5014) which may be attached to the clip attachments
(5012) by any type of attachment known to the art whether permanent, removable, or
temporary. Attachment plate (5014) may then be used to attach the entire apparatus
to a surface such as, but not limited to, a wall or ceiling.
[0091] In one embodiment, the lighting fixture (5000) is generally cylindrical in shape
when assembled (as shown in FIG. 5b) and therefore can move or "roll" on a surface.
In addition, in one embodiment, the lighting fixture (5000) only can emit light through
the upper body section (5003) and not through the lower body section (5001). Without
a holder (5010), directing the light emitted from such a lighting fixture (5000) could
be difficult and motion could cause the directionality of the light to undesirably
alter.
[0092] In one embodiment of the invention, it is recognized, that prespecified ranges of
available colors may be desirable and it may also be desirable to build lighting fixtures
in such a way as to maximize the illumination of the lighting apparatus for particular
color therein. This is best shown through a numerical example. Let us assume that
a lighting fixture contains 30 component illumination sources in three different wavelengths,
primary red, primary blue, and primary green (such as individual LEDs). In addition,
let us assume that each of these illumination sources produces the same intensity
of light, they just produce at different colors. Now, there are multiple different
ways that the thirty illumination sources for any given lighting fixture can be chosen.
There could be 10 of each of the illumination sources, or alternatively there could
be 30 primary blue colored illumination sources. It should be readily apparent that
these light fixtures would be useful for different types of lighting. The second light
apparatus produces more intense primary blue light (there are 30 sources of blue light)
than the first light source (which only has 10 primary blue light sources, the remaining
20 light sources have to be off to produce primary blue light), but is limited to
only producing primary blue light. The second light fixture can produce more colors
of light, because the spectrums of the component illumination sources can be mixed
in different percentages, but cannot produce as intense blue light. It should be readily
apparent from this example that the selection of the individual component illumination
sources can change the resultant spectrum of light the fixture can produce. It should
also be apparent that the same selection of components can produce lights which can
produce the same colors, but can produce those colors at different intensities. To
put this another way, the full-on point of a lighting fixture (the point where all
the component illumination sources are at maximum) will be different depending on
what the component illumination sources are.
[0093] A lighting system may accordingly be specified using a full-on point and a range
of selectable colors. This system has may potential applications such as, but not
limited to, retail display lighting and theater lighting. Often times numerous lighting
fixtures of a plurality of different colors are used to present a stage or other area
with interesting shadows and desirable features. Problems can arise, however, because
lamps used regularly have similar intensities before lighting filters are used to
specify colors of those fixtures, due to differences in transmission of the various
filters (for instance blue filters often loose significantly more intensity than red
filters), lighting fixtures must have their intensity controlled to compensate. For
this reason, lighting fixtures are often operated at less than their full capability
(to allow mixing) requiring additional lighting fixtures to be used. With the lighting
fixtures of the instant invention, the lighting fixtures can be designed which produce
particular colors at identical intensities of chosen colors when operating at their
full potential, this can allow easier mixing of the resultant light, and can result
in more options for a lighting design scheme.
[0094] Such a system enables the person building or designing lighting fixtures to generate
lights that can produce a pre-selected range of colors, while still maximizing the
intensity of light at certain most desirable color. These lighting fixtures would
therefore allow a user to select certain color(s) of lighting fixtures for an application
independent of relative intensity. The lighting fixtures can then be built so that
the intensities at these colors are the same. Only the spectrum is altered. It also
enables a user to select lighting fixtures that produce a particular high-intensity
color of light, and also have the ability to select nearby colors of light in a range.
[0095] The range of colors which can be produced by the lighting fixture can be specified
instead of, or in addition to, the full-on point. The lighting fixture can then be
provided with control systems that enable a user of the lighting fixture to intuitively
and easily select a desired color from the available range.
[0096] One embodiment of such a system works by storing the spectrums of each of the component
illumination sources. In this example embodiment, the illumination sources are LEDs.
By selecting different component LEDs with different spectrums, the designer can define
the color range of a lighting fixture. An easy way to visualize the color range is
to use the CIE diagram which shows the entire lighting range of all colors of light
which can exist. One embodiment of a system provides a light-authoring interface such
as an interactive computer interface. FIG. 6 shows an embodiment of an interactive
computer interface enabling a user to see a CIE diagram (508) on which is displayed
the spectrum of color a lighting fixture can produce. In FIG. 6 individual LED spectra
are saved in memory and can be recalled from memory to be used for calculating a combined
color control area. The interface has several channels (502) for selecting LEDs. Once
selected, varying the intensity slide bar (504) can change the relative number of
LEDs of that type in the resultant lighting fixture. The color of each LED represented
on a color chart such as a CIE diagram (508) as a point (for example, point (506)).
A second LED can be selected on a different channel to create a second point (for
example, point (509)) on the CIE chart. A line connecting these two points represents
the extent that the color from these two LEDs can be mixed to produce additional colors.
When a third and fourth channel are used, an area (510) can be plotted on the CIE
diagram representing the possible combinations of the selected LEDs. Although the
area (510) shown here is a polygon of four sides it would be understood by one of
skill in the art that the area (510) could be a point line or a polygon with any number
of sides depending on the LEDs chosen.
[0097] In addition to specifying the color range, the intensities at any given color can
be calculated from the LED spectrums. By knowing the number of LEDs for a given color
and the maximum intensity of any of these LEDs, the total light output at a particular
color is calculated. A diamond or other symbol (512) may be plotted on the diagram
to represent the color when all of the LEDs are on full brightness or the point may
represent the present intensity setting.
[0098] Because a lighting fixture can be made of a plurality of component illumination sources,
when designing a lighting fixture, a color that is most desirable can be selected,
and a lighting fixture can be designed that maximizes the intensity of that color.
Alternatively, a fixture may be chosen and the point of maximum intensity can be determined
from this selection. A tool may be provided to allow calculation of a particular color
at a maximum intensity. FIG. 6 shows such a tool as symbol (512), where the CIE diagram
has been placed on a computer and calculations can be automatically performed to compute
a total number of LEDs necessary to produce a particular intensity, as well as the
ratio of LEDs of different spectrums to produce particular colors. Alternatively,
a selection of LEDs may be chosen and the point of maximum intensity determined, both
directions of calculation are included in embodiments of this invention.
[0099] In FIG. 6 as the number of LEDs are altered, the maximum intensity points move so
that a user can design a light which has a maximum intensity at a desired point.
[0100] Therefore the system in one embodiment of the invention contains a collection of
the spectrums of a number of different LEDs, provides an interface for a user to select
LEDs that will produce a range of color that encloses the desirable area, and allows
a user to select the number of each LED type such that when the unit is on full, a
target color is produced. In an alternative embodiment, the user would simply need
to provide a desired spectrum, or color and intensity, and the system could produce
a lighting fixture which could generate light according to the requests.
[0101] Once the light has been designed, in one embodiment, it is further desirable to make
the light's spectrum easily accessible to the lighting fixture's user. As was discussed
above, the lighting fixture may have been chosen to have a particular array of illumination
sources such that a particular color is obtained at maximum intensity. However, there
may be other colors that can be produced by varying the relative intensities of the
component illumination sources. The spectrum of the lighting fixture can be controlled
within the predetermined range specified by the area (510). To control the lighting
color within the range, it is recognized that each color within the polygon is the
additive mix of the component LEDs with each color contained in the components having
a varied intensity. That is to move from one point in FIG. 6 to a second point in
FIG. 6, it is necessary to alter the relative intensities of the component LEDs. This
may be less than intuitive for the final user of the lighting fixture who simply wants
a particular color, or a particular transition between colors and does not know the
relative intensities to shift to. This is particularly true if the LEDs used do not
have spectra with a single well determined peak of color. A lighting fixture may be
able to generate 100 shades of orange, but how to get to each of those shades may
require control.
[0102] In order to be able to carry out such control of the spectrum of the light, it is
desirable in one embodiment to create a system and method for linking the color of
the light to a control device for controlling the light's color. Since a lighting
fixture can be custom designed, it may, in one embodiment, be desirable to have the
intensities of each of the component illumination sources "mapped" to a desirable
resultant spectrum of light and allowing a point on the map to be selected by the
controller. That is, a method whereby, with the specification of a particular color
of light by a controller, the lighting fixture can turn on the appropriate illumination
sources at the appropriate intensity to create that color of light. In one embodiment,
the lighting fixture design software shown in FIG. 6 can be configured in such a way
that it can generate a mapping between a desirable color that can be produced (within
the area (510)), and the intensities of the component LEDs that make up the lighting
fixture. This mapping will generally take one of two forms: 1) a lookup table, or
2) a parametric equation, although other forms could be used as would be known to
one of skill in the art. Software on board the lighting fixture (such as in the processor
(316) above) or on board a lighting controller, such as one of those known to the
art, or described above, can be configured to accept the input of a user in selecting
a color, and producing a desired light.
[0103] This mapping may be performed by a variety of methods. In one embodiment, statistics
are known about each individual component illumination sources within the lighting
fixture, so mathematical calculations may be made to produce a relationship between
the resulting spectrum and the component spectrums. Such calculations would be well
understood by one of skill in the art.
[0104] In another embodiment, an external calibration system may be used. One layout of
such a system is disclosed in FIG 7. Here the calibration system includes a lighting
fixture (2010) that is connected to a processor (2020) and which receives input from
a light sensor or transducer (2034). The processor (2020) may be processor (316) or
may be an additional or alternative processor. The sensor (2034) measures color characteristics,
and optionally brightness, of the light output by the lighting fixture (2010) and/or
the ambient light, and the processor (2020) varies the output of the lighting fixture
(2010). Between these two devices modulating the brightness or color of the output
and measuring the brightness and color of the output, the lighting fixture can be
calibrated where the relative settings of the component illumination sources (or processor
settings(2020)) are directly related to the output of the fixture (2010) (the light
sensor (2034) settings). Since the sensor (2034) can detect the net spectrum produced
by the lighting fixture, it can be used to provide a direct mapping by relating the
output of the lighting fixture to the settings of the component LEDs.
[0105] Once the mapping has been completed, other methods or systems may be used for the
light fixture's control. Such methods or systems will enable the determination of
a desired color, and the production by the lighting fixture of that color.
[0106] FIG. 8a shows one embodiment of the system (2000) where a control system (2030) may
be used in conjunction with a lighting fixture (2010) to enable control of the lighting
fixture (2010). The control system (2030)may be automatic, may accept input from a
user, or may be any combination of these two. The system (2000) may also include a
processor (2020) which may be processor (316) or another processor to enable the light
to change color.
[0107] FIG. 9 shows a more particular embodiment of a system (2000) a user computer interface
control system (2032) with which a user may select a desired color of light is used
as a control system (2030). This may be the user interface (401) or could be a separate
interface. The interface could enable any type of user interaction in the determination
of color. For example, the interface may provide a palette, chromaticity diagram,
or other color scheme from which a user may select a color, e.g., by clicking with
a mouse on a suitable color or color temperature on the interface, changing a variable
using a keyboard, etc. The interface may include a display screen, a computer keyboard,
a mouse, a trackpad, or any other suitable system for interaction between the processor
and a user. In certain embodiments, the system may permit a user to select a set of
colors for repeated use, capable of being rapidly accessed, e.g., by providing a simple
code, such as a single letter or digit, or by selecting one of a set of preset colors
through an interface as described above. In certain embodiments, the interface may
also include a look-up table capable of correlating color names with approximate shades,
converting color coordinates from one system (e.g., RGB, CYM, YIQ, YUV, HSV, HLS,
XYZ, etc.) to a different color coordinate system or to a display or illumination
color, or any other conversion function for assisting a user in manipulating the illumination
color. The interface may also include one or more closed-form equations for converting
from, for example, a user-specified color temperature (associated with a particular
color of white light) into suitable signals for the different component illumination
sources of the lighting fixture (2010). The system may further include a sensor as
discussed below for providing information to the processor (2020), e.g., for automatically
calibrating the color of emitted light of the lighting fixture (2010) to achieve the
color selected by the user on the interface.
[0108] In another embodiment, a manual control system (2036) is used in the system (2000),
as depicted in FIG. 10a, such as a dial, slider, switch, multipole switch, console,
other lighting control unit, or any other controller or combination of controllers
to permit a user to modify the illumination conditions until the illumination conditions
or the appearance of a subject being illuminated is desirable. For example, a dial
or slider may be used in a system to modulate the net color spectrum produced, the
illumination along the color temperature curve, or any other modulation of the color
of the lighting fixture.. Alternatively, a joystick, trackball, trackpad, mouse, thumb-wheel,
touch-sensitive surface, or a console with two or more sliders, dials, or other controls
may be used to modulate the color, temperature, or spectrum. These manual controls
may be used in conjunction with a computer interface control system (2032) as discussed
above, or may be used independently, possibly with related markings to enable a user
to scan through an available color range.
[0109] One such manual control system (2036) is in detail in FIG. 10b. The depicted control
unit features a dial marked to indicate a range of color temperatures, e.g., from
3000K to 10,500K. This device would be useful on a lighting fixture used to produce
a range of temperatures ("colors") of white light, such as the one discussed below.
It would be understood by one of skill in the art that broader, narrower, or overlapping
ranges may be employed, and a similar system could be employed to control lighting
fixtures that can produce light of a spectrum beyond white, or not including white.
A manual control system (2036) may be included as part of a processor controlling
an array of lighting units, coupled to a processor, e.g., as a peripheral component
of a lighting control system, disposed on a remote control capable of transmitting
a signal, such as an infrared or microwave signal, to a system controlling a lighting
unit, or employed or configured in any other manner, as will readily be understood
by one of skill in the art. Additionally, instead of a dial, a manual control system
(2036) may employ a slider, a mouse, or any other control or input device suitable
for use in the systems and methods described herein.
[0110] In another embodiment, the calibration system depicted in FIG. 7 may function as
a control system or as a portion of a control system. For instance a selected color
could be input by the user and the calibration system could measure the spectrum of
ambient light, compare the measured spectrum with the selected spectrum, adjust the
color of light produced by the lighting fixture (2010), and repeat the procedure to
minimize the difference between the desired spectrum and the measured spectrum. For
example, if the measured spectrum is deficient in red wavelengths when compared with
the target spectrum, the processor may increase the brightness of red LEDs in the
lighting fixture, decrease the brightness of blue and green LEDs in the lighting fixture,
or both, in order to minimize the difference between the measured spectrum and the
target spectrum and potentially also achieve a target brightness (i.e. such as the
maximum possible brightness of that color). The system could also be used to match
a color produced by a lighting fixture to a color existing naturally. For instance,
a film director could find light in a location where filming does not occur and measure
that light using the sensor, this could than provide the desired color which is to
be produced by the lighting fixture. In one embodiment, these tasks can be performed
simultaneously (potentially using two separate sensors). In a yet further embodiment,
the director can remotely measure a lighting condition with a sensor (2034) and store
that lighting condition on memory associated with that sensor (2034). The sensor's
memory may then be transferred at a later time to the processor (2020) which may set
the lighting fixture to mimic the light recorded. This allows a director to create
a "memory of desired lighting" which can be stored and recreated later by lighting
fixtures such as those described above.
[0111] The sensor (2034) used to measure the illumination conditions may be a photodiode,
a phototransistor, a photoresistor, a radiometer, a photometer, a colorimeter, a spectral
radiometer, a camera, a combination of two or more of the preceding devices, or any
other system capable of measuring the color or brightness of illumination conditions.
An example of a sensor may be the IL2000 SpectroCube Spectroradiometer offered for
sale by International Light Inc. although any other sensor may be used. A colorimeter
or spectral radiometer is advantageous because a number of wavelengths can be simultaneously
detected, permitting accurate measurements of color and brightness simultaneously.
A color temperature sensor which may be employed in the systems and methods described
herein is disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 5,521,708.
[0112] In embodiments wherein the sensor (2034) detects an image, e.g., includes a camera
or other video capture device, the processor (2020) may modulate the illumination
conditions with the lighting fixture (2010) until an illuminated object appears substantially
the same, e.g., of substantially the same color, as in a previously recorded image.
Such a system simplifies procedures employed by cinematographers, for example, attempting
to produce a consistent appearance of an object to promote continuity between scenes
of a film, or by photographers, for example, trying to reproduce lighting conditions
from an earlier shoot.
[0113] In certain embodiments, the lighting fixture (2010) may be used as the sole light
source, while in other embodiments, such as is depicted in FIG 8b, the lighting fixture
(2010) may be used in combination with a second source of light (2040), such as an
incandescent, fluorescent, halogen, other LED sources or component light sources (including
those with and without control), lights that are controlled with pulse width modulation,
sunlight, moonlight, candlelight, etc. This use can be to supplement the output of
the second source. For example, a fluorescent light emitting illumination weak in
red portions of the spectrum may be supplemented with an lighting fixture emitting
primarily red wavelengths to provide illumination conditions more closely resembling
natural sunlight. Similarly, such a system may also be useful in outdoor image capture
situations, because the color temperature of natural light varies as the position
of the sun changes. A lighting fixture (2010) may be used in conjunction with a sensor
(2034) as controller (2030) to compensate for changes in sunlight to maintain constant
illumination conditions for the duration of a session.
[0114] Any of the above systems could be deployed in the system disclosed in FIG 11. A lighting
system for a location may comprise a plurality of lighting fixtures (2301) which are
controllable by a central control system (2303). The light within the location (or
on a particular location such as the stage (2305) depicted here) is now desired to
mimic another type of light such as sunlight. A first sensor (2307) is taken outside
and the natural sunlight (2309) is measured and recorded. This recording is then provided
to central control system (2303). A second sensor (which may be the same sensor in
one embodiment) (2317) is present on the stage (2305). The central control system
(2309) now controls the intensity and color of the plurality of lighting fixtures
(2301) and attempts to match the input spectrum of said second sensor (2317) with
the prerecorded natural sunlight's (2309) spectrum. In this manner, interior lighting
design can be dramatically simplified as desired colors of light can be reproduced
or simulated in a closed setting. This can be in a theatre (as depicted here), or
in any other location such as a home, an office, a soundstage, a retail store, or
any other location where artificial lighting is used. Such a system could also be
used in conjunction with other secondary light sources to create a desired lighting
effect.
[0115] The above systems allow for the creation of lighting fixtures with virtually any
type of spectrum. It is often desirable to produce light that appears "natural" or
light which is a high-quality, especially white light.
[0116] A lighting fixture which produces white light according to the above invention can
comprise any collection of component illumination sources such that the area defined
by the illumination sources can encapsulate at least a portion of the black body curve.
The black body curve (104) in FIG. 1 is a physical construct that shows different
color white light with regards to the temperature of the white light. In a preferred
embodiment, the entire black body curve would be encapsulated allowing the lighting
fixture to produce any temperature of white light.
[0117] For a variable color white light with the highest possible intensity, a significant
portion of the black body curve may be enclosed. The intensity at different color
whites along the black body curve can then be simulated. The maximum intensity produced
by this light could be placed along the black body curve. By varying the number of
each color LED (in FIG. 6 red, blue, amber, and blue-green) it is possible to change
the location of the full on point (the symbol (512) in FIG. 6). For example, the full
on color could be placed at approximately 5400K (noon day sunlight shown by point
(106) in FIG. 1), but any other point could be used (two other points are shown in
FIG 1. corresponding to a fire glow and an incandescent bulb). Such a lighting apparatus
would then be able to produce 5400K light at a high intensity, in addition, the light
may adjust for differences in temperature (for instance cloudy sunlight) by moving
around in the defined area.
[0118] Although this system generates white light with a variable color temperature, it
is not necessarily a high quality white light source. A number of combinations of
colors of illumination sources can be chosen which enclose the black body curve, and
the quality of the resulting lighting fixtures may vary depending on the illumination
sources chosen.
[0119] Since white light is a mixture of different wavelengths of light, it is possible
to characterize white light based on the component colors of light that are used to
generate it. Red, green, and blue (RGB) can combine to form white; as can light blue,
amber, and lavender; or cyan, magenta and yellow. Natural white light (sunlight) contains
a virtually continuous spectrum of wavelengths across the human visible band (and
beyond). This can be seen by examining sunlight through a prism, or looking at a rainbow.
Many artificial white lights are technically white to the human eye, however, they
can appear quite different when shown on colored surfaces because they lack a virtually
continuous spectrum.
[0120] As an extreme example one could create a white light source using two lasers (or
other narrow band optical sources) with complimentary wavelengths. These sources would
have an extremely narrow spectral width perhaps 1 nm wide. To exemplify this, we will
choose wavelengths of 635 nm and 493 nm. These are considered complimentary since
they will additively combine to make light which the human eye perceives as white
light. The intensity levels of these two lasers can be adjusted to some ratio of powers
that will produce white light that appears to have a color temperature of 5000K. If
this source were directed at a white surface, the reflected light will appear as 5000K
white light.
[0121] The problem with this type of white light, is that it will appear extremely artificial
when shown on a colored surface. A colored surface (as opposed to colored light) is
produced because the surface absorbs and reflects different wavelengths of light.
If hit by white light comprising a full spectrum (light with all wavelengths of the
visible band at reasonable intensity), the surface will absorb and reflect perfectly.
However, the white light above does not provide the complete spectrum. To again use
an extreme example, if a surface only reflected light from 500 nm-550 nm it will appear
a fairly deep green in full-spectrum light, but will appear black (it absorbs all
the spectrums present) in the above described laser-generated artificial white light.
[0122] Further, since the CRI index relies on a limited number of observations, there are
mathematical loopholes in the method. Since the spectrums for CRI color samples are
known, it is a relatively straightforward exercise to determine the optimal wavelengths
and minimum numbers of narrow band sources needed to achieve a high CRI. This source
will fool the CRI measurement, but not the human observer. The CRI method is at best
an estimator of the spectrum that the human eye can see. An everyday example is the
modem compact fluorescent lamp. It has a fairly high CRI of 80 and a color temperature
of 2980K but still appears unnatural. The spectrum of a compact fluorescent is shown
in FIG. 27.
[0123] Due to the desirability of high-quality light (in particular high-quality white light)
that can be varied over different temperatures or spectrums, a further embodiment
of this invention comprises systems and method for generating a higher-quality white
light by mixing the electromagnetic radiation from a plurality of component illumination
sources such as LEDs. This is accomplished by choosing LEDs that provide a white light
that is targeted to the human eye's interpretation of light, as well as the mathematical
CRI index. That light can then be maximized in intensity using the above system. Further,
because the color temperature of the light can be controlled, this high quality white
light can therefore still have the control discussed above and can be a controllable,
high-quality, light which can produce high-quality light across a range of colors.
[0124] To produce a high-quality white light, it is necessary to examine the human eye's
ability to see light of different wavelengths and determine what makes a light high-quality.
In it's simplest definition, a high-quality white light provides low distortion to
colored objects when they are viewed under it. It therefore makes sense to begin by
examining a high-quality light based on what the human eye sees. Generally the highest
quality white light is considered to be sunlight or full-spectrum light, as this is
the only source of "natural" light. For the purposes of this disclosure, it will be
accepted that sunlight is a high-quality white light.
[0125] The sensitivity of the human eye is known as the Photopic response. The Photopic
response can be thought of as a spectral transfer function for the eye, meaning that
it indicates how much of each wavelength of light input is seen by the human observer.
This sensitivity can be expressed graphically as the spectral luminosity function
Vλ (501), which is represented in FIG. 12.
[0126] The eye's Photopic response is important since it can be used to describe the boundaries
on the problem of generating white light (or of any color of light). In one embodiment
of the invention, a high quality white light will need to comprise only what the human
eye can "see." In another embodiment of the invention, it can be recognized that high-quality
white light may contain electromagnetic radiation which cannot be seen by the human
eye but may result in a photobiological response. Therefore a high-quality white light
may include only visible light, or may include visible light and other electromagnetic
radiation which may result in a photobiological response. This will generally be electromagnetic
radiation less than 400 nm (ultraviolet light) or greater than 700 nm (infrared light).
[0127] Using the first part of the description, the source is not required to have any power
above 700 nm or below 400 nm since the eye has only minimal response at these wavelengths.
A high-quality source would preferably be substantially continuous between these wavelengths
(otherwise colors could be distorted) but can fall-off towards higher or lower wavelengths
due to the sensitivity of the eye. Further, the spectral distribution of different
temperatures of white light will be different. To illustrate this, spectral distributions
for two blackbody sources with temperatures of 5000K (601) and 2500K (603) are shown
in FIG. 13 along with the spectral luminosity function (501) from FIG. 12.
[0128] As seen in FIG. 13, the 5000K curve is smooth and centered about 555 nm with only
a slight fall-off in both the increasing and decreasing wavelength directions. The
2500K curve is heavily weighted towards higher wavelengths. This distribution makes
sense intuitively, since lower color temperatures appear to be yellow-to-reddish.
One point that arises from the observation of these curves, against the spectral luminosity
curve, is that the Photopic response of the eye is "filled." This means that every
color that is illuminated by one of these sources will be perceived by a human observer.
Any holes, i.e., areas with no spectral power, will make certain objects appear abnormal.
This is why many "white" light sources seem to disrupt colors. Since the blackbody
curves are continuous, even the dramatic change from 5000K to 2500K will only shift
colors towards red, making them appear warmer but not devoid of color. This comparison
shows that an important specification of any high-quality artificial light fixture
is a continuous spectrum across the photopic response of the human observer.
[0129] Having examined these relationships of the human eye, a fixture for producing controllable
high-quality white light would need to have the following characteristic. The light
has a substantially continuous spectrum over the wavelengths visible to the human
eye, with any holes or gaps located in the areas where the human eye is less responsive.
In addition, in order to make a high-quality white light controllable over a range
of temperatures, it would be desirable to produce a light spectrum which can have
relatively equal values of each wavelength of light, but can also make different wavelengths
dramatically more or less intense with regards to other wavelengths depending on the
color temperature desired. The clearest waveform which would have such control would
need to mirror the scope of the photopic response of the eye, while still being controllable
at the various different wavelengths.
[0130] As was discussed above, the traditional mixing methods which create white light can
create light which is technically "white" but still produces an abnormal appearance
to the human eye. The CRI rating for these values is usually extremely low or possibly
negative. This is because if there is not a wavelength of light present in the generation
of white light, it is impossible for an object of a color to reflect/absorb that wavelength.
In an additional case, since the CRI rating relies on eight particular color samples,
it is possible to get a high CRI, while not having a particularly high-quality light
because the white light functions well for those particular color samples specified
by the CRI rating. That is, a high CRI index could be obtained by a white light composed
of eight 1 nm sources which were perfectly lined up with the eight CRI color structures.
This would, however, not be a high-quality light source for illuminating other colors.
[0131] The fluorescent lamp shown in FIG. 27 provides a good example of a high CRI light
that is not high-quality. Although the light from a fluorescent lamp is white, it
is comprised of many spikes (such as (201) and (203)). The position of these spikes
has been carefully designed so that when measured using the CRI samples they yield
a high rating. In other words, these spikes fool the CRI calculation but not the human
observer. The result is a white light that is usable but not optimal (i.e., it appears
artificial). The dramatic peaks in the spectrum of a fluorescent light are also clear
in FIG. 27. These peaks are part of the reason that fluorescent light looks very artificial.
Even if light is produced within the spectral valleys, it is so dominated by the peaks
that a human eye has difficulty seeing it. A high-quality white light may be produced
according to this disclosure without the dramatic peaks and valleys of a florescent
lamp.
[0132] A spectral peak is the point of intensity of a particular color of light which has
less intensity at points immediately to either side of it. A maximum spectral peak
is the highest spectral peak within the region of interest. It is therefore possible
to have multiple peaks within a chosen portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, only
a single maximum peak, or to have no peaks at all. For instance, FIG. 12 in the region
500 nm to 510 nm has no spectral peaks because there is no point in that region that
has lower points on both sides of it.
[0133] A valley is the opposite of a peak and is a point that is a minimum and has points
of higher intensity on either side of it (an inverted plateau is also a valley). A
special plateau can also be a spectrum peak, a plateau involves a series of concurrent
points of the same intensity with the points on either side of the series having less
intensity.
[0134] It should be clear that high-quality white light simulating black-body sources do
not have significant peaks and valleys within the area of the human eye's photopic
response as is shown in FIG. 13.
[0135] Most artificial light, does however have some peaks and valleys in this region such
shown in FIG. 27, however the less difference between these points the better. This
is especially true for higher temperature light whereas for lower temperature light
the continuous line has a positive upward slope with no peaks or valleys and shallow
valleys in the shorter wavelength areas would be less noticeable, as would slight
peaks in the longer wavelengths.
[0136] To take into account this peak and valley relationship to high-quality white light,
the following is desirable in a high-quality white light of one embodiment of this
invention. The lowest valley in the visible range should have a greater intensity
than the intensity attributable to background noise as would be understood by one
of skill in the art. It is further desirable to close the gap between the lowest valley
and the maximum peak, and other embodiments of the invention have lowest valleys with
at least 5%, 10%, 25%, 33%, 50%, and 75% of the intensity of the maximum peaks. One
skilled in the art would see that other percentages could be used anywhere up to 100%.
[0137] In another embodiment, it is desirable to mimic the shape of the black body spectra
at different temperatures, for higher temperatures (4,000k to 10,000k) this may be
similar to the peaks and valleys analysis above. For lower temperatures, another analysis
would be that most valleys should be at a shorter wavelength than the highest peak.
This would be desirable in one embodiment for color temperatures less than 2500k.
In another embodiment it would be desirable to have this in the region 500k to 2500k.
[0138] From the above analysis high-quality artificial white light should therefore have
a spectrum that is substantially continuous between the 400 nm and 700 nm without
dramatic spikes. Further, to be controllable, the light should be able to produce
a spectrum that resembles natural light at various color temperatures. Due to the
use of mathematical models in the industry, it is also desirable for the source to
yield a high CRI indicative that the reference colors are being preserved and showing
that the high-quality white light of the instant invention does not fail on previously
known tests.
[0139] In order to build a high-quality white light lighting fixture using LEDs as the component
illumination sources, it is desirable in one embodiment to have LEDs with particular
maximum spectral peaks and spectral widths. It is also desirable to have the lighting
fixture allow for controllability, that is that the color temperature can be controlled
to select a particular spectrum of "white" light or even to have a spectrum of colored
light in addition to the white light. It would also be desirable for each of the LEDs
to produce equal intensities of light to allow for easy mixing.
[0140] One system for creating white light includes a large number (for example around 300)
of LEDs, each of which has a narrow spectral width and each of which has a maximum
spectral peak spanning a predetermined portion of the range from about 400 nm to about
700 nm, possibly with some overlap, and possibly beyond the boundaries of visible
light. This light source may produce essentially white light, and may be controllable
to produce any color temperature (and also any color). It allows for smaller variation
than the human eye can see and therefore the light fixture can make changes more finely
than a human can perceive. Such a light is therefore one embodiment of the invention,
but other embodiments can use fewer LEDs when perception by humans is the focus.
[0141] In another embodiment of the invention, a significantly smaller number of LEDs can
be used with the spectral width of each LED increased to generate a high-quality white
light. One embodiment of such a light fixture is shown in FIG. 14. FIG. 14 shows the
spectrums of nine LEDs (701) with 25 nm spectral widths spaced every 25 nm. It should
be recognized here that a nine LED lighting fixture does not necessarily contain exactly
nine total illumination sources. It contains some number of each of nine different
colored illuminating sources. This number will usually be the same for each color,
but need not be. High-brightness LEDs with a spectral width of about 25 nm are generally
available. The solid line (703) indicates the additive spectrum of all of the LED
spectrums at equal power as could be created using the above method lighting fixture.
The powers of the LEDs may be adjusted to generate a range of color temperature (and
colors as well) by adjusting the relative intensities of the nine LEDs. FIGS. 15a
and 15b are spectrums for the 5000K (801) and 2500K (803) white-light from this lighting
fixture. This nine LED lighting fixture has the ability to reproduce a wide range
of color temperatures as well as a wide range of colors as the area of the CIE diagram
enclosed by the component LEDs covers most of the available colors. It enables control
over the production of non-continuous spectrums and the generation of particular high-quality
colors by choosing to use only a subset of the available LED illumination sources.
It should be noted that the choice of location of the dominant wavelength of the nine
LEDs could be moved without significant variation in the ability to produce white
light. In addition, different colored LEDs may be added. Such additions may improve
the resolution as was discussed in the 300 LED example above. Any of these light fixtures
may meet the quality standards above. They may produce a spectrum that is continuous
over the photopic response of the eye, that is without dramatic peaks, and that can
be controlled to produce a white light of multiple desired color temperatures.
[0142] The nine LED white light source is effective since its spectral resolution is sufficient
to accurately simulate spectral distributions within human-perceptible limits. However,
fewer LEDs may be used. If the specifications of making high-quality white light are
followed, the fewer LEDs may have an increased spectral width to maintain the substantially
continuous spectrum that fills the Photopic response of the eye. The decrease could
be from any number of LEDs from 8 to 2. The 1 LED case allows for no color mixing
and therefore no control. To have a temperature controllable white light fixture at
least two colors of LEDs may be required.
[0143] One embodiment of the current invention includes three different colored LEDs. Three
LEDs allow for a two dimensional area (a triangle) to be available as the spectrum
for the resultant fixture. One embodiment of a three LED source is shown in FIG. 16.
[0144] The additive spectrum of the three LEDs (903) offers less control than the nine LED
lighting fixture, but may meet the criteria for a high-quality white light source
as discussed above. The spectrum may be continuous without dramatic peaks. It is also
controllable, since the triangle of available white light encloses the black body
curve. This source may lose fine control over certain colors or temperatures that
were obtained with a greater number of LEDs as the area enclosed on the CIE diagram
is a triangle, but the power of these LEDs can still be controlled to simulate sources
of different color temperatures. Such an alteration is shown in FIGS. 17a and 17b
for 5000K (1001) and 2500K (1003) sources. One skilled in the art, would see that
alternative temperatures may also be generated.
[0145] Both the nine LED and three LED examples demonstrate that combinations of LEDs can
be used to create high-quality white lighting fixtures. These spectrums fill the photopic
response of the eye and are continuous, which means they appear more natural than
artificial light sources such as fluorescent lights. Both spectra may be characterized
as high-quality since the CRIs measure in the high 90s.
[0146] In the design of a white lighting fixture, one impediment is the lack of current
availability for LEDs with a maximum spectral peak of 555 nm. This wavelength is at
the center of the Photopic response of the eye and one of the clearest colors to the
eye. The introduction of an LED with a dominant wavelength at or near 555 nm would
simplify the generation of LED-based white light, and a white light fixture with such
an LED comprises one embodiment of this invention. In another embodiment of the invention,
a non-LED illumination source that produces light with a maximum spectral peak from
about 510 nm to about 570 nm could also be used to fill this particular spectral gap.
In a still further embodiment, this non-LED source could comprise an existing white
light source and a filter to make that resulting light source have a maximum spectral
peak in this general area.
[0147] In another embodiment high-quality white light may be generated using LEDs without
spectral peaks around 555 nm to fill in the gap in the Photopic response left by the
absence of green LEDs. One possibility is to fill the gap with a non-LED illumination
source. Another, as described below, is that a high-quality controllable white light
source can be generated using a collection of one or more different colored LEDs where
none of the LEDs have a maximum spectral peak in the range of about 510 nm to 570
nm.
[0148] To build a white light lighting fixture that is controllable over a generally desired
range of color temperatures, it is first necessary to determine the criteria of temperatures
desired.
[0149] In one embodiment, this is chosen to be color temperatures from about 2300K to about
4500K which is commonly used by lighting designers in industry. However, any range
could be chosen for other embodiments including the range from 500K to 10,000K which
covers most variation in visible white light or any sub-range thereof. The overall
output spectrum of this light may achieve a CRI comparable to standard light sources
already existing. Specifically, a high CRI (greater than 80) at 4500K and lower CRI
(greater than 50) at 2300K may be specified although again any value could be chosen.
Peaks and valleys may also be minimized in the range as much as possible and particularly
to have a continuous curve where no intensity is 0.
[0150] In recent years, white LEDs have become available. These LEDs operate using a blue
LED to pump a layer of phosphor. The phosphor down-converts some of the blue light
into green and red. The result is a spectrum that has a wide spectrum and is roughly
centered about 555 nm, and is referred to as "cool white." An example spectrum for
such a white LED (in particular for a Nichia NSPW510 BS (bin A) LED), is shown in
FIG. 18 as the spectrum (1201).
[0151] The spectrum (1201) shown in FIG. 18 is different from the Gaussian-like spectrums
for some LEDs. This is because not all of the pump energy from the blue LED is down-converted.
This has the effect of cooling the overall spectrum since the higher portion of the
spectrum is considered to be warm. The resulting CRI for this LED is 84 but it has
a color temperature of 20,000K. Therefore the LED on its own does not meet the above
lighting criteria. This spectrum (1201) contains a maximum spectral peak at about
450 nm and does not accurately fill the photopic response of the human eye. A single
LED also allows for no control of color temperature and therefore a system of the
desired range of color temperatures cannot be generated with this LED alone.
[0152] Nichia Chemical currently has three bins (A, B, and C) of white LEDs available. The
LED spectrum (1201) shown in FIG. 18 is the coolest of these bins. The warmest LED
is bin C (the spectrum (1301) of which is presented in FIG. 19). The CRI of this LED
is also 84; it has a maximum spectral peak of around 450 nm, and it has a CCT of 5750K.
Using a combination of the bin A or C LEDs will enable the source to fill the spectrum
around the center of the Photopic response, 555 nm. However, the lowest achievable
color temperature will be 5750K (from using the bin C LED alone) which does not cover
the entire range of color temperatures previously discussed. This combination will
appear abnormally warm (blue) on its own as the additive spectrum will still have
a significant peak around 450 nm.
[0153] The color temperature of these LEDs can be shifted using an optical high-pass filter
placed over the LEDs. This is essentially a transparent piece of glass or plastic
tinted so as to enable only higher wavelength light to pass through. One example of
such a high-pass filter's transmission is shown in FIG. 20 as line (1401). Optical
filters are known to the art and the high pass filter will generally comprise a translucent
material, such as plastics, glass, or other transmission media which has been tinted
to form a high pass filter such as the one shown in FIG. 20. One embodiment of the
invention includes generating a filter of a desired material (to obtain particular
physical properties) upon specifying the desired optical properties. This filter may
be placed over the LEDs directly, or may be filter (391) from the lighting fixture's
housing.
[0154] One embodiment of the invention allows for the existing fixture to have a preselection
of component LEDs and a selection of different filters. These filters may shift the
range of resultant colors without alteration of the LEDs. In this way a filter system
may be used in conjunction with the selected LEDs to fill an area of the CIE enclosed
(area (510)) by a light fixture that is shifted with respect to the LEDs, thus permitting
an additional degree of control. In one embodiment, this series of filters could enable
a single light fixture to produce white light of any temperature by specifying a series
of ranges for various filters which, when combined, enclose the white line. One embodiment
of this is shown in FIG. 30 where a selection of areas (3001, 3011, 3021, 3031) depends
on the choice of filters shifting the enclosed area.
[0155] This spectral transmission measurement shows that the high pass filter in FIG. 20
absorbs spectral power below 500 nm. It also shows an overall loss of approximately
10% which is expected. The dotted line (1403) in FIG. 20 shows the transmission loss
associated with a standard polycarbonate diffuser which is often used in light fixtures.
It is to be expected that the light passing through any substance will result in some
decrease in intensity.
[0156] The filter whose transmission is shown in FIG. 20 can be used to shift the color
temperature of the two Nichia LEDs. The filtered ((1521) and (1531)) and un-filtered
((1201) and (1301)) spectrums for the bin A and C LEDs are shown in FIGS. 21a and
21b.
[0157] The addition of the yellow filter shifts the color temperature of the bin A LED from
20,000K to 4745K. Its chromaticity coordinates are shifted from (0.27,0.2A) to (0.35,
0.37). The bin C LED is shifted from 5750K to 3935K and from chromaticity coordinates
(0.33,0.33) to (0.40, 0.43).
[0158] The importance of the chromaticity coordinates becomes evident when the colors of
these sources are compared on the CIE 1931 Chromaticity Map. FIG. 22 is a close-up
of the chromaticity Map around the Plankian locus (1601). This locus indicates the
perceived colors of ideal sources called blackbodies. The thicker line (1603) highlights
the section of the locus that corresponds to the range from 2300K to 4500K.
[0159] FIG. 22 illustrates how large of a shift can be achieved with a simple high-pass
filter. By effectively "warming up" the set of Nichia LEDs, they are brought into
a chromaticity range that is useful for the specified color temperature control range
and are suitable for one embodiment of the invention. The original placement was dashed
line (1665), while the new color is represented by line (1607) which is within the
correct region.
[0160] In one embodiment, however, a non-linear range of color temperatures may be generated
using more than two LEDs.
[0161] The argument could be made that even a linear variation closely approximating the
desired range would suffice. This realization would call for an LED close to 2300K
and an LED close to 4500K, however. This could be achieved two ways. One, a different
LED could be used that has a color temperature of 2300K. Two, the output of the Nichia
bin C LED could be passed through an additional filter to shift it even closer to
the 2300K point. Each of these Systems comprises an additional embodiment of the instant
invention. However, the following example uses a third LED to meet the desired criteria.
[0162] This LED should have a chromaticity to the right of the 2300K point on the blackbody
locus. The Agilent HLMP-EL1 8 amber LED, with a dominant wavelength of 592 nm, has
chromaticity coordinates (0.60,0.40). The addition of the Agilent amber to the set
of Nichia white LEDs results in the range (1701) shown in FIG. 23.
[0163] The range (1701) produced using these three LEDs completely encompasses the blackbody
locus over the range from 2300K to 4500K. A light fixture fabricated using these LEDs
may meet the requirement of producing white light with the correct chromaticity values.
The spectra of the light at 2300K (2203) and 5000K (2201) in FIGS. 26a and b show
spectra which meet the desired criteria for high-quality white light, both spectra
are continuous and the 5000K spectrum does not show the peaks present in other lighting
fixtures, with reasonable intensity at all wavelengths. The 2300K spectrum does not
have any valleys at lower wavelengths than it's maximum peak. The light is also controllable
over these spectra. However, to be considered high-quality white light by the lighting
community, the CRI should be above 50 for low color temperatures and above 80 for
high color temperatures. According to the software program that accompanies the CIE
13.3-1995 specification, the CRI for the 2300K simulated spectrum is 52 and is similar
to an incandescent bulb with a CRI of 50. The CRI for the 4500K simulated spectrum
is 82 and is considered to be high-quality white light. These spectra are also similar
in shape to the spectra of natural light as shown in FIGS. 26a and 26b.
[0164] FIG. 24 shows the CRI plotted with respect to the CCT for the above white light source.
This comparison shows that the high-quality white light fixture above will produce
white light that is of higher quality than the three standard fluorescent lights (1803),
(1805), and (1809) used in FIG. 24. Further, the light source above is significantly
more controllable than a fluorescent light as the color temperature can be selected
as any of those points on curve (1801) while the fluorescents are limited to the particular
points shown. The luminous output of the described white light lighting fixture was
also measured. The luminous output plotted with respect to the color temperature is
given in FIG. 25, although the graph in FIG. 25 is reliant on the types and levels
of power used in producing it, the ratio may remain constant with the relative number
of the different outer LEDs selected. The full-on point (point of maximum intensity)
may be moved by altering the color of each of the LEDs present.
[0165] It would be understood by one of skill in the art that the above embodiments of white-light
fixtures and methods could also include LEDs or other component illumination sources
which produce light not visible to the human eye. Therefore any of the above embodiments
could also include illumination sources with a maximum spectral peak below 400 nm
or above 700 nm.
[0166] A high-quality LED-based light may be configured to replace a fluorescent tube. In
one embodiment, a replacement high-quality LED light source useful for replacing fluorescent
tubes would function in an existing device designed to use fluorescent tubes. Such
a device is shown in FIG. 28. FIG. 28 shows a typical fluorescent lighting fixture
or other device configured to accept florescent tubes (2402). The lighting fixture
(2402) may include a ballast (2410). The ballast (2410) may be a magnetic type or
electronic type ballast for supplying the power to at least one tube (2404) which
has traditionally been a fluorescent tube. The ballast (2410) includes power input
connections (2414) to be connected with an external power supply. The external power
supply may be a building's AC supply or any other power supply known in the art. The
ballast (2410) has tube connections (2412) and (2416) which attach to a tube coupler
(2408) for easy insertion and removal of tubes (2404). These connections deliver the
requisite power to the tube. In a magnetic ballasted system, the ballast (2410) may
be a transformer with a predetermined impedance to supply the requisite voltage and
current. The fluorescent tube (2404) acts like a short circuit so the ballast's impedance
is used to set the tube current. This means that each tube wattage requires a particular
ballast. For example, a forty-watt fluorescent tube will only operate on a forty-watt
ballast because the ballast is matched to the tube. Other fluorescent lighting fixtures
use electronic ballasts with a high frequency sine wave output to the bulb. Even in
these systems, the internal ballast impedance of the electronic ballast still regulates
the current through the tube.
[0167] FIG. 29 shows one embodiment of a lighting fixture according to this disclosure which
could be used as a replacement florescent tube in a housing such as the one in FIG.
28. The lighting fixture may comprise, in one embodiment, a variation on the lighting
fixture (5000) in FIGS. 5a and 5b. The lighting fixture can comprise a bottom portion
(1101) with a generally rounded underside (1103) and a generally flat connection surface
(1105). The lighting fixture also comprises a top portion (1111) with a generally
rounded upper portion (1113) and a generally flat connection surface (1115). The top
portion (1111) will generally be comprised of a translucent, transparent, or similar
material allowing light transmission and may comprise a filter similar to filter (391).
The flat connection surfaces (1105) and (1115) can be placed together to form a generally
cylindrical lighting fixture and can be attached by any method known in the art. Between
top portion (1111) and bottom portion (1101) is a lighting fixture (1150) which comprises
a generally rectangular mounting (1153) and a strip of at least one component illumination
source such as an LED (1155). This construction is by no means necessary and the lighting
fixture need not have a housing with it or could have a housing of any type known
in the art. Although a single strip is shown, one of skill in the art would understand
that multiple strips, or other patterns of arrangement of the illumination sources,
could be used. The strips generally have the component LEDs in a sequence that separates
the colors of LEDs if there are multiple colors of LEDs but such an arrangement is
not required. The lighting fixture will generally have lamp connectors (2504) for
connecting the lighting fixture to the existing lamp couplers (2008). The LED system
may also include a control circuit (2510). This circuit may convert the ballast voltage
into D.C. for the LED operation. The control circuit (2510) may control the LEDs (1155)
with constant D.C. voltage or control circuit (2510) may generate control signals
to operate the LEDs. In a preferred embodiment, the control circuit (2510) would include
a processor for generating pulse width modulated control signals, or other similar
control signals, for the LEDs.
[0168] These white lights therefore are examples of how a high-quality white light fixture
can be generated with component illumination sources, even where those sources have
dominant wavelengths outside the region of 530 nm to 570 nm.
[0170] Where T =Temperature in degrees K.
[0171] These equations may be applied directly or may be used to create a look-up table
so that binary values corresponding to a particular color temperature can be determined
quickly. This table can reside in any form of programmable memory for use in controlling
color temperature (such as, but not limited to, the control described in US Patent
6,016,038). In another embodiment, the light could have a selection of switches, such
as DIP switches enabling it to operate in a stand-alone mode, where a desired color
temperature can be selected using the switches, and changed by alteration of the stand
alone product. The light could also be remotely programmed to operate in a standalone
mode as discussed above.
[0172] The lighting fixture in FIG. 29 may also comprise a program control switch (2512).
This switch may be a selector switch for selecting the color temperature, color of
the LED system, or any other illumination conditions. For example, the switch may
have multiple settings for different colors. Position "one" may cause the LED system
to produce 3200K white light, position "two" may cause 4000K white light, position
"three" may be for blue light and a fourth position may be to allow to allow the system
to receive external signals for color or other illumination control. This external
control could be provided by any of the controllers discussed previously.
[0173] Some fluorescent ballasts also provide for dimming where a dimmer switch on the wall
will change the ballast output characteristics and as a result change the fluorescent
light illumination characteristics. The LED lighting system may use this as information
to change the illumination characteristics. The control circuit (2510) can monitor
the ballast characteristics and adjust the LED control signals in a corresponding
fashion. The LED system may have lighting control signals stored in memory within
the LED lighting system. These control signals may be preprogrammed to provide dimming,
color changing, a combination of effects or any other illumination effects as the
ballasts' characteristics change.
[0174] A user may desire different colors in a room at different times. The LED system can
be programmed to produce white light when the dimmer is at the maximum level, blue
light when it is at 90% of maximum, red light when it is at 80%, flashing effects
at 70% or continually changing effects as the dimmer is changed. The system could
change color or other lighting conditions with respect to the dimmer or any other
input. A user may also want to recreate the lighting conditions of incandescent light.
One of the characteristics of such lighting is that it changes color temperature as
its power is reduced. The incandescent light may be 2800K at full power but the color
temperature will reduce as the power is reduced and it may be 1500K when the lamp
dimmed to a great extent. Fluorescent lamps do not reduce in color temperature when
they are dimmed. Typically, the fluorescent lamp's color does not change when the
power is reduced. The LED system can be programmed to reduce in color temperature
as the lighting conditions are dimmed. This may be achieved using a look-up table
for selected intensities, through a mathematical description of the relationship between
intensity and color temperature, any other method known in the art, or any combination
of methods. The LED system can be programmed to provide virtually any lighting conditions.
[0175] The LED system may include a receiver for receiving signals, a transducer, a sensor
or other device for receiving information. The receiver could be any receiver such
as, but not limited to, a wire, cable, network, electromagnetic receiver, IR receiver,
RF receiver, microwave receiver or any other receiver. A remote control device could
be provided to change the lighting conditions remotely. Lighting instructions may
also be received from a network. For example, a building may have a network where
information is transmitted through a wireless system and the network could control
the illumination conditions throughout a building. This could be accomplished from
a remote site as well as on site. This may provide for added building security or
energy savings or convenience.
[0176] The LED lighting system may also include optics to provide for evenly distributed
lighting conditions from the fluorescent lighting fixture. The optics may be attached
to the LED system or associated with the system.
[0177] The system has applications in environments where variations in available lighting
may affect aesthetic choices.
[0178] In an example embodiment, the lighting fixture may be used in a retail embodiment
to sell paint or other color sensitive items. A paint sample may be viewed in a retail
store under the same lighting conditions present where the paint will ultimately be
used. For example, the lighting fixture may be adjusted for outdoor lighting, or may
be more finely tuned for sunny conditions, cloudy conditions, or the like. The lighting
fixture may also be adjusted for different forms of interior lighting, such as halogen,
fluorescent, or incandescent lighting. In a further embodiment, a portable sensor
(as discussed above) may be taken to a site where the paint is to be applied, and
the light spectrum may be analyzed and recorded. The same light spectrum may subsequently
be reproduced by the lighting fixture, so that paint may be viewed under the same
lighting conditions present at the site where the paint is to be used. The lighting
fixture may similarly be used for clothing decisions, where the appearance of a particular
type and color of fabric may be strongly influenced by lighting conditions. For example,
a wedding dress (and bride) may be viewed under lighting conditions expected at a
wedding ceremony, in order to avoid any unpleasant surprises. The lighting fixture
can also be used in any of the applications, or in conjunction with any of the systems
or methods discussed elsewhere in this disclosure.
[0179] In another example embodiment, the lighting fixture may be used to accurately reproduce
visual effects. In certain visual arts, such as photography, cinematography, or theater,
make-up is typically applied in a dressing room or salon, where lighting may be different
than on a stage or other site. The lighting fixture may thus be used to reproduce
the lighting expected where photographs will be taken, or a performance given, so
that suitable make-up may be chosen for predictable results. As with the retail applications
above, a sensor may be used to measure actual lighting conditions so that the lighting
conditions may be reproduced during application of make-up.
[0180] In theatrical or film presentations, colored light often corresponds to the colors
of specific filters which can be placed on white lighting instruments to generate
a specific resulting shade. There are generally a large selection of such filters
in specific shades sold by selected companies. These filters are often classified
by a spectrum of the resulting light, by proprietary numerical classifications, and/or
by names which give an implication of the resulting light such as "primary blue,"
"straw," or "chocolate." These filters allow for selection of a particular, reproducible
color of light, but, at the same time, limit the director to those colors of filters
that are available. In addition, mixing the colors is not an exact science which can
result in slight variations in the colors as lighting fixtures are moved, or even
change temperature, during a performance or film shoot. Thus, in one embodiment there
is provided a system for controlling illumination in a theatrical environment. In
another embodiment, there is provided a system for controlling illumination in cinematography.
[0181] The wide variety of light sources available create significant problems for film
production in particular. Differences in lighting between adjacent scenes can disrupt
the continuity of a film and create jarring effects for the viewer. Correcting the
lighting to overcome these differences can be exacting, because the lighting available
in an environment is not always under the complete control of the film crew. Sunlight,
for example, varies in color temperature during the day, most obviously at dawn and
dusk, when yellows and red abound, lowering the color temperature of the ambient light.
Fluorescent light does not generally fall on the color temperature curve, often having
extra intensity in blue-green regions of the spectrum, and is thus described by a
correlated color temperature, representing the point on the color temperature curve
that best approximates the incident light. Each of these lighting problems may be
addressed using the systems described above.
[0182] The availability of a number of different fluorescent bulb types, each providing
a different color temperature through the use of a particular phosphor, makes color
temperature prediction and adjustment even more complicated. High-pressure sodium
vapor lamps, used primarily for street lighting, produce a brilliant yellowish-orange
light that will drastically skew color balance. Operating at even higher internal
pressures are mercury vapor lamps, sometimes used for large interior areas such as
gymnasiums. These can result in a pronounced greenish-blue cast in video and film.
Thus, there is provided a system for simulating mercury vapor lamps, and a system
for supplementing light sources, such as mercury vapor lamps, to produce a desired
resulting color. These embodiments may have particular use in cinematography.
[0183] To try and recreate all of these lighting types, it is often necessary for a filmmaker
or theatre designer to place these specific types of lights in their design. At the
same time, the need to use these lights may thwart the director's theatric intention.
The gym lights flashing quickly on and off in a supernatural thriller is a startling
effect, but it cannot be achieved naturally through mercury vapor lamps which take
up to five minutes to warm up and produce the appropriate color light.
[0184] Other visually sensitive fields depend on light of a specific color temperature or
spectrum. For example, surgical and dental workers after require colored light that
emphasizes contrasts between different tissues, as well as between healthy and diseased
tissue. Doctors also often rely on tracers or markers that reflect, radiate, or fluoresce
color of a specific wavelength or spectrum to enable them to detect blood vessels
or other small structures. They can view these structures by shining light of the
specific wavelength in the general area where the tracers are, and view the resultant
reflection or fluorescing of the tracers. In many instances, different procedures
may benefit from using a customized color temperature or particular color of light
tailored to the needs of each specific procedure. Thus, there is provided a system
for the visualization of medical, dental or other imaging conditions. In one embodiment,
the system uses LEDs to produce a controlled range of light within a predetermined
spectrum.
[0185] Further, there is often a desire to alter lighting conditions during an activity,
a stage should change colors as the sun is supposed to rise, a color change may occur
to change the color of a fluorescing tracer, or a room could have the color slowly
altered to make a visitor more uncomfortable with the lighting as the length of their
stay increased.
[0186] The lighting systems and methods can be particularly useful in these above applications
as well as other applications as would be understood by one of the skill in the art.
[0187] All articles, patents, and other references set forth above are hereby incorporated
by reference. While the invention has been disclosed in connection with the embodiments
shown and described in detail, various equivalents, modifications, and improvements
will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art from the above description. Such
equivalents, modifications, and improvements are intended to be encompassed by the
following claims.
1. A light source for generating essentially white light, comprising:
at least one first white LED having a first spectrum (1201); and
at least one second white LED having a second spectrum (1301), the first spectrum
(1201) being different than the second spectrum (1301).
2. The light source of claim 1, further comprising at least one optical filter configured
to selectively transmit a portion of light emitted from at least one of the first
and second white LEDs.
3. The light source of claim 2, wherein the at least one optical filter is a high pass
filter.
4. The light source of claims 2 or 3, wherein the at least one optical filter comprises
a plurality of optical filters, each of the plurality of optical filters being configured
to selectively transmit a portion of the light emitted from at least one of the first
and second white LEDs.
5. The light source of claim 4, wherein the selectively transmitted portion of the light
emitted from the at least one of the first and second LEDs includes at least a portion
of the Planckian locus.
6. The light source claims 4 or 5, wherein at least one of the plurality of optical filters
is a yellow filter.
7. The light source of any of claims 4 to 6, wherein:
at least a first one of the plurality of optical filters is adapted to transmit a
portion of the light corresponding to a color temperature of approximately 4745 Kelvin;
and
at least a second one of the plurality of optical filters is adapted to transmit a
portion of the light corresponding to a color temperature of approximately 3935 Kelvin.
8. The light source of any of the foregoing claims, wherein the first white LED has a
color temperature of approximately 20000 Kelvin, and the second white LED has a color
temperature of approximately 5750 Kelvin.
9. The light source of any of the foregoing claims, wherein the at least one first white
LED and the at least one second white LED are configured in a substantially linear
arrangement.
10. The light source of any of the foregoing claims, further comprising at least one further
LED having a third spectrum different from the first spectrum and the second spectrum.
11. The light source of claim 10, wherein the at least one further LED has a chromaticity
to the right of the 2300 Kelvin point of a Planckian locus on a conventional chromaticity
chart.
12. The light source of claim 10, wherein the at least one further LED includes at least
one amber LED.
13. The light source of claim 10, further comprising:
at least one fourth LED having a fourth spectrum; and
at least one fifth LED having a fifth spectrum,
wherein the first, second, third, fourth and fifth spectra are respectively different.
14. The light source of claim 13, further comprising:
at least one sixth LED having a sixth spectrum; and
at least one seventh LED having a seventh spectrum,
wherein the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh spectra are
respectively different.
15. The light source of any of the foregoing claims, wherein a first quantity of the at
least one first white LED is different than a second quantity of the at least one
second white LED.
16. The light source of any of the foregoing claims, wherein the at least one first white
LED, the at least one second white LED, and the at least one further LED are arranged
to provide a combined spectrum that is substantially continuous over wavelengths visible
to the human eye.
17. The light source of claim 16, wherein the light source is configured such that the
combined spectrum includes at least a portion of the Planckian locus over the range
from 2300 Kelvin to 4500 Kelvin.
18. The light source of claims 16 or 17, wherein the light source is configured such that
the combined spectrum at a color temperature of 2300 Kelvin does not have any substantial
valleys at wavelengths below a wavelength corresponding to a maximum peak of the combined
spectrum.
19. The light source of any of claims 16 to 18, wherein the light source is configured
such that the combined spectrum at a color temperature of 2300 Kelvin has a color
rendering index (CRI) value of greater than 50, and the combined spectrum at a color
temperature of 4500 Kelvin has a color rendering index (CRI) value of greater than
80.
20. A lighting fixture comprising:
a processor; and
at least one light source as claimed in claims 1 to 19.
21. The lighting fixture as claimed in claim 20, wherein the processor is adapted to control
a first intensity of the at least one first white LED having the first spectrum (1201),
and a second intensity of the at least one second white LED having the second spectrum
(1301).
22. The lighting fixture as claimed in any of claims 20 or 21, wherein the at least one
first white LED comprises a plurality of first white LEDs and the at least one second
white LED comprises a plurality of second white LEDs.
23. The lighting fixture of any of claims 20 to 22, further comprising:
a housing; and
a mounting for the light source.
24. The lighting fixture of any of claims 20 to 23, wherein the lighting fixture is configured
to resemble an Edison-mount light bulb.
25. The lighting fixture of any of claims 20 to 23, wherein the lighting fixture is configured
to resemble a fluorescent light bulb.
26. The lighting fixture of any of claims 20 to 23, wherein the lighting fixture is configured
to resemble a halogen MR-16-type light bulb.
27. The lighting fixture of any of claims 20 to 26, wherein the processor is configured
to independently control the at least one first white LED and the at least one second
white LED so as to controllably vary a color temperature of essentially white light
generated by the lighting fixture.
28. The lighting fixture of claim 27, further comprising at least one user interface coupled
to the processor and configured to facilitate an adjustment of the color temperature
of the essentially white light generated by the lighting fixture.
29. The lighting fixture of any of claims 20 to 28, further comprising at least one sensor.
30. The lighting fixture of claim 29, wherein the at least one sensor is configured to
measure at least color characteristics of light generated by the lighting fixture,
and
wherein the lighting fixture further includes a calibration system to vary the light
generated by the lighting fixture based on the measured color characteristics.
31. The lighting fixture of any of claims 20 to 30, further comprising at least one of
a receiver and a transmitter coupled to the processor and configured to communicate
at least one control signal to or from the lighting fixture.
32. The lighting fixture of any of claims 20 to 31, wherein the processor is configured
to control the at least one light source according to any of claims 1 to 19 using
a pulse width modulation (PWM) technique.
33. The lighting fixture of any of claims 20 to 32, wherein the processor is configured
to receive at least one network signal.
34. The lighting fixture of any of claims 20 to 33, wherein the processor is configured
to receive at least one wireless control signal.
35. The lighting fixture of any of claims 20 to 34, wherein the processor is configured
to receive at least one control signal formatted using a DMX protocol.
36. A method for generating essentially white light in a light source comprising the steps
of:
generating a first spectrum (1201) by at least one first white LED; and
generating a second spectrum (1301) by at least one second white LED, the first spectrum
(1201) being different than the second spectrum (1301).
37. The method of claim 36, further comprising the step of selectively transmitting a
portion of light emitted from at least one of the first and second white LEDs using
at least one optical filter.
38. The method of claim 37, wherein the at least one optical filter comprises a plurality
of optical filters, and the step of selectively transmitting comprises selectively
transmitting using each of the plurality of optical filters a portion of the light
emitted from at least one of the first and second white LEDs.
39. The method of claim 38, wherein the selectively transmitted portion of the light emitted
from the at least one of the first and second LEDs includes at least a portion of
the Planckian locus.
40. The method of claims 38 or 39, wherein at least one of the plurality of optical filters
is a yellow filter.
41. The method of any of claims 38 to 40, wherein:
at least a first one of the plurality of optical filters is adapted to transmit a
portion of the light corresponding to a color temperature of approximately 4745 Kelvin;
and
at least a second one of the plurality of optical filters is adapted to transmit a
portion of the light corresponding to a color temperature of approximately 3935 Kelvin.
42. The method of claims 36 to 41, wherein the at least one first white LED has a color
temperature of approximately 20000 Kelvin, and the at least one second white LED has
a color temperature of approximately 5750 Kelvin.
43. The method of claims 36 to 42, further comprising the step of generating a third spectrum
by at least one further LED, the third spectrum being different from the first spectrum
(1201) and the second (1301) spectrum.
44. The method of claim 43, wherein the at least one further LED has a chromaticity to
the right of the 2300 Kelvin point of a Planckian locus on a conventional chromaticity
chart.
45. The method of claim 43, wherein the at least one further LED includes at least one
amber LED.
46. The method of claims 36 to 45, further comprising the step of controlling a first
intensity of the at least one first white LED having the first spectrum (1201), and
a second intensity of the at least one second white LED having the second spectrum
(1301).
47. The method of claims 36 to 46, further comprising the steps of:
measuring at least color characteristics of generated light, and
calibrating the generated light based on the measured color characteristics.