Projection device and projection-type video display device
US-9217879-B2 · Dec 22, 2015 · US
US9529207B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9529207-B2 |
| Application number | US-201414298633-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jun 6, 2014 |
| Priority date | Jun 6, 2013 |
| Publication date | Dec 27, 2016 |
| Grant date | Dec 27, 2016 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
The present disclosure includes systems and methods for solving speckle problems by exciting the screen with a more complex vibration spectrum. A range of frequencies provides, in effect, a collection of overlapping patterns of high and low displacement, so that all regions of the screen have enough motion to reduce visible speckle. As previously discussed acceptable speckle may be approximately 15% contrast or less, preferably approximately 5% contrast or less at approximately 15 feet from the screen.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A method for reducing speckle on a projection screen, comprising: vibrating a projection screen within a predetermined frequency spectrum, wherein the predetermined frequency spectrum has power which is broadly dispersed within the predetermined frequency spectrum, further wherein the vibration of the projection screen is out of the screen plane; locating vibrating elements behind masking to reduce acoustic transmission from the vibrating elements; and mitigating speckle on the projection screen to an acceptable level. 2. The method for reducing speckle on a projection screen of claim 1 , further comprising vibrating the projection screen with at least one primary transducer. 3. The method for reducing speckle on a projection screen of claim 2 , wherein the at least one primary transducer further comprises a voice coil. 4. The method for reducing speckle on a projection screen of claim 2 , further comprising mounting the at least one primary transducer to a mounting patch, wherein the mounting patch is attached to the projection screen. 5. The method for reducing speckle on a projection screen of claim 2 , further comprising detecting primary transducer failure by measuring the projection screen vibrations. 6. The method for reducing speckle on a projection screen of claim 5 , further comprising measuring projection screen vibrations with at least one accelerometer. 7. The method for reducing speckle on a projection screen of claim 5 , further comprising locating redundant transducers on the projection screen. 8. The method for reducing speckle on a projection screen of claim 7 , further comprising driving the redundant transducers only when a failure of at least one primary transducer is detected. 9. The method for reducing speckle on a projection screen of claim 1 , wherein the predetermined frequency spectrum power is primarily in the range of 30-500 Hertz. 10. The method for reducing speckle on a projection screen of claim 1 , wherein the acceptable level for speckle is less than 15 percent contrast at approximately fifteen feet from the projection screen. 11. The method for reducing speckle on a projection screen of claim 1 , wherein the projection screen further comprises a high elastic modulus substrate. 12. The method for reducing speckle on a projection screen of claim 11 , wherein the high elastic modulus substrate has an elastic modulus of greater than 0.4 GPa. 13. The method for reducing speckle on a projection screen of claim 1 , further comprising attaching at least one vibrating element directly to the projection screen. 14. The method for reducing speckle on a projection screen of claim 1 , wherein vibrating the screen further comprises producing an acceptable level of audible noise of less than 40 dBm. 15. The projection screen of claim 1 , wherein the masking further comprises noise absorbing material. 16. A projection screen system comprising: a projection screen; and at least one primary vibrating element attached to the projection screen, wherein the vibrating element vibrates the screen within a predetermined frequency spectrum, further wherein the vibrating element vibrates the screen out of the screen plane; masking located to dampen audible acoustic transmission from the at least one primary vibrating element; wherein the predetermined frequency spectrum has power which is broadly dispersed within the predetermined frequency spectrum, further wherein vibrating the screen mitigates the speckle to an acceptable level. 17. The projection screen of claim 16 , wherein the projection screen comprises a high elastic modulus substrate. 18. The projection screen of claim 17 , wherein the high elastic modulus substrate has an elastic modulus of greater than 0.4 GPa. 19. The projection screen of claim 16 , wherein the at least one primary vibrating element comprises at least one primary transducer. 20. The projection screen of claim 19 , wherein the at least one primary transducer comprises a voice coil. 21. The projection screen of claim 16 , wherein the predetermined frequency spectrum is in the range of 50-200 Hz. 22. The projection screen of claim 16 , wherein the acceptable level for speckle is less than approximately less than 15 percent contrast at fifteen feet from the projection screen. 23. The projection screen of claim 16 , wherein the at least one primary vibrating element is mounted directly adjacent to the projection screen. 24. The projection screen of claim 16 , further comprising redundant vibrating elements in addition to the at least one primary vibrating element, wherein the redundant vibrating elements are driven only when a failure of at least one of the primary vibrating elements is detected. 25. The projection screen of claim 16 , wherein the masking is located on the front and the back of the projection screen.
Laser speckle optics · CPC title
Screens moving during projection (G03B21/58 - G03B21/62 take precedence) · CPC title
using interference effects; Masking sound · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.