BMW develops laser light for the car.
Following the introduction of the full LED headlight, laser light
is the next logical step in the development of vehicle headlight
technology. BMW is planning this step, thus further expanding its lead
in innovative light technology.
Munich - September 1, 2011... As a globally
successful carmaker within the premium segment, the BMW Group attaches
the utmost importance to advanced technology in all sectors of
automotive manufacturing. Exclusive innovations and technological leaps
secure BMW’s lead amongst the competition. In the field of exterior
vehicle lights, BMW also leads the way for example with full LED
headlamps for the BMW 6 Series and with new developments such as the
“Anti-dazzle High- Beam Assistant”, as well as with “Dynamic Light
Spot”. The term “Dynamic Light Spot” stands for a marker light system
that automatically illuminates pedestrians in good time, thereby guiding
the driver’s attention.
After LED technology, laser light is the next logical step in car light
development. BMW engineers are currently already working on the
introduction of laser light as a further pioneering technology for
series production within a few years. Laser light could then facilitate
entirely new light functions for even more safety and comfort and at the
same time contribute significantly through its higher degree of
efficiency towards a saving in energy and fuel respectively.
Laser light produces virtually parallel light beams.
By definition, laser lighting is radically different from sunlight, and
also from the various types of artificial lighting in common use today.
For a start, laser lighting is monochromatic, which means that the light
waves all have the same length. And it is also what is known as a
“coherent” light source, which means that its waves have a constant
phase difference. As a result, laser lighting can produce a
near-parallel beam with an intensity a thousand times greater than that
of conventional LEDs. In vehicle headlights, these characteristics can
be used to implement entirely new functions. Also, the high inherent
efficiency of laser lighting means that laser headlights have less than
half the energy consumption of LED headlights. Simply put, laser
headlights save fuel.
The intensity of laser light poses no possible risks to humans, animals
or wildlife when used in car lighting. Amongst other things, this is
because the light is not emitted directly, but is first converted into a
form that is suitable for use in road traffic. The resulting light is
very bright and white. It is also very pleasant to the eye and has a
very low energy consumption.
Laser diodes are already in use today in the consumer sector.
Completely safe laser lighting technology is already in use in a variety
of consumer products, though in many cases this is a product feature
that goes unnoticed by the customer. That won’t be the case when this
technology is used in cars, however, as planned by BMW. Here the whole
point is that the advantages should be noticeable and visible. A further
feature of laser technology, which has important implications, is the
size of the individual diodes. With a length of just ten microns (µm),
laser diodes are one hundred times smaller even than the small,
square-shaped cells used in conventional LED lighting, which have a side
length of one millimetre. This opens up all sorts of new possibilities
when integrating the light source into the vehicle. The BMW engineers
have no plans to radically reduce the size of the headlights however,
although that would be theoretically possible. Instead, the thinking is
that the headlights would retain their conventional surface area
dimensions and so continue to play an important role in the styling of a
BMW, while the size advantages could be used to reduce the depth of the
headlight unit, and so open up new possibilities for headlight
positioning and body styling.
A further advantage of laser lighting technology, and one which the BMW
engineers intend to use to full effect, is its high inherent efficiency.
A single statistic will make this clear: whereas LED lighting generates
only around 100 lumens (a photometric unit of light output) per watt,
laser lighting generates approximately 170 lumens. With statistics like
this, it is not surprising that BMW is also planning to take advantage
of laser lighting technology to increase the efficiency of the overall
vehicle. And appropriately enough it is in a concept vehicle from the
new BMW i sub-brand, the BMW i8 Concept, that laser lighting will get
its first airing. After all, BMW i stands for a new premium concept that
is strongly oriented towards sustainability.
Laser lighting: high efficiency and safety.
Safety is a key consideration in the development of laser lighting for
use in passenger cars. For BMW, the complete eye safety of this
technology for all road users and its complete reliability in day-to-day
use have top priority. Importantly, therefore, before the light from
the tiny laser diodes is emitted onto the road, the originally bluish
laser light beam is first of all converted by means of a fluorescent
phosphor material inside the headlight into a pure white light which is
very bright and pleasant to the eye. As a result, in future it will be
possible to use laser light to implement all the familiar – including
more recent – BMW lighting functions such as Adaptive Headlights, the
“Dynamic Light Spot” spotlighting system and the “Anti-Dazzle High-Beam
Assist”. It will also be possible to use BMW laser lighting to implement
completely new functions, which will have only minimal power
consumption.
Tags
Laser Headlights