![]() DIRECTIONAL BACKLIGHTING
专利摘要:
directional backlight is a directional display that may include a waveguide. the waveguide may include light extraction means arranged to direct light from an array of light sources via total internal reflection to an array of viewing windows and a reflector arranged to direct light from the waveguide by transmission through waveguide extraction capabilities for the same array of viewports. the brightness of the directional screen can be increased. a bright and effective autostereoscopic display system can be achieved. 公开号:BR112015020160B1 申请号:R112015020160-1 申请日:2014-02-21 公开日:2022-01-18 发明作者:Michael G. Robinson;Graham J. Woodgate 申请人:Reald Spark, Llc; IPC主号:
专利说明:
"REFERENCE TO RELATED DEPOSIT REQUESTS [0001] This application claims priority over US Provisional Patent Application No. 61/768,371 entitled "Directional backlight", filed February 22, 2013 (Attorney Ref No. 95194936.355000), of US Provisional Patent Application No. 61/791,112, entitled "Directional backlight", filed on March 15, 2013 (Lawyer's Ref No. 95194936.355000A) and US Provisional Patent Application No. 61/890,456, entitled "Energy efficient directional backlight", filed on October 14, 2013 (Lawyer's Ref No. 95194936.355000B), the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety. This application is also related to US Patent Application No. 13/837,466, entitled "Polarization recovery in a directional display device", filed on March 15, 2013 (Lawyer's Ref No. 95194936.325001), which is hereby fully incorporated into reference title. TECHNICAL FIELD [0002] The present disclosure relates generally to the illumination of light modulating devices, and more specifically, relates to light guides for providing a large area of illumination from light sources located to use on 2D display devices. BACKGROUND [0003] Spatially multiplexed autostereoscopic displays typically align a parallax component such as a lenticular monitor or parallax barrier with an array of images arranged as at least first and second sets of pixels in a spatial light modulator, for example a LCD. The parallax component directs light from each of the sets of pixels to different respective directions to provide first and second viewing windows in front of the screen. An observer with an eye placed in the first viewport can see a first image with light from the first set of pixels; and, with an eye placed in the second viewport, you can see a second image, with light from the second set of pixels. [0004] Such screens reduced the spatial resolution compared to the native resolution of the spatial light modulator and, further, the structure of the viewing windows is determined by the pixel aperture format and the parallax component image function. Gaps between pixels, for example for electrodes, typically produce non-uniform viewing windows. Undesirably, such screens exhibit image flicker as an observer moves laterally from the screen and thus limits viewing freedom on the screen. Such flickering can be reduced by defocusing the optical elements; however such blurring results in increased levels of crosstalk in the image and increases the visual effort for an observer. Such flickering can be reduced by adjusting the pixel aperture shape, however, such changes can reduce screen brightness and may include electronics treatment in the spatial light modulator. BRIEF SUMMARY [0005] In accordance with a first aspect of the present disclosure, viewing windows may be provided. Viewing windows can be provided through streaming light extracting features from a waveguide. The light extraction features can be aligned with the viewports provided by the total internal light reflection of the light extraction features. A brilliant and energetically effective display can be achieved. [0006] In accordance with another aspect of the present disclosure, a directional backlight may be provided which may include a waveguide and an array of light sources arranged at different input positions in a lateral direction through the input end of the waveguide. wave. The waveguide may include an input end, opposing first and second guide surfaces to guide light along the waveguide, and a reflective end facing the input end to reflect input light back through the waveguide. wave. The first guide surface may be arranged to guide light by total internal reflection and the second guide surface may have a staggered shape. The stepped shape may include a plurality of facets oriented to reflect light from the light sources, after reflection from the reflective end, through the first guide surface in optical windows in outgoing directions. The output directions can be distributed in a direction lateral to the normal to the first guide surface and mainly as a function of the input positions and intermediate regions between the facets that can be arranged to direct light through the waveguide without extracting the same. . Directional backlighting may also include a backreflector which may include a linear array of reflective facets arranged to reflect light from light sources. Light may be transmitted through the plurality of facets of the waveguide, back through the waveguide to exit through the first guide surface in said optical windows. [0007] Directional backlighting may include a diffuser arranged to receive light emitted through the first guide surface. The diffuser may be an asymmetrical diffuser that may be arranged to provide greater angular dispersion in a direction approximately orthogonal to the lateral direction than in the lateral direction. The directional backlight may include a Fresnel lens which may have optical power at least in the lateral direction and which may be disposed between the first guide surface of the waveguide and the diffuser. In another example, the Fresnel lens may have optical power at least in the lateral direction arranged to receive light emitted through the first guide surface. [0008] The directional backlight waveguide may include facets which may be reflective facets of the rear reflector and which may be inclined in the same direction in a common plane approximately orthogonal to the lateral direction. The waveguide facets can be inclined at an approximate angle (π/2-α) to the normal to the first guide surface and the reflective facets of the back reflector can be inclined at an angle β to the normal to the first surface and 2β >π/2 - sin'1(n. sin (α- θc)), where θc is the critical angle of the waveguide facets and n is the refractive index of the waveguide material. [0009] The directional backlight rear reflector can be spaced away from the waveguide so that light from an individual facet of the waveguide is incident on several reflective facets of the rear reflector. The rear reflector may additionally include intermediate facets which may extend between the reflective facets of the rear reflector. The intermediate facets may be inclined in a direction opposite to the reflective facets of the rear reflector at an angle so that light from the light sources that is transmitted through the plurality of facets of the waveguide may not be incident on the intermediate facets. The reflective facets of the rear reflector may have an irregular gap. The reflective facets of the rear reflector have an irregular random gap. The reflective facets of the back reflector can have a slope that varies through the reflective facet array. The reflective facets of the rear reflector can be linear. The reflective facets of the rear reflector can be curved. The reflective facets of the rear reflector can be wavy along its length. The rear reflector may additionally comprise a diffusing surface on at least some of the reflective facets. [0010] In one example, the backreflector facets can be arranged behind the respective facets among the waveguide facets and arranged to reflect substantially all of the light from the light sources that is transmitted through the respective facet among the waveguide facets. waveguide. The reflective end may have positive optical power in a lateral direction along the waveguide. The rear reflector may be formed of at least two polarized reflector foils arranged to reflect light that is polarized in respective polarization directions that are orthogonal to each other, wherein the polarized reflector foils are shaped to form said linear array of reflective facets. Advantageously, the cost of the rear reflector can be reduced. [0011] In accordance with another aspect of the present disclosure, a directional display device may be provided which may include the previously discussed directional backlight and a transmissive spatial light modulator which may be arranged to receive light emitted from the first guide surface. [0012] In accordance with another aspect of the present disclosure, a display apparatus may be provided which may include the previously discussed directional display device and a control system which may be arranged to selectively operate light sources to direct light into windows. optics that correspond to the output directions. The display apparatus may be an autostereoscopic display apparatus wherein the control system may be further arranged to control the display device to temporarily display multiplexed left and forward images and to substantially synchronously direct images displayed in viewports in positions corresponding to an observer's left and right eyes. The control system of the autostereoscopic display apparatus may include a sensor system which may be arranged to detect the position of an observer through the display device. Additionally, the control system can be arranged to direct the emitted light into selected optical windows as a function of the detected position of the observer. [0013] In accordance with another aspect of the present disclosure, a directional backlight may comprise a waveguide comprising an input end; a single light source disposed at a predetermined input position in a lateral direction across the input end of the waveguide, wherein the waveguide further comprises opposing first and second guide surfaces for guiding light along the waveguide. waveform and a reflective end facing the input end to reflect input light back through the waveguide, wherein the first guide surface is arranged to guide light by means of total internal reflection and a second guide surface has a staggered shape comprising (a) a plurality of facets oriented to reflect light from the light source, after reflection from the reflective end, through the first guide surface into an optical window in an egress direction positioned in a lateral direction in a function of the light source entry position and (b) intermediate regions between the facets that are arranged to guide light through the waveguide; a rear reflector comprising an array of reflective facets arranged to reflect light from the light source, which is transmitted through the plurality of facets of the waveguide, back through the waveguide to exit through the first guide surface in said optical windows. [0014] Advantageously, the cost of the light source is reduced and tracking technologies are not required, further reducing the cost and increasing the lifetime of the device. Additional high gain optical output with high optical efficiency can be achieved. [0015] In accordance with other aspects of the present disclosure, directional imaging backlight may include a waveguide to guide light. The waveguide may include a first light guide surface operable to direct light from an illuminating array in a first direction, a second light guide surface operable to allow light to exit the waveguide, and a light guide surface operable to exit the waveguide. operable light input to receive light from the illuminating array. [0016] Screen backlights generally employ waveguides and edge emission sources. Certain directional imaging backlights have the added ability to direct lighting through a screen panel to the viewports. An imaging system can be formed between the multiple sources and their respective window images. An example of a directional imaging backlight is an optical valve which may employ a folded optical system and therefore may also be an example of a directional folded imaging backlight. Light can propagate substantially losslessly in one direction through the optic valve while counter-propagation light can be extracted by reflection from inclined facets as described in Patent Application No. No. 13/300,293, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. [0017] The modalities described here can provide an autostereoscopic screen with large area and fine structure. Furthermore, as will be described, the waveguides of the present disclosure can achieve thin optical components with large operating distances at the rear. These components can be used in directional light backgrounds to provide directional displays including autostereoscopic displays. Additionally, the modalities can provide a controlled illuminator for the purpose of an autostereoscopic screen and an effective 2D screen, a high brightness 2D screen or 2D screens that achieve a privacy function. [0018] The embodiments of the present disclosure can be used in a variety of optical systems. The modality may include or work with a variety of projectors, projection systems, optical components, screens, microscreens, computer systems, processors, self-contained projector systems, visual and/or audiovisual systems, and optical and/or electrical devices. Aspects of the present disclosure can be used with virtually any apparatus relating to optical and electrical devices, optical systems, display systems, or any apparatus that may contain any type of optical system. Accordingly, the embodiments of the present disclosure can be employed in optical systems, devices used in visual and/or optical presentations, visual peripherals, etc., and in numerous computing environments. [0019] Before considering in detail the modalities presented, it must be understood that the revelation is not limited in its application or creation to the details of specific dispositions shown, because the revelation is capable of other modalities. Furthermore, aspects of disclosure can be defined in different combinations and arrangements to define unique modalities in their own right. Furthermore, the terminology used in the present invention is for the purpose of description and not limitation. [0020] Directional backlights provide control over the illumination emanating substantially from the normally controlled output surface through modulation of independent LED light sources arranged on the inlet port side of an optical waveguide. Controlling the directional distribution of emitted light can achieve single person viewing for a safety function, where the screen can only be seen by a single observer from a limited range of angles; high electrical efficiency, where lighting can be provided only in a small angular directional distribution; switching from left and right eye view to time sequential stereoscopic and autostereoscopic screen; and low cost. [0021] These and other advantages and features of the present disclosure will be apparent to those skilled in the art upon reading this disclosure in its entirety. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS [0022] The modalities are illustrated by way of example in the attached Figures, in which similar reference numbers indicate similar parts, and in which: [0023] FIGURE 1A is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of light propagation in one embodiment of a directional display device, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0024] FIGURE 1B is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of light propagation in an embodiment of the directional display device of FIGURE 1A, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0025] FIGURE 2A is a schematic diagram illustrating a top view of light propagation in another embodiment of a directional display device, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0026] FIGURE 2B is a schematic diagram illustrating light propagation in a front view of the directional display device of FIGURE 2A, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0027] FIGURE 2C is a schematic diagram illustrating light propagation in a side view of the directional display device of FIGURE 2A, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0028] FIGURE 3 is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a directional display device in accordance with the present disclosure; [0029] FIGURE 4A is a schematic diagram illustrating in a previous view, the generation of a viewing window in a directional display device and including curved light extraction capabilities, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0030] FIGURE 4B is a schematic diagram illustrating in a previous view, the generation of a first and a second viewport in a directional display device and including curved light extraction features, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0031] FIGURE 5 is a schematic diagram illustrating the generation of a first viewport in a directional display device including linear light extraction capabilities, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0032] FIGURE 6A is a schematic diagram illustrating an embodiment of generating a first viewport in a time multiplexed directional display device, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0033] FIGURE 6B is a schematic diagram illustrating another embodiment of generating a second viewing window in a time multiplexed directional display device in a second time slot, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0034] FIGURE 6C is a schematic diagram illustrating another embodiment of generating first and second viewing windows in a time multiplexed directional display device, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0035] FIGURE 7 is a schematic diagram illustrating a viewer tracking autostereoscopic directional screen device in accordance with the present disclosure; [0036] FIGURE 8 is a schematic diagram illustrating a multi-viewer directional display device in accordance with the present disclosure; [0037] FIGURE 9 is a schematic diagram illustrating a privacy directional display device in accordance with the present disclosure; [0038] FIGURE 10 is a schematic diagram illustrating in a side view, the structure of a directional display device, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0039] FIGURE 11 is a schematic diagram illustrating a control system for an observer tracking directional screen apparatus, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0040] FIGURE 12 is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a directional display device with a rear reflector having an array of reflective facets, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0041] FIGURE 13 is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of a directional display device with a waveguide with linear light extraction capabilities and a back reflector with an array of linear reflective facets, in accordance with the present revelation; [0042] FIGURE 14 is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of a directional display device with a waveguide with curved light extraction capabilities and a back reflector with an array of linear reflective facets, in accordance with the present revelation; [0043] FIGURE 15A is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of a directional display device with a waveguide with curved light extraction capabilities and a back reflector with an array of curved reflective facets, in accordance with the present revelation; [0044] FIGURE 15B is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of a directional backlight that includes the waveguide and rear reflector of FIGURE 15A, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0045] FIGURE 15C is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of a rear reflector comprising random reflective facets, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0046] FIGURE 16 is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a directional display device with a waveguide, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0047] FIGURE 17 is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity versus propagation angle outside and inside a waveguide, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0048] FIGURE 18 is a schematic diagram illustrating a further side view of a directional display device with a waveguide, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0049] FIGURE 19A is a schematic diagram illustrating front and side views of an asymmetric diffuser, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0050] FIGURE 19B is a schematic diagram illustrating front and side views of an asymmetric diffuser, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0051] FIGURE 19C is a schematic diagram illustrating front and side views of an asymmetric diffuser, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0052] FIGURE 20 is a schematic diagram illustrating an additional side view of a waveguide with silver light extraction capabilities, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0053] FIGURE 21 is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity versus propagation angle outside and within the waveguide of FIGURE 20, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0054] FIGURE 22 is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of luminous intensity versus propagation angle for light exiting the waveguide of Figure 16 through reflection of light extraction features before an asymmetric diffuser, according to the present disclosure; [0055] FIGURE 23 is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of luminous intensity versus propagation angle for light exiting the waveguide of FIGURE 16 through reflection of light extraction features after an asymmetric diffuser, of in accordance with the present disclosure; [0056] FIGURE 24A is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of ray propagation paths in a waveguide via transmission through light extraction facilities, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0057] FIGURE 24B is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of luminous intensity versus propagation angle for light exiting the waveguide of FIGURE 24A via transmission through light extraction facilities, in accordance with the present revelation; [0058] FIGURE 25A is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of ray propagation paths in a waveguide through transmission through light extraction features and interacting reflection facets, in accordance with the present revelation; [0059] FIGURE 25B is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of ray propagation paths in a waveguide via transmission through light extraction features and which additionally interact with light guide features and facets of light. reflection, in accordance with the present revelation; [0060] FIGURE 25C is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of ray propagation paths in a waveguide through transmission through light extraction features, which interact with light guide features, which additionally comprise a layer disposed between the waveguide and reflection features, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0061] FIGURE 26 is a schematic diagram illustrating a detail of side views of a waveguide with a rear reflector having an array of reflective facets, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0062] FIGURE 27 is a schematic diagram illustrating a detail of side views of a waveguide with a rear reflector having an array of reflective facets, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0063] FIGURES 28A to 28E are schematic diagrams illustrating a detail of side views of a waveguide with a rear reflector having an array of reflective facets, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0064] FIGURES 28F to 28I are schematic diagrams illustrating side views of methods for forming a rear reflector, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0065] FIGURES 28J to 28K are schematic diagrams illustrating front views of rear reflectors, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0066] FIGURE 29 is a schematic diagram illustrating a detail of an additional side view of a waveguide with a rear reflector having an array of reflective facets, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0067] FIGURE 30 is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity versus propagation angle of a directional backlight fixture with a waveguide with a back reflector with an array of reflective facets before an asymmetric diffuser, of in accordance with the present disclosure; [0068] FIGURE 31 is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity versus propagation angle of a directional backlight fixture with a waveguide with a back reflector with an array of reflective facets after an asymmetric diffuser, in accordance with with the present revelation; [0069] FIGURE 32A is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity versus propagation angle of a directional backlight fixture with a waveguide with a back reflector with a matrix of reflective facets after an asymmetric diffuser, in accordance with with the present revelation; [0070] FIGURE 32B is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity versus propagation angle of a directional backlight apparatus with a waveguide with a back reflector with an array of reflective facets, in accordance with the present disclosure. ; [0071] FIGURE 32C is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity versus propagation angle of a directional backlight fixture with a waveguide with a back reflector with an array of reflective facets after an asymmetric diffuser, in accordance with with the present revelation; [0072] FIGURE 32D is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of using the optical output of the present embodiments on a screen disposed on a table surface, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0073] FIGURE 32E is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a rear reflector, in which the facets of the rear reflector are concave and arranged to image light from respective aligned light extraction features of an optic valve, in accordance with the present revelation; [0074] FIGURE 32F is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity versus propagation angle of a directional backlight apparatus comprising the arrangement of Figure 32E, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0075] FIGURE 33A is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a directional display device with a waveguide with a back reflector with an array of reflective facets, a Fresnel lens, and an asymmetric diffuser, in accordance with the present revelation; [0076] FIGURE 33B is a schematic diagram illustrating exemplary ray trajectories used to determine the relationship between the curvatures of light extraction features and backreflector facets, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0077] FIGURE 33C is a schematic diagram illustrating a plot of drawn ray angles versus incident ray angles as illustrated in FIGURE 33B, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0078] FIGURE 33D is a schematic illustrating ray trajectories traced to optimize lighting system design, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0079] FIGURE 33E is a schematic illustrating the reflection facet ray paths and extraction feature plotted to optimize lighting system design in accordance with the present disclosure; [0080] Figure 33F is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of ray emission position versus horizontal screen position for those rays coming from a single point of view that reflect from extraction features or reflector facets, in accordance with the present revelation; [0081] FIGURE 34 is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of an embodiment of a directional display device with polarization recovery, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0082] FIGURE 35A is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of an embodiment of a directional display device with polarization recovery of FIGURE 34, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0083] FIGURE 35B is a schematic diagram illustrating a further side view of a detail of the polarization recovery arrangement of FIGURE 34, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0084] FIGURE 35C is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of the polarization recovery arrangement of FIGURE 34, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0085] FIGURE 35D is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of a symmetrical diffuser for use in the arrangement of FIGURE 36A, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0086] FIGURE 35E is a schematic diagram illustrating a perspective view of an optical stack comprising an optical valve, a backreflector, an optical control layer, and a spatial light modulator, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0087] FIGURES 35F to 35I are schematic diagrams illustrating side views of an optical stack comprising optical control layers and a spatial light modulator, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0088] FIGURES 36A to 36B are schematic diagrams illustrating additional side views of polarization recovery arrangements in accordance with the present disclosure; [0089] FIGURES 37A and 37B are schematic diagrams illustrating a side view of a polarization recovery arrangement, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0090] FIGURE 37C is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of an optical valve comprising a light scattering feature and a rear reflector, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0091] FIGURE 37D is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of the appearance of an optical valve comprising a light scattering feature and a rear reflector, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0092] FIGURE 37E is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of an optical valve comprising a light scattering feature and a rear reflector which further comprises a light scattering facet surface, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0093] FIGURE 37F is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of the appearance of an optical valve comprising a light scattering feature and a rear reflector which further comprises a light scattering facet surface, in accordance with the present invention. revelation; [0094] FIGURE 37G is a schematic diagram illustrating a perspective view of a light extraction feature of an optical valve comprising a dimple structure, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0095] FIGURES 37H and 37I are schematic diagrams illustrating perspective views of rear reflectors comprising a dimple structure, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0096] FIGURE 38A is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of a polarization recovery embodiment comprising curved facets, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0097] FIGURE 38B is a schematic diagram illustrating recirculated ray trajectories plotted to optimize backlight design in accordance with the present disclosure; [0098] FIGURE 39 is a schematic diagram illustrating double recirculated rays reflecting reflector film facets, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0099] FIGURE 40 is a schematic diagram that illustrates a graph of ray emission position versus horizontal screen position for those rays coming from a single point of view and subjected, or not, to recirculation and, therefore, reflecting resources extraction or reflector facets, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0100] FIGURE 41 is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of an optic valve arranged in portrait orientation to provide a horizontal 2D viewing window, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0101] FIGURE 42A is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of an optic valve arranged in landscape orientation to provide a vertical 2D viewing window, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0102] FIGURES 42B to 42D are schematic diagrams illustrating light emitting element luminous flux graphs with position in light emitting element arrays, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0103] FIGURES 43A and 43B are schematic diagrams illustrating front and side views of an optic valve arranged with a reflector on the inlet side to redirect back light into a wide viewing cone and an integrated Fresnel mirror, in accordance with the present revelation; [0104] FIGURES 43C and 43D are schematic diagrams illustrating additional front views of an optical valve arranged with a reflector on the inlet side to redirect back light into a wide viewing cone and an integrated Fresnel mirror, in accordance with the present revelation; [0105] FIGURE 43E is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of a light intensity distribution of the arrangement of FIGURE 43A, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0106] FIGURES 44A and 44B are schematic diagrams illustrating front and side views of an optical valve which further comprises an asymmetric diffuser disposed near the reflective end to improve output uniformity, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0107] FIGURES 44C and 44D are schematic diagrams illustrating front views of a method for forming an optical valve, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0108] FIGURE 45A is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of an optical valve in a first assembly stage comprising an LED array arranged in a first device frame and a Fresnel mirror arranged in a second device frame , in accordance with the present disclosure; [0109] FIGURE 45B is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of an optical valve in a second assembly stage comprising an LED array arranged in a first device frame and a Fresnel mirror arranged in a second device frame , in accordance with the present disclosure; [0110] FIGURE 46A is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of a battery for display devices comprising a reflective film, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0111] FIGURES 46B and 46C are schematic diagrams illustrating side views of batteries for the display device comprising a reflective film, in accordance with the present disclosure; and [0112] FIGURE 47 is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a display device comprising a reflective film disposed on a wedge-type battery, in accordance with the present disclosure; [0113] FIGURE 48 is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a display device comprising a side wall provided with LED placement slits to achieve reduced bevel width, in accordance with the present disclosure; and [0114] FIGURE 49 is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a screen device comprising a side wall provided with slits for mirror placement to achieve reduced bevel width, in accordance with the present disclosure. DETAILED DESCRIPTION [0115] Time multiplexed autostereoscopic displays can advantageously improve the spatial resolution of the autostereoscopic display by directing light from all pixels of a spatial light modulator to a first viewing window at a first time interval, and all pixels to a second viewport at a second time slot. In this way, an observer with eyes arranged to receive light in the first and second viewing windows will see a full resolution image across the entire screen at multiple time intervals. Time multiplexed displays can advantageously achieve directional illumination by directing an illuminating array through a substantially transparent time multiplexed spatial light modulator using directional optical elements, the directional optical elements substantially forming an image of the array. illuminator in the plane of the window. [0116] The uniformity of the viewing windows can be advantageously independent of the arrangement of pixels in the spatial light modulator. Advantageously, such screens can provide the observer with tracking screens that have low flicker, with low levels of crosstalk for a moving observer. [0117] To achieve high uniformity in the window plane, it is desirable to provide an array of lighting elements that have a high spatial uniformity. The illuminating elements of the sequential lighting system can be provided, for example, by pixels of a spatial light modulator approximately 100 micrometers in size in combination with a lens array. However, these pixels suffer from similar difficulties as spatially multiplexed screens. In addition, these devices can be low in efficiency and high in cost, which requires additional display components. [0118] The high plane uniformity of the window can be conveniently achieved with macroscopic illuminators, for example an array of LEDs in combination with diffusion and homogenization optical elements that typically have a size of 1 mm or more. However, increasing the size of the illuminating elements means that the size of the directional optical elements increases proportionately. For example, a 16mm wide illuminator imaged to a 65mm wide viewport may require a rear working distance of 200mm. In this way, increasing the thickness of the optical elements can prevent useful application, for example, for mobile screens, or large area screens. [0119] In addressing the aforementioned shortcomings, optical valves, as described in commonly owned US Patent Application No. 13/300,293, can be advantageously arranged in combination with rapidly changing transmissive spatial light modulators to achieve multiplexed autostereoscopic illumination time in a slim package, while providing high resolution images with flicker-free observer tracking and low crosstalk levels. We describe a one-dimensional array of viewing positions, or windows, that can display different images in a first, typically horizontal, direction, but which contain the same images when moving in a second, typically vertical, direction. [0120] Conventional non-imaging screen backlights commonly employ optical waveguides and are edge-illuminated from light sources such as LEDs. However, it should be noted that there are many fundamental differences in function, design, structure, and operation between these conventional non-imaging screen backlights and the directional imaging backlights discussed in the present disclosure. [0121] Generally, for example, in accordance with the present disclosure, directional imaging backlights are arranged to direct lighting from multiple light sources through a screen panel to multiple respective viewing windows at at least an axis. Each viewing window is substantially formed as an image on at least one axis of a light source by the imaging directional backlight imaging system. An imaging system can be formed between the multiple light sources and the respective window images. In this way, light from each of the multiple light sources is substantially not visible to the eye of an observer outside the respective viewing window. [0122] In contrast, conventional non-imaging backlights or light guiding plates (LGPs) are used to illuminate 2D screens. See, for example, Kalil Kãlãntãr et al., Backlight Unit With Double Surface Light Emission, J. Soc. Inf. Display, Vol. 12, Issue 4, pages 379 to 387 (December 2004). Non-imaging backlights are typically arranged to direct lighting from multiple light sources through a display panel to a substantially common viewing zone for each of the multiple light sources to achieve wide viewing angle and high uniformity. of screen. Thus, backlights without imaging do not form viewing windows. In this way, light from each of the multiple light sources can be visible to the eye of an observer at substantially all positions throughout the observation zone. These conventional non-imaging backlights may have some directionality, for example to increase screen gain compared to Lambertian lighting, which can be provided by gloss enhancement films such as BEF™ available from 3M. However, this directionality can be substantially the same for each of the respective light sources. Thus, for these and other reasons that should be obvious to those skilled in the art, conventional non-imaging backlights are different from directional imaging backlights. Backlight lighting structures without imaging the illuminated edge can be used in liquid crystal display systems such as those seen in Laptops, Monitors and 2D TVs. Light propagates from the edge of a lossy waveguide that may include sparse features; typically local indentations on the surface of the guide that cause light to be lost regardless of the direction of light propagation. [0123] As used here, an optical valve is an optical structure that can be a type of light guide structure or device called, for example, a light valve, a directional backlight of the optical valve, and a directional backlight of the optical valve. valve ("v-DBL"). In the present disclosure, the optical valve is different from a spatial light modulator (although spatial light modulators may sometimes be called a "light valve" in the art). An example of a directional imaging backlight is an optical valve that may employ a folded optical system. Light may propagate substantially losslessly in one direction through the optic valve, may be incident upon an image reflector, and may counter-propagate such that light may be extracted by reflection from the inclined light extraction facilities, and directed at windows. display as described in Patent Application no. No. 13/300,293, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. [0124] As used here, examples of an imaging directional backlight include a staggered waveguide imaging directional backlight, a folded imaging directional backlight, a wedge-type directional backlight, or an optical valve. [0125] Additionally, as used here, a stepped waveguide imaging directional backlight can be an optical valve. A stepped waveguide is a waveguide for directional imaging backlight that includes a waveguide for guiding light, which further includes a first guide surface light and a second guide surface light opposite the first guide surface light. guide surface, further including a plurality of light guide features interspersed with a plurality of extraction features arranged as steps. [0126] Furthermore, as used, a folded imaging directional backlight can be at least one of a wedge-type directional light background, or an optical valve. [0127] In operation, light can propagate within an example optical tube in a first direction from an input side to a reflective side and can be transmitted substantially without loss. Light can be reflected on the reflective side and propagate in a second direction substantially opposite to the first direction. As light propagates in the second direction, light may be incident on the light extraction features, which are operable to redirect light away from the optic valve. Put another way, the optical valve generally allows light to propagate in the first direction and can allow light to be extracted while propagating in the second direction. [0128] Optical valve can achieve time-sequential directional illumination of large area screens. Additionally, optical elements can be employed, which are thinner than the working distance from the back of the optical elements, to direct light from the macroscopic illuminators to a plane of the window. Such screens can use an array of light extraction features arranged to extract the counterpropagation of light in a substantially parallel waveguide. [0129] Thin imaging directional backlight implementations for use with LCDs have been proposed and demonstrated by 3M, for example in US Patent No. 7,528,893; by Microsoft, for example, in US Patent No. 7,970,246 which may be referred to in the present invention as a "wedge-type directional backlight"; by RealD, e.g., US Patent Application No. 13/300,293 which may be referred to in the present invention as "optical valve" or "optical valve directional backlight" all of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety. [0130] The present disclosure features directional stepped waveguide imaging backlights in which light may reflect back and forth between the inner faces of, for example, a stepped waveguide which may include a first side and a first feature set. As light travels along the length of the stepped waveguide, the light cannot substantially change the angle of incidence with respect to the first side and the first set of surfaces, and thus cannot reach the critical angle of the middle on these surfaces. inner faces. Light extraction can advantageously be achieved by a second set of surfaces (the "rises" step) that are inclined with respect to the first set of surfaces (the "steps" step). Note that the second set of surfaces may not be part of the staggered waveguide's light guide operation, but may be arranged to provide light extraction from the structure. On the other hand, a directional wedge imaging backlight can allow light to be oriented within a wedge-shaped waveguide having continuous internal surfaces. The optic valve is therefore not a wedge-type directional imaging backlight. [0131] FIGURE 1A is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of light propagation in one embodiment of a directional display device, and FIGURE 1B is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of light propagation in the display device direction of FIGURE 1A. [0132] FIGURE 1A illustrates an xy-plane anterior view of a directional backlight of a directional display device, and includes an illuminating array 15 that can be used to illuminate a stepped waveguide 1. The illuminating array 15 includes illuminating elements 15a through the illuminating element 15n (where n is an integer greater than one). In one example, scaled waveguide 1 of FIGURE 1A may be a scaled waveguide of screen 1. Illuminator elements 15a to 15n are light sources which may be light-emitting diodes (LEDs). Although LEDs are discussed here as illuminating elements 15a - 15n, other light sources can be used such as, but not limited to, diode sources, semiconductor sources, laser sources, local field emission sources, organic emitting arrays. , and so on. Additionally, FIGURE 1B illustrates a side view in the xz plane, and includes illuminating array 15, SLM (spatial light modulator) 48, extraction features 12, guide features 10, and stepped waveguide 1, arranged as shown. A side view provided in FIGURE 1B is an alternate view of the front view shown in FIGURE 1A. Accordingly, the illuminator array 15 of FIGURES 1A and 1B correspond to each other and the stepped waveguide 1 of FIGURES 1A and 1B may correspond to each other. [0133] Additionally, in FIGURE 1B, the stepped waveguide 1 may have an inlet end 2 that is thin and a reflective end 4 that is thick. In this way, the waveguide 1 extends between the input end 2 that receives the input light and the reflective end 4 that reflects the input light back through the waveguide 1. The length of the input end 2 in a lateral direction along the waveguide is greater than the height of the inlet end 2. The illuminating elements 15a - 15n are arranged at different inlet positions in a lateral direction along the inlet end 2. [0134] Waveguide 1 has opposing first and second guide surfaces that extend between input end 2 and reflective end 4 to guide light back and forth along waveguide 1 by internal reflection total. The first guide surface is flat. The second guide surface has a plurality of light extracting features 12 facing the reflective end 4 and angled to reflect at least part of the guided light back through the waveguide 1 from the reflective end in reflection-breaking directions. internally on the first guide surface and allow exit through the first guide surface, for example upwards in FIGURE 1B, which is supplied to the SLM 48. [0135] In this example, light extraction features 12 are reflective facets, although other reflective features can be used. The light extracting features 12 do not guide light through the waveguide, while the intermediate regions of the second guide surface intermediate to the light extracting features 12 guide light without extracting it. Such regions of the second guide surface are planar and may extend parallel to the first guide surface, or at a relatively low slope. The light extraction features 12 extend laterally into the regions so that the second guide surface has a staggered shape including the light extraction features 12 and the regions in between. The light extraction features 12 are oriented to reflect light from the light sources, after a reflection from the reflective end 4, through the first guide surface. [0136] The light extraction features 12 are arranged to direct the incoming light from different inlet positions in the lateral direction along the inlet end in different directions with respect to the first guide surface which are dependent on the position of Entrance. As lighting elements 15a-15n are arranged at different input positions, light from respective lighting elements 15a-15n is reflected in different directions. In this way, each of the lighting elements 15a-15n directs light to a respective optical window in output directions distributed in the lateral direction as a function of input positions. The lateral direction through the entry end 2, in which the entry positions are distributed, corresponds, with respect to the exit light, to a lateral direction with respect to the normal to the first guide surface. The lateral directions as defined at the input end 2 and with respect to the light output remain parallel in this embodiment, where the deflections at the reflective end 4 and the first guide surface are generally orthogonal to the lateral direction. Under the control of a control system, the illuminating elements 15a - 15n can be selectively operated to direct light to a selectable optical window. Optical windows can be used individually or in groups as viewing windows. [0137] The reflective end 4 can have positive optical power in the lateral direction along the waveguide. In embodiments in which the reflective end 4 typically has a positive optical power, the optical axis may be defined with reference to the shape of the reflective end 4, e.g., being a line passing through the center of curvature of the reflective end 4 and coincides with the reflective symmetry axis of end 4 about the x-axis. In the case where the reflective surface 4 is flat, the optical axis can be similarly defined with respect to other components having optical power, for example the light-extracting features 12 if they are curved, or the Fresnel lens 62 described below. Optical axis 238 is typically coincident with the mechanical axis of waveguide 1. [0138] The SLM 48 that extends along the waveguide is transmissive and modulates the light that passes through it. Although the SLM 48 may be a liquid crystal display (LCD), but this is merely by way of example, and other spatial light modulators or displays may be used, including LCOS devices, DLP, and so on, this illuminator can work on reflection. In this example, the SLM 48 is disposed along the first guide surface of the waveguide and modulates the light output through the first guide surface after reflection from light extraction features 12. [0139] The operation of a directional display device that can provide a three-dimensional array of viewports is illustrated in the previous view in FIGURE 1A, with its side profile illustrated in FIGURE 1B. In operation, in FIGURES 1A and 1B, light may be emitted from an illuminating array 15, such as an array of illuminating elements 15a to 15n, located at different positions, y, along the thin-end side surface 2, x=0, from stepped waveguide 1. Light can propagate along +x in a first direction, inside stepped waveguide 1, while at the same time light can scatter outwards in the xy plane and upon reaching the far curved end side 4, it may substantially or entirely fill the curved end side 4. During propagation, light can scatter at a set of angles in the xz plane up to, but not greater than, the critical angle of the guide material. The pullout features 12 connecting the guide features 10 on the underside of the stepped waveguide 1 can have a tilt angle greater than the critical angle and therefore can be dispensed with by substantially all of the light propagating along it. of +x in the first direction, ensuring substantially lossless propagation forward. [0140] Continuing the discussion of FIGURES 1A and 1B, the curved end 4 side of the stepped waveguide 1 can be made reflective, typically being coated with a reflective material such as silver, although other reflective techniques may be employed . Therefore, light can be redirected in a second direction, back down the guide in the -x direction, and can be substantially collimated in the xy plane or screen plane. Angular scattering can be substantially preserved in the xz plane over the main propagation direction, which can allow light to reach the rising edges and reflect off the guide. In one embodiment, with extraction features tilted at approximately 45 degrees, light can effectively be directed approximately normal to the screen plane xy with angular dispersion xz substantially maintained with respect to the propagation direction. This angular scattering can be increased as light exits the staggered waveguide 1 through refraction, but can be slightly decreased depending on the reflective properties of the extraction features 12. [0141] In some embodiments, with uncoated extraction features 12, reflection can be reduced when total internal reflection (TIR) fails by tightening the xz angular profile changing to normal. However, in other embodiments having metallized or silver-coated extraction capabilities, increased angular dispersion and central normal direction can be preserved. Continuing the description of the modality with silver-coated extraction features, in the xz plane, light can exit the 1 staggered waveguide approximately collimated and can be directed out of the normal in proportion to the y-position of the respective illuminating element 15a - 15n in the illuminating matrix 15 from the center of the leading edge. By having independent illuminating elements 15a - 15n along the leading edge 2 then light is allowed to exit from the entire first light directing side 6 and propagate at different external angles as illustrated in FIGURE 1A . [0142] Illumination of a Spatial Light Modulator (SLM) 48 such as a fast liquid crystal display (LCD) panel with such a device can reach the 3D autostereoscopic screen as shown in a top view or yz plane viewed from the end of the array illuminator 15 in FIGURE 2A, front view in FIGURE 2B and side view in FIGURE 2C. FIGURE 2A is a schematic diagram illustrating in a top view the propagation of light in a directional display device, FIGURE 2B is a schematic diagram illustrating in a previous view the propagation of light in a directional display device and FIGURE 2C is a schematic diagram illustrating in a side view the propagation of light in a directional display device. As illustrated in FIGURES 2A, 2B, and 2C, the stepped waveguide 1 may be located behind a fast (e.g. greater than 100 Hz) LCD SLM panel 48 that displays right and left eye images in sequence. In synchronization, the specific illuminating elements 15a to 15n of the illuminating array 15 (where n is an integer greater than one) can be selectively turned on and off, providing illuminating light that enters the right and left eyes substantially independently, by virtue of the system directionality. In the simplest case, the sets of illuminating elements of the illuminating array 15 are linked together, providing a one-dimensional viewing window 26 or an optical pupil with limited width in the horizontal direction but extended in the vertical direction, in which both horizontally separated eyes can viewing an image of the left eye, and another viewing window 44 in which the image of a right eye can be viewed primarily by both eyes, and a central position in which both eyes can view different images. In this way, 3D can be seen when an observer's head is approximately centrally aligned. Moving sideways away from the center position can result in the scene collapsing into a 2D image. [0143] Reflective end 4 can have positive optical power in the lateral direction along the waveguide. In embodiments in which the reflective end 4 typically has a positive optical power, the optical axis may be defined with reference to the shape of the reflective end 4, e.g., being a line passing through the center of curvature of the reflective end 4 and coincides with the reflective symmetry axis of end 4 about the x-axis. In the case where the reflective surface 4 is flat, the optical axis can be similarly defined with respect to other components having optical power, for example the light-extracting features 12 if they are curved, or the Fresnel lens 62 described below. Optical axis 238 is typically coincident with the mechanical axis of waveguide 1. The cylindrical reflection surface at the end 4 may typically have a spherical profile to optimize performance for both on-axis and off-axis viewing positions. Other profiles can be used. [0144] FIGURE 3 is a schematic diagram illustrating, in side view, a directional display device. Additionally, FIGURE 3 illustrates further details of a side view of the operation of the stepped waveguide 1, which may be a transparent material. The stepped waveguide 1 may include an illuminating input side 2, a reflective side 4, a first light directing side 6 which may be substantially flat, and a second light directing side 8 which includes guide features 10 and light extraction features 12. In operation, light rays 16 from an illuminator element 15c of an illuminator array 15 (not shown in FIGURE 3), which may be an addressable array of LEDs for example, may be oriented in the guide waveform 1 through total internal reflection by the first light-directing side 6 and total internal reflection by the guide feature 10, to the reflective side 4, which may be a mirror surface. Although the reflective side 4 may be a mirrored surface and may reflect light, it may, in some embodiments, also be possible for light to pass through the reflective side 4. [0145] Continuing the discussion of FIGURE 3, the light ray 18 reflected by the reflective side 4 can be further oriented in the stepped waveguide 1 by the total internal reflection on the reflective side 4 and can be reflected by extraction features 12. The rays Light beams 18 that are incident on extraction features 12 can be substantially deviated from the orientation modes of stepped waveguide 1 and can be directed, as shown by beam 20, through side 6 to an optical pupil that can form a viewing window. visualization 26 of an autostereoscopic screen. The width of the viewing window 26 can be determined by at least the size of the illuminator, the design distance of optical power output on the sides 4 and the extraction features 12. The height of the viewing window can be determined primarily by the reflection cone angle of extraction features 12 and by inputting the lighting cone angle on the input side 2. Thus, each viewport 26 represents a range of separate output directions, with respect to the direction normal to the modulator surface. of spatial light 48 that intersects with a plane at the nominal viewing distance. [0146] FIGURE 4A is a schematic diagram illustrating in a previous view, a directional display device that can be illuminated by a first illuminating element and including curved light extraction capabilities. Furthermore, FIGURE 4A shows, in a front view, more light ray guides from the illuminator element 15c of the illuminator array 15, in the stepped waveguide 1, which has an optical geometric axis 28. In FIGURE 4A, the Directional backlighting may include step waveguide 1 and light source illuminator array 15. Each of the output rays is directed from the input side 2 towards the same viewing window 26 from the respective illuminator 15c. The light rays of FIGURE 4A can exit the reflective side 4 of the stepped waveguide 1. As shown in FIGURE 4A, the ray 16 can be directed from the illuminating element 15c towards the reflective side 4. The ray 18 can then be , reflected from a light extractor 12 and exiting the reflective side 4 towards the viewport 26. Thus, the light ray 30 may intercept the ray 20 in the viewport 26, or it may have a different height in the window display as shown by ray 32. Additionally, in various embodiments, sides 22, 24 of waveguide 1 may be of transparent, mirrored or blackened surfaces. Continuing the discussion of FIGURE 4A, the light-extracting features 12 can be elongated, and the orientation of the light-extracting features 12 in a first region 34 of the light-directing side 8 (light-directing side 8 shown in FIGURE 3, but not shown in FIGURE 4A) may differ from the orientation of light extracting features 12 in a second region 36 of the light-directing side 8. Similar to other embodiments discussed herein, for example, as illustrated in FIGURE 3, the light extraction features of FIGURE 4A can be switched with the guide features 10. As illustrated in FIGURE 4A, the stepped waveguide 1 can include a reflective surface on the reflective side 4. In one embodiment, the reflective end step waveguide 1 can have positive optical power in a lateral direction through step waveguide 1. [0147] In another embodiment, the light extraction features 12 of each directional backlight may have positive optical power in a lateral direction through the waveguide. [0148] In another embodiment, each directional backlight may include light extraction features 12 which may be facets of the second guide surface. The second guide surface may have regions alternating with facets which may be arranged to direct light through the waveguide without substantially extracting it. [0149] FIGURE 4B is a schematic diagram that illustrates, in a previous view, a directional display device that can be illuminated by a second illuminating element. In addition, FIGURE 4B shows light rays 40, 42 from a second illuminating element 15h of the illuminating array 15. The curvature of the reflective surface on side 4 and the light extraction features 12 cooperatively produce a second window of light. view 44 laterally separated from viewport 26 with rays of light from illuminating element 15h. [0150] Advantageously, the arrangement illustrated in FIGURE 4B can provide a real image of the illuminating element 15c in a viewing window 26 in which the real image can be formed by a cooperation of optical power on the reflective side 4 and optical power, which can arise from different orientations of elongated light extraction features 12 between regions 34 and 36 as shown in FIGURE 4A. The arrangement of FIGURE 4B can achieve enhanced aberrations from imaging the illuminating element 15c to side positions in the viewport 26. The enhanced aberrations can achieve extended viewing freedom for an autostereoscopic screen by achieving low levels of crosstalk. [0151] FIGURE 5 is a schematic diagram illustrating, in a previous view, an embodiment of a directional display device that has substantially linear light extraction capabilities. Furthermore, FIGURE 5 shows a similar arrangement of components to FIGURE 1 (with corresponding elements being similar), with one of the differences being that the light extraction features 12 are substantially linear and parallel to each other. Advantageously, such an arrangement can provide substantially uniform illumination across a screen surface and can be more convenient to manufacture than the curved extraction features of FIGURE 4A and FIGURE 4B. Optical axis 321 of directional waveguide 1 may be the optical axis direction of the surface on side 4. Optical power on side 4 is arranged to be transverse to the optical axis direction, thus, rays incident on the side 4 will have an angular deflection that varies according to the lateral deviation 319 of the incident ray of the optical geometric axis 321. [0152] FIGURE 6A is a schematic diagram illustrating one embodiment of generating a first viewport in a time multiplexed imaging directional screen device in a first time slot, FIGURE 6B is a schematic diagram illustrating another embodiment of generating a second viewing window in a time multiplexed imaging directional backlight in a second time slot, and FIGURE 6C is a schematic diagram illustrating another embodiment of generating first and second viewing windows in a time multiplexed imaging directional display device. Furthermore, FIGURE 6A schematically shows the generation of viewing window 26 from stepped waveguide 1. The illuminator element group 31 in the illuminator array 15 may provide a cone of light 17 directed to a viewing window 26. FIGURE 6B schematically shows the generation of viewing window 44. The illuminating element group 33 in the illuminating array 15 can provide a cone of light 19 directed towards a viewing window 44. In cooperation with a time multiplexed screen, the windows 26 and 44 may be provided in sequence as shown in FIGURE 6C. If the image on a spatial light modulator 48 (not shown in FIGURES 6A, 6B, 6C) is adjusted in correspondence with the directing light output, then the autostereoscopic image can be achieved by a suitably located observer. Similar operation can be achieved with all directional imaging backlights described herein. Note that groups of lighting elements 31, 33 each include one or more lighting elements from lighting elements 15a to 15n, where n is an integer greater than one. [0153] FIGURE 7 is a schematic diagram illustrating an embodiment of an autostereoscopic observer tracking display apparatus including a time multiplexed directional display device. As shown in FIGURE 7, by selectively turning on and off lighting elements 15a to 15n along axis 29, directional control of the viewing windows is provided. The position of the head 45 can be monitored with a camera, motion sensor, motion detector, or any other appropriate optical, mechanical, or electrical means, and the appropriate illuminator elements of the illuminator array 15 can be turned on and off to provide substantially independent images. for each eye regardless of head position 45. The head tracking system (or a second head tracking system) can provide monitoring of more than one head 45, 47 (head 47 not shown in FIGURE 7) and can provide the same left and right eye images for each of the observers' left and right eyes providing the 3D for all observers. Again, similar operation can be achieved with all imaging directional backlights described herein. [0154] FIGURE 8 is a schematic diagram illustrating an embodiment of a multi-view directional display device as an example including an imaging directional backlight. As shown in FIGURE 8, at least two 2D images can be directed to a pair of observers 45, 47 so that each observer can see a different image on the spatial light modulator 48. The two 2D images of FIGURE 8 can be generated in a similar manner. in a similar manner as described with respect to FIGURE 7, in that the two images can be displayed in sequence and in synchronization with sources whose light is directed towards the two observers. One image is presented to the spatial light modulator 48 in a first phase, and a second image is presented to the spatial light modulator 48 in a second phase different from the first phase. In correspondence with the first and second stages, the output lighting is adjusted to provide the first and second viewing windows 26, 44, respectively. An observer with two eyes in viewport 26 will perceive a first image, while an observer with two eyes in viewport 44 will perceive a second image. [0155] FIGURE 9 is a schematic diagram illustrating a directional privacy display device that includes an imaging directional backlight. 2D display systems may also utilize directional backlighting for safety and efficiency purposes where light may be directed primarily towards the eyes of a first observer 45, as shown in FIGURE 9. Thus, as illustrated in FIGURE 9, although the first observer 45 may be able to view an image on device 50, the light is not directed towards second observer 47. Thus, second observer 47 is prevented from viewing an image on device 50. Each of the embodiments of the present disclosure may advantageously provide autostereoscopic, dual-image or privacy screen functions. [0156] FIGURE 10 is a schematic diagram illustrating in a side view the structure of a time multiplexed directional display device as an example including an imaging directional backlight. In addition, FIGURE 10 shows, in a side view, a directional autostereoscopic display device, which may include stepped waveguide 1 and a Fresnel lens 62 arranged to provide viewing window 26 for substantially collimated output. through the exit surface of the stepped waveguide 1. A vertical diffuser 68 may be arranged to further extend the height of the viewing window 26. The light may then be imaged via the spatial light modulator 48. illuminating array 15 may include light-emitting diodes (LEDs) which may, for example, be phosphor-converted blue LEDs, or may be separate RGB LEDs. Alternatively, the illuminating elements in the illuminator array 15 may include a uniform light source and spatial light modulator 48 arranged to provide separate regions of illumination. Alternatively, the illuminating elements may include laser light source(s). The laser output can be directed to a diffuser by scanning, for example using a galvo scanner or MEMS. In one example, laser light may thus be used to provide suitable illuminating elements in the illuminator array 15 to provide a substantially uniform light source at the proper output angle, and further to provide reduction in spatter. Alternatively, the illuminating array 15 may be an array of laser light emitting elements. Additionally, in one example, the diffuser may be a wavelength-converting phosphor, so that the illumination may be at a different wavelength than the visible output light. [0157] In the following description, the waveguides, directional backlights, and directional display devices are based on, and incorporate the structures of, FIGURES 1 through 10 above. Except for the modifications and/or additional features that will now be described, the above description applies equally to the following waveguides, directional backlights, and display devices, but for brevity they will not be repeated. The waveguides described below can be incorporated into a directional backlight or directional display device, 2D display device or 3D display device as described above. Similarly, the directional backlights described below can be incorporated into a directional display device as described above. [0158] FIGURE 11 is a schematic diagram illustrating a directional display apparatus comprising a display device 100 and a control system. The layout and operation of the control system will now be described and can be applied, with changes as appropriate, to each of the display devices presented here. [0159] The directional display device 100 comprises a directional backlight comprising a waveguide 1 and an array of illuminating elements 15 arranged as described above. The control system is arranged to selectively operate lighting elements 15a to 15n to direct light into selectable viewing windows. [0160] Waveguide 1 is arranged as described above. The reflective end 4 converges the reflected light. A Fresnel lens 62 may be arranged to cooperate with the reflective end 4 to target viewing windows 26 in a viewing plane 106 observed by an observer 99. A spatial transmissive light modulator (SLM) 48 may be arranged to receive light from a directional backlight. In addition, a diffuser 68 may be provided to substantially remove Moiré beating between the waveguide 1 and the SLM pixels 48, as well as the Fresnel lens 62. [0161] As illustrated in FIGURE 11, a directional backlight may include stepped waveguide 1 and light source illuminating array 15. As illustrated in FIGURE 11, stepped waveguide 1 includes a light-directing side 8 , 4 reflective side, 10 guide features, and 12 light extraction features. [0162] The control system may comprise a sensor system arranged to detect the position of the observer 99 in relation to the screen device 100. The sensor system comprises a position sensor 70, such as a camera, and a measurement system of position of the head 72, which may, for example, comprise a computer display image processing system. The control system may further comprise a lighting controller 74 and an image controller 76, which are both provided with the detected position of the observer provided from the head position measurement system 72. [0163] The lighting controller 74 selectively operates the illuminators 15 to direct light to the viewing windows 26 in cooperation with the waveguide 1. The lighting controller 74 selects the illuminator elements 15 to be operated as a function of the position of the light. observer detected by the head position measurement system 72, so that the viewing windows 26, to which the light is directed, are in positions corresponding to the right and left eyes of the observer 99. In this way, the directionality of the side exit of waveguide 1 corresponds to the position of the observer. [0164] Image controller 76 controls SLM 48 to display the images. To provide an autostereoscopic display, the image controller 76 and the lighting controller 74 may operate as follows. The image controller 76 controls the SLM 48 to display the temporally multiplexed right and left eye images. The lighting controller 74 operates the light sources 15 to direct light to the viewing windows at positions corresponding to an observer's left and right eyes synchronously with the display of left and right eye images. In this way, an autostereoscopic effect is achieved using a time division multiplexing technique. [0165] The above descriptions may apply to each or all of the following devices, modifications and/or additional features, individually or any combination thereof, which will now be described. [0166] In another embodiment, a directional display apparatus may additionally include a control system that may be arranged to selectively operate light sources to direct light into viewing windows that correspond to output directions as previously discussed. This mode can also be used in conjunction with any of the directional backlights, directional display devices, directional display devices and so on as described herein. [0167] In another embodiment, a directional display device may be an autostereoscopic display device with a control system. The control system may be further arranged to control the directional display device to temporarily display multiplexed left and right images and to synchronously direct the displayed images in viewports to positions that correspond at least to the left and right eyes of an observer. . The control system may include a sensor system which may be arranged to detect the position of an observer through the display device and may also be arranged to direct images displayed in viewports to positions corresponding at least to the left and right eyes. right of an observer. The position of the viewports can mainly depend on the detected position of the observer. [0168] FIGURE 12 is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a directional display device with a back reflector 300. The directional display device may include a directional backlight and a transmissive spatial light modulator. The backreflector 300 may include an array of reflective facets 310. The array is a linear array as it repeats in a linear direction (e.g., vertically in Figure 12). The light rays 304 that are reflected from the light extracting features 12 of the waveguide 1 are directed to a vertical viewing position in the viewing window 26, with an angular distribution in the direction. The light rays that are reflected from the light extraction 306 that are transmitted through the resources 12 are either lost to the system or may interact with materials through the screen and be scattered to produce undesirable crosstalk between the respective viewing windows. [0169] In the present disclosure, an optical window refers to the image of a single light source in the window plane. By way of comparison, a viewing window 26 is a region in the window plane 106 where light is supplied and which may include image data of substantially the same image as the screen area. In this way, a viewport can be formed from multiple optical windows. Typically, optical windows have a small lateral extent (y-axis direction) and a large extent in a vertical direction orthogonal to the lateral extent (x-axis direction). [0170] In the present embodiment, the light rays 306 that are transmitted through the features 12 are incident on the reflective facets of the rear reflector 300. The light rays 306 are thus redirected to the viewing window 26. For a given array light source 15, the lateral extent and position of the respective optical windows for rays 304, 306 are substantially the same; however, the light distribution in the vertical direction may be different for beams of light ray directed by reflection or transmission in the features 12. [0171] A directional backlight can thus include a waveguide and an array of light sources arranged at different input positions in a lateral direction across the input end of the waveguide. The waveguide may have an input end, may include opposing first and second guide surfaces to guide light along the waveguide, and a reflective end toward the input end to reflect input light back through the waveguide. of the waveguide. The first guide surface may be arranged to guide light by total internal reflection and the second guide surface may be of a staggered shape which may include a plurality of facets oriented to reflect light from the light sources after reflection from the reflective end. , through the first guide surface in optical windows in outgoing directions. The output directions can be distributed in a direction lateral to the normal to the first guide surface as a function of input positions and intermediate regions between facets that are arranged to direct light through the waveguide without extracting it. The directional backlight may also include a rear reflector which may include a linear array of reflective facets arranged to reflect light from the light sources, which is transmitted through the plurality of facets of the waveguide, back through the waveguide to exit. through the first guide surface in the optical windows. [0172] A directional display device may also thus include a directional backlight and a spatial transmissive light modulator arranged to receive light emitted from the first guide surface. A display apparatus may thus also include a directional display device and a control system arranged to selectively operate light sources to direct light into viewing windows corresponding to the output directions. The display apparatus may be an autostereoscopic display apparatus wherein the control system is further arranged to control the display device to temporarily display multiplexed left and forward images and to synchronously direct the displayed images in viewports to corresponding positions. to the left and right eyes of an observer. The control system may additionally include a sensor system arranged to detect the position of an observer through the display device. The control system can be arranged to direct the images displayed in viewing windows to positions corresponding to an observer's left and right eyes, as a function of the observer's detected position. [0173] Advantageously, the optical windows and the viewing windows 26 reached by the rays 304, 306 can substantially overlap in the lateral direction. In this way, screen crosstalk can be substantially maintained. Additionally, the total intensity of light rays directed at the viewing window 26 can be increased and the screen brightness can be increased. The battery life of a mobile screen device can be increased and the cost and number of light sources can be reduced to a desired brightness level. Additionally, unwanted light crosstalk transmitted through resources 12 is reduced or eliminated. Additionally, the reflector 300 can be formed into a thin film that can be mounted to the housing of a screen system, thus minimizing cost and thickness. Alternatively, the reflector structure 300 can be formed into a backlight backlight housing, for example, by molding the reflector structure 300 as part of the screen housing and then coating it with a metallization layer. Advantageously, this can provide a rigid and flat structure, achieving high window quality for the viewing windows 26 which are reflected from the reflector 300. [0174] FIGURE 13 is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of a directional display device that includes a waveguide 1 with linear light extraction capabilities 12 and a rear reflector 300 including an array of linear reflective facets 310. The array is a linear array as it repeats in a linear direction, for example vertically in FIGURE 13. The directional display device may include a directional backlight and a transmissive spatial light modulator. The features 12 may be arranged substantially parallel to the orientation of the reflective facets 310, advantageously reaching viewports that are substantially aligned to the same orientation for the respective radii 304, 306. [0175] The facets of the waveguide 12 and the reflective facets 310 of the rear reflector 300 can be inclined in the same direction in a common plane orthogonal to the lateral direction. In this example, the reflective facets 310 are linear, i.e. they extend linearly across the rear reflector 300, for example horizontally in Figure 13. The reflective end 4 may have positive optical power in a lateral direction along the waveguide 1. In this way, light from light source array 15 can have a divergence that is reduced to achieve area loading of spatial light modulator 48 by light from waveguide 1. Positive optical power can be arranged to substantially collimate the light in the waveguide 1 and a Fresnel lens 62 with optical power in the same direction as the positive optical power of the reflective end 4 can be arranged to form viewing windows in the window plane. The asymmetric diffuser 68 with a main diffusion geometry axis direction 69 can be arranged to achieve high diffusion in the orthogonal direction (x axis axis) with respect to the lateral direction in which the optical windows and viewing windows are arranged (y axis) . Advantageously, the viewing window 26 can be spread in the orthogonal direction while achieving low crosstalk in the lateral direction. [0176] FIGURE 14 is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of a directional display device that includes a waveguide 1 with curved light extraction features 12 and a back reflector 300 including an array of linear reflective facets 310. The directional display device may include a directional backlight and a transmissive spatial light modulator. The curved features 12 can be arranged to reach viewing windows 26 in the window plane 106 without a Fresnel lens and can have a substantially uniform first radius of curvature in the x-y plane. Advantageously, the thickness of the system and light losses due to additional surfaces can be reduced. Additionally, the reflector 300 can be cut from a large continuous sheet of material compared to an arrangement where the reflective facets 310 are curved as will be described below, thus reducing cost. [0177] FIGURE 15A is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of a directional display device including a waveguide 1 with curved light extracting features 12 with a first ray in the xy plane and a rear reflector 300 including a matrix of curved reflective facets 310. The matrix is a linear matrix as it repeats in a linear direction, for example vertically in Figure 15A. In this example, the reflective facets 310 extend across the rear reflector 300, for example, horizontally in Figure 15A, but are curved, not linear. In particular, the reflective facets 310 have a second ray in the xy plane that can be approximately twice the first ray, arranged to direct light rays 306 of FIGURE 12 into the same viewing window as light rays 304 without a lens. Fresnel 62. The directional display device may include a directional backlight and a transmissive spatial light modulator. Reflective facets 310 may be arranged to cooperate with curved light-extracting features 12 such that the lateral direction of light ray reflection 306 of reflective facets 310 is substantially equal to the lateral direction of light ray reflection 304 of features 12. In this way, optical windows 26 produced by rays 304, 306 can be substantially overlapped. Advantageously, crosstalk can be reduced while the screen brightness can be increased. [0178] FIGURE 15B is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of a directional display device including the waveguide 1 and rear reflector 300 of FIGURE 15A, with components shown as superimposed. The directional display device may include a directional backlight and a transmissive spatial light modulator. In region 303, the high point of reflector 300 is in contact with light extracting feature 12 of waveguide 1. The contact area will be small and therefore light leakage due to loss of total internal reflection in the region 303 is minimized. In this way, the reflector 300 can be arranged in contact with the waveguide 1. Advantageously, the thickness of the structure can be reduced and can even out the flattening of the reflector 300 achieved by the structural support of the waveguide 1. [0179] It may be desirable to reduce the occurrence of Moiré beating between the afterreflector 300, extraction features 12, and spatial light modulator 48 pixels. [0180] In the examples described above, the rear reflectors comprise a regular array of reflective facets 310 with a constant gap. In contrast, FIGURE 15C is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of a rear reflector 300 comprising an irregular, randomized array of reflective facets 310 that have an irregular, random interval. Facets 310 may be arranged to affect the appearance of the Moiré beat on the display device. The regions 313 between the facets 310 may be arranged to be directly reflective, transmissive, or absorbing. [0181] FIGURE 16 is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a directional display device that includes a waveguide 1. The directional display device may include a directional backlight and a transmissive spatial light modulator. The light source 202 which may be an LED, for example, may be arranged to produce a substantially Lambertian optical output in air, shown by polar intensity profile 204, so that the beam on axis 206 has a greater intensity than the radius 208 inclined at an angle Φ 210 to the normal direction. After passing through input side 2 of waveguide 1, polar intensity profile 212 for rays 214 in waveguide 1 is modified from polar intensity profile 204 due to refraction on input side 2. Thus, the maximum angular extent Φ 210 is adjusted to be the critical angle θC of the waveguide material of waveguide 1. The light rays 214 propagate along the waveguide 1 by total internal reflection and after reflection in the waveguide 1. side 4 of waveguide 1 (not shown), light ray beam 216 returns towards light extraction features 12. [0182] In an illustrative example, for an angle of inclination α 238 from the horizontal direction of the light extraction filter of 45° that propagates horizontally (parallel to the x axis) the ray 218 in the waveguide 1 is redirected in a vertical direction (parallel to the z axis) and through side 6 of waveguide 1 to an asymmetric diffuser 68. The diffuser 68 may include an optical function which may be arranged to redirect a light beam parallel to a polar intensity profile 217 with an angle of inclination δ 227 and a cone of angle Y 225. The cone of angle Y 225 can be, for example, the half-angle of rays 219 with half intensity of the peak rays 213 of the diffuser 68 in the zx plane. In a further illustrative example, the tilt angle δ 227 can be set to 15° and the angle cone Y 225 can be set to 10°. Similarly, ray 220 is redirected and scattered in the x-z plane which produces half the intensity directions of ray 221 as shown. [0183] Additionally, some rays 226 may be transmitted by light extraction facility 12 so that they impinge on a surface 229 (such as the back cover of the screen) on which they diffuse to form rays 231. These rays 231 may be diffused in such a way that they fall outside the desired viewing windows for the light source 202 and can create unwanted image crosstalk. Additional rays 224 can be partially reflected on side 10 and redirected to surface 229, where they can also scatter light. The refracted rays 237 can be wide-angle inside the screen and produce unwanted off-axis illumination and can diffuse with screen edges that increase crosstalk and reduce screen uniformity. These additional rays can be absorbed into surface 229, reducing screen glare. [0184] It may be desirable to reduce image crosstalk and increase screen brightness via the rear reflector 300 which includes an array of reflective facets 310, as will be described in more detail below. [0185] The luminous intensity of a display device is a measure of the power emitted by the display device in a particular direction per solid unit angle. The brightness of display device 100 as observed by observer 99 is obtained by luminance which is a photometric measure of luminous intensity per unit area of light traveling in a given direction. The illuminating elements of the array 15 provide the respective luminous fluxes. [0186] FIGURE 17 is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity versus propagation angle outside and inside a waveguide 1. Therefore, for light source 202 with a Lambertian intensity profile, intensity 211 can be plotted against angle Φ 210 which gives intensity curve 230 for the cone of light in air and curve 232 for the cone of light refracted inside the optic valve. [0187] FIGURE 18 is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a directional display device that includes a waveguide 1. The directional display device may include a directional backlight and a spatial transmissive light modulator. Thus, in the z-y plane, the light ray 218 is redirected by feature 12 so that it is parallel to the z-axis. In the asymmetric diffuser, on this axis, the scattering angle ε 227 for rays with half intensity 223 in the polar intensity profile 215 means that the propagation of light on the y axis is limited. For present purposes, the y-axis is called the lateral direction and refers to the direction of the array of light sources 202 in the array 15. Thus, the lateral direction is the direction in which the array of optical windows is arranged. [0188] FIGURES 19A to 19C are schematic diagrams illustrating the front and side views of an asymmetric diffuser. The asymmetric diffuser 68 may include, for example, a gap and surface diffuser that includes surface features with asymmetric structures 259, as shown in the front view of FIGURE 19A. FIGURE 19B shows a side view in the y-z plane, so that the small diffusion angle ε 235 is achieved in the lateral direction (y-axis). FIGURE 19C shows a side view in the xz plane, where the surface gap structures 259 in layer 263 may additionally include an array of prismatic structures with a nominal slope angle Φ 257 to achieve a diffusion cone slope δ 227 and a cone of diffusion angle Y 233 vertically (geometric x axis). The diffusion angle Y 233 can be, for example, at most half the width of the light cone from a collimated input. For applications such as autostereoscopic screens, angles ε 235 can be relatively low, eg 1 to 3 degrees to achieve low crosstalk. However, the angle ε 235 may be larger on screens that are used for 2D applications such as low power modes, high brightness modes and privacy modes, e.g. 3 degrees to 20 degrees or more to advantageously achieve uniform output and a desirable luminance decline with viewing angle for wide angle usage. [0189] The diffuser 68 may include, for example, but is not limited to a UV cured layer 263 formed on a substrate 261 which may be a glass or polymer substrate such as PET or PMMA. Alternatively, the surface gap may be formed within a single material by molding. Structures can be controlled using diamond tools, laser engraving on photopolymer or other known control techniques. Alternatively, the diffuser 68 may include a volume diffuser such as a photopolymer material recorded through an asymmetric photomask. [0190] A directional backlight may additionally include an asymmetrical diffuser 68 arranged to receive light output through the first guide surface 6, the asymmetrical diffuser 68 may be arranged to provide greater angular dispersion in a direction orthogonal to said lateral direction of the than in said lateral direction. [0191] FIGURE 20 is a schematic diagram illustrating an additional side view of a waveguide 1 with silver light extraction features 12. By way of comparison with the present embodiments, it can be considered that the light output can be enhanced by coating the light extracting means with a reflective material 240. Thus, in addition to light rays 218, 254 that can be reached by total internal reflection alone, light rays 250, 252 can be directed towards the observer, achieving a substantially Lambertian output in air in the xz plane. [0192] FIGURE 21 is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity versus propagation angle in and out of waveguide 1 of FIGURE 20. Intensity curve 242 has a lower maximum than curve 232 due to light losses. reflection at feature 12. In an illustrative example, a silver coating may have a reflectivity of less than 92% compared to substantially 100% for both total and internally reflected light rays. Additionally, the process for applying material 240 to features 12 alone can be complex and expensive. It can be considered that both features 12 and 10 are coated, reducing cost and complexity. However, absorption of material 240 when applied to features 10 can result in substantial losses to guided light within the waveguide of waveguide 1. [0193] FIGURE 22 is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of luminous intensity versus propagation angle for existing light in waveguide 1 of FIGURE 16 through reflection from light extraction facilities before an asymmetric diffuser 68 for rake angles α 238 of 45° on curve 270, 35° on curve 272, and 55° on curve 274. In this way, the width and angular clipping point of the rays that experience total internal reflection in feature 12 can be variables. It may typically be desirable to brighten the peak intensity and place the peak intensity on the geometry axis at or near 0°, e.g. 10° above normal for the spatial light modulator 48 for an optical window laterally. on the geometric axis. [0194] FIGURE 23 is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of luminous intensity versus propagation angle for existing light in waveguide 1 of FIGURE 16 through reflection from light extraction features after an asymmetric diffuser with variable optical properties, as indicated, assuming a light extraction feature angle of 45°. In this way, peaks can be blurred to achieve increased screen lighting uniformity. [0195] FIGURE 24A is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of ray propagation paths in a waveguide 1 through transmission and reflection from light extraction facilities 12. In this way, light rays 218 in cones 280, 281 are reflected, light rays 224 in cones 282, 283 are transmitted by feature 12 and partially reflected from feature 10, and light rays 226 in cones 284, 285, 286 are directly transmitted by feature 12. [0196] FIGURE 24B is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity versus propagation angle for existing light in waveguide 1 of FIGURE 24A through transmission through light extraction facilities. In this way, translated to the angle of exits in air, the intensity curve 292 for the ray beam in the cone 283 and the intensity curve 294 for the ray beam in the cone 285 can be calculated from the analysis of reflection coefficients Fresnel in polarization states if p. For the present illustrative example, it is assumed that the light is unpolarized inside the valve, the angle α 238 is 45° and the refractive index of waveguide 1 is 1.5. The total intensity in the two light cones is given by curve 296. [0197] FIGURE 25A is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of ray propagation trajectories in a waveguide 1 via transmission through light extraction facilities 12 and which interacts with reflective facets 310. Rays 226 may impinge on a reflective facet 310 arranged at an angle β 305 to direct light back through waveguide 1, reaching light rays 239 which are directed towards the SLM 48 of the display system. Advantageously, light rays 226 that are directed through the facets 12 instead of being reflected can be directed to the viewing windows 26 of the display system, increasing brightness and efficiency. [0198] FIGURE 25B is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of ray propagation trajectories in a waveguide 1 via transmission through light extraction features 12 and which additionally interact with light guide features 10 and which reflect facets 310. These light rays are reflected, so as to exit as rays 241 from the waveguide. Advantageously, light rays 224 that are directed through facets 12 rather than reflected can be directed towards viewing windows 26 of the display system, increasing brightness and efficiency. [0199] FIGURE 25C is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of ray propagation paths in a waveguide 1 via transmission through light extraction features 12 and light reflecting facets 310 which additionally comprise a layer 243 arranged between the waveguide and reflection features. Additional layer 243 may comprise, for example, a wave plate, a diffuser, a deflector, or a combination thereof. Light rays 224 have relatively high angles of incidence at the entrance to layer 243 and therefore additional light rays 237 are produced. In general, it is preferred that no additional layer 243 is introduced between waveguide 1 and reflection facet 310. [0200] FIGURE 26 is a schematic diagram illustrating a detail of a side view of a waveguide 1 that includes a rear reflector that includes an array of reflective facets. In this way, the reflector 300 can include a serrated structure with reflective facets 310 and scribbles or intermediate facets 312. The angle of inclination β 305 from the vertical direction of facet 310 can be determined as will be described below. In this way, light rays 226 transmitted through feature 12 (otherwise referred to herein as facet 12) are directed back through waveguide 1. Light rays 226 advantageously increase the brightness of the viewing windows while maintaining the directionality of the viewing windows, reducing image crosstalk. [0201] The reflector can be formed from an embossed film. Reflector 300 may include, for example, but is not limited to, a curved UV layer 309 formed on a substrate 31 311 which may be a glass substrate, a polymer substrate such as PET or PMMA, or may be the shell of a display device. Desirably, the flattening of the reflector 300 is arranged to maintain the alignment of viewports 26 formed by rays 306 from the reflector film which is in alignment with viewports 26 that are formed by rays 304 appearing due to the total internal reflection in features 12. Alternatively, the surface gap can be formed within a single material by molding. Structures can be controlled using diamond stamping, laser engraving on photopolymer or other known control techniques. Alternatively, the diffuser 68 may be a volume diffuser such as a photopolymer material recorded through an asymmetric photomask. A reflective material 315 may be applied by known coating methods to the reflective facets 310 of the reflector or may be applied to the reflective facets 310 and intermediate facets 312. The reflective material 315 may comprise aluminum, silver, chromium, oxides of silicon or other materials. known used in substrate coating to achieve desirable reflectivity, low diffusion, low cost and roughness. [0202] As illustrated by ray 325, a small proportion of the light from facet 310 will fall on feature 12 of waveguide 1. The amount of light falling on features 12 is small, in an illustrative example, features 12 may have a width of 0.01 mm in a range of 0.5 mm, so that approximately 2% of the light from facet 310 falls on feature 12. However, light rays 325 may be directed substantially to the same viewing window 26 as the light rays 226, so these light rays may not significantly impair optical performance. [0203] FIGURE 27 is a schematic diagram illustrating a detail of a side view of a waveguide 1 that includes a rear reflector that includes an array of reflective facets. In this embodiment, the intermediate facets 312 may be arranged at an angle of inclination K 307 from the vertical which is arranged, so that the light transmitted from the resources 12 is arranged not to reflect from the intermediate facets 312 by provided shielding. by the reflective facets 310. [0204] The after reflector may be spaced from the waveguide 1 so that light from an individual facet of the waveguide 1 falls on multiple reflective facets 310 of the afterreflector 300, the afterreflector 300 may additionally include , intermediate facets 312 extending between the reflective facets of the rear reflector, wherein the intermediate facets are angled in an opposite direction from the reflective facets of the rear reflector at an angle, so that such light from the light sources that are transmitted through the plurality of facets of the waveguide not impinging on the intermediate facets. [0205] Advantageously, the arrangement of FIGURE 27 can be more conveniently manufactured with uniform reflectivity and is less susceptible to incorrect adjustment during the screen assembly process. [0206] FIGURE 28A is a schematic diagram illustrating a detail of a side view of a waveguide 1 that includes a rear reflector that includes an array of reflective facets 310. The facets are aligned to features 12 of the waveguide 1 and planar regions 314 which may or may not be coated are arranged between facets 310 and intermediate facets 312. [0207] The facets 310 of the rear reflector 300 may be arranged behind the respective reflectors of the facets 12 of the waveguide 1 and are arranged to reflect most of the light incident thereon from the light sources that are transmitted through of the respective facet among the facets 12 of the waveguide 1. Advantageously, the Moiré pattern among the extraction features 12 of the waveguide 1 of the optic valve can be minimized compared to the modalities of FIGURES 26 and 27. It is observed that a little of the light transmitted through the facets is directed back through the regions 10 and toward off-axis viewing positions without incident on the rear reflector, as will be described with reference to FIGURE 32B. [0208] As illustrated in FIGURE 28A, the afterreflector 300 includes an intermediate facet 312, a planar region 314 and a reflective facet 310. In another example, the afterreflector 300 can be configured to include a planar region 314 and a reflective facet 310 and to eliminate the intermediate facet 312. In this example, the reflective facet 310 can maintain approximately the same recline and the recline of the flat region 314 can become a steeper positive recline to allow the flat region 314 to merge with the reflective facet 310. Additionally, the flat region 314 can recline in a generally upward direction and can connect to the top end of the reflective facet 310. Still in the same example, the facets of the back reflector 300 can still be approximately aligned with the features 12 of the waveguide 1. [0209] FIGURE 28B is a detailed schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a waveguide 1 that includes a rear reflector that includes an array of reflective facets 310. The facets are equivalently spaced angles, but are advantageously spaced accordingly. random mode or spaced with repeating structures to minimize Moiré interference in the optionally periodic 12 extraction features of Waveguide 1 and SLM 48. [0210] FIGURE 28C is an additional schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a waveguide 1 and a backreflector 300, wherein the waveguide comprises light guide features 227 that are not parallel to the guide surface. 6 of the waveguide and can be used in combination with a rear reflector that includes an array of reflective facets 310. The deflection angle achieved by the facets 10 can be modified to compensate for the non-parallel guide surfaces of the waveguide 1. Advantageously , the thickness of the waveguide 1 can be reduced and thus the thickness of the optical stack can be minimized. [0211] The light rays 251 that propagate between the input end 2 and the reflective end 4 and that are extracted by the taper of the waveguide 1 can be directed substantially parallel to the side 6 and can be absorbed inside the device or can be be emitted at high angles and these rays may not be visible to an observer. [0212] Some light rays 253 that are extracted may fall on the rear reflector and be directed towards the observer, achieving undesired illumination of optical windows for light that propagates within the waveguide from the light source array 15 to the reflective end 4. It may be desirable to eliminate this light. [0213] FIGURE 28D is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a waveguide 1 and a rear reflector 300 comprising reflective facets 310 and non-reflective facets 312. Therefore, light rays 253 can be directed through the reflector 300, while the rays 251 are directed to optical windows. Directional coating techniques may be arranged to provide different reflectivities for facets 310, 312. Advantageously, the scattered light visibility for rays 253 is reduced or eliminated. [0214] FIGURE 28E is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a waveguide 1 and rear reflector 300. Light extraction features 12 may have tilt angles α 380, 382 and reflector facet angles β 384 , 386 that vary in the direction of the geometric axis x orthogonal to the lateral direction. This arrangement can achieve the direction of outgoing light rays 388, 390 which vary across the width of the screen and therefore provide some pupilation in that direction, achieving some focus of light in the viewing windows in the x direction. Additionally, the reflective facets of the rear reflector have a slope that varies through the reflective facet array. Peak light intensity can be directed to optical window 260 in window plane 106 from different positions along the path of light propagating within waveguide 1. In use, the light source array can be located on one side of the directional backlight, so that light can be directed either in a downward deflection or an upward deflection towards the top or bottom of the screen, respectively. Advantageously, the brightness and uniformity of the screen can be increased. [0215] It may be desirable to increase the reflectivity of the after reflector 300 compared to the reflectivity shown in FIGURE 26, for example, while the cost is reduced. High reflectivity flat reflectors can be formed by stretching "sandwiches" of materials with different birefringence properties, such as uniaxial polymeric materials. The refractive index steps between the respective layers can achieve transmission to an electric vector orientation and reflection to the orthogonal vector. By aligning these reflectors orthogonally, a reflector with high reflectivity can be achieved, with reflectivity greater than that for metallized structures, for example, greater than 95% reflectivity. [0216] FIGURES 28F to 281 are schematic diagrams illustrating side views of methods for forming a rear reflector. Reflective foils 569 transverse to reflected layers 571,572 may be heated and embossed under pressure by stamping tool 570 to achieve surface clearance reflectors 571, 572, as shown in FIGURES 28F through 28G. To ensure the structure is formed on both reflectors, a 584 compatible stamping tool can be provided on the reverse side of the layer. Alternatively, the first and second reflectors 571,572 may be formed and arranged separately as a stack of rear reflectors, as shown in FIGURE 28I. Advantageously, the reflectivity of the rear reflector can be increased compared to metallized structures, as shown in FIGURE 26, for example. [0217] FIGURES 28J to 28K are schematic diagrams illustrating front views of rear reflectors. The rear reflector 300 is formed of at least two polarized reflector blades 576, 578 arranged to reflect light that is polarized in respective polarization directions 580, 582 that are orthogonal to each other, wherein the polarized reflector blades are formed so as to forming said linear matrix of reflective facets. The orientation of the curved reflective facets 310 may be substantially parallel to one of the polarization directions 580, as shown in FIGURE 28J, or they may be at 45 degrees, as shown in FIGURE 28K. The orientation of the top reflector 572 may be arranged to align so as to advantageously achieve maximum reflectivity for the preferred incident polarization state. [0218] FIGURE 29 is a schematic diagram illustrating a detail of an additional side view of a waveguide 1 that includes a rear reflector that includes an array of reflective facets. A cross section in the y-z plane is illustrated. In this way, the transmitted light ray 321 from the waveguide 1 of the waveguide 1 is directed to a reflective facet 310 of the reflector 300. The reflected light is transmitted through the waveguide 1 so as to be parallel to the ray 218 that has been directed by total internal reflection at facet 12 of waveguide 1. In this way, light rays 321 will be directed into the same optical window as rays 218 and therefore crosstalk will be minimized while brightness is increased. [0219] FIGURE 30 is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity 211 versus propagation angle 320 from a directional backlight apparatus that includes a waveguide 1 with a back reflector that includes an array of reflective facets before an asymmetric diffuser. The curve 296 of FIGURE 24B is shifted in a direction around the normal for the spatial light modulator 48 and is added to the TIR light curve 270 of FIGURE 23 to achieve the total intensity distribution 324 in air before the asymmetric diffuser 68 It can be seen that the peak intensity can be more than twice the peak intensity from the TIR 270 curve alone. This desired increase in brightness can be achieved when curve 296 is arranged to overlap curve 270. [0220] For rays 304, the threshold of this condition can rise when the guide rays that propagate inside the waveguide 1, with a material of refractive index n and a critical angle θc, impinge on the critical angle in the feature 12 that has a slope angle between the normal and the first guide surface 6 of (π/2δ-α). These rays 304 have a departure angle x1 in air of: [0221] The reflective facets 310 of the rear reflector may be inclined at an angle v between the normal and the first guide surface, so that for rays 306 that propagate substantially parallel to the first guide surface and then are reflected by facets 310, the departure angle of x2 in air is given by: [0222] In this way, the angle β 305 can be arranged according to the following condition, so that the light rays 304 and 306 reach an angular overlap in the viewing window 26, achieving increased brightness. [0223] In this way, the facets 12 of the waveguide 1 can be inclined at an angle (π/2-α) to the normal with respect to the first guide surface and the reflective facets 310 of the after reflector 300 can be inclined in a angle β 305 to the normal to the first guide surface 6 and 2β >π/2 - sen'1(n. sin (α - θc)), where θc is the critical angle of the waveguide facets and n is the refractive index of the waveguide material. In arrangements where there is a slope between the first guide surface 6 and the light guide features 10, the expression of eq. 3 may vary accordingly. [0224] In an illustrative example, the refractive index of waveguide 1 might be 1.5, the critical angle might be 41.8°, the facet angle α might be 45°, so the angle β 305 of facet 310 may be set to 42.6° or greater in order to achieve increased brightness gain without a substantial gap between the angular intensity profiles of the ray beams represented by rays 304, 306 in FIGURE 12. [0225] FIGURE 31 is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity 211 versus propagation angle 320 from a directional backlight apparatus which may include a waveguide 1 with a rear reflector. The rear reflector may include an array of reflective facets after an asymmetric diffuser. As previously described, the asymmetric diffuser 68 blurs the output peaks reducing lighting non-uniformities across the screen and as the viewer moves in a direction orthogonal to the lateral direction relative to the screen. [0226] FIGURE 32A is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity 211 versus propagation angle 320 from a directional backlight apparatus which may include a waveguide 1 with a rear reflector. The rear reflector may include an array of reflective facets after an asymmetric diffuser. Various arrangements 330, 332, 334, 336, 338, 340 of rake angle α 238 of facet 12, rake angle β 305 of reflective facet 310 and asymmetric diffuser properties including angles Y 233 and δ 227 are illustrated. Advantageously, the central luminance can be substantially increased with the wide distribution of intensity over acceptable viewing angles. [0227] FIGURE 32B is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity 211 against propagation angle 320 from a directional backlight apparatus with a waveguide with a back reflector with a matrix of reflective facets for the arrangements. 344, 346, 348 from angles α 238 and β 305. The graphs are shown at a wider angle than for FIGURE 32A and comprise the luminous intensity of light rays 237 and 241, as shown in FIGURE 25B, for example. Therefore, an off-axis illumination peak 349 can be observed for high off-axis viewing positions. [0228] FIGURE 32C is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity 211 versus propagation angle 320 from a directional backlight apparatus with a waveguide 1 with a rear reflector with an array of reflective facets 310 after an asymmetric diffuser 68. Arrangement 354 can provide a light intensity distribution that has a profile similar to a profile 352 that has a gain of approximately 2 compared to a Lambertian distribution 350. Further increasing the diffusion angle Y 233 to 15° , for example, can further increase peak shape similarity. Peak light intensity can be substantially maximized for on-axis viewing, this arrangement is particularly advantageous for mobile screen devices where the device is required to be rotated between landscape and portrait operating modes. Arrangement 356 is shown for an additional layer 243, as shown in FIGURE 25C, for example, indicating losses associated with increased reflection of light rays 237 in layer 243. [0229] FIGURE 32D is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of using the optical output of the present directional backlight modalities on a screen 100 arranged on a table surface 366 and viewed in a landscape arrangement when the array 15 is arranged along the long edge of waveguide 1. Peak 349 will provide a luminance ranging from 1/cos x where angle x 320 is the screen viewing angle. At high viewing angles 364, for example greater than 45°, the luminance of the screen to the viewer 362 can increase substantially, because of the small resolved screen area and advantageously the screen can be used to achieve a high luminance image for the low power consumption at these high angles. [0230] FIGURE 32E is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a rear reflector, in which the facets of the rear reflector are arranged to image light from the respective aligned light extraction features of an optical valve comprising the guide. waveguide 1 with extraction facets 12. The reflective facets 710 of the backreflector 700 are concave and arranged in alignment with the facets 12 of the waveguide 1. Light rays 714 from a light extraction facet 12 are incident upon the curved reflector 710 of the after reflector 700. Draft regions 712 are provided for connecting concave reflectors 710. In operation, the reflectors 710 are arranged with a focus substantially on the draw feature 12 of waveguide 1. The light from feature 12 is thus substantially collimated and transmitted through waveguide 1. The range 716 of the extraction means is set to substantially the same range 718 of the reflectors 7 10. [0231] FIGURE 32F is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of light intensity versus propagation angle from a directional backlight apparatus comprising the arrangement of FIGURE 32E. Thus, the light intensity profile 720 has a sharper peak than that achieved by the arrangement of FIGURE 27, for example. [0232] In the present embodiments, the term concave describes a curvature of the reflective facets 710 in the xz plane, as shown in FIGURE 32E, while the term curved describes a curvature of the reflective facets 310 in the xy plane, as shown, for example, in FIGURE 15A. The backreflector facets can be concave and curved to advantageously achieve viewing windows with very high gain characteristics in both the x-axis and y-axis. Additional diffuser layers can be arranged to regulate the desired output characteristics. The reflection from the backreflector facets 710 can be arranged to superimpose the direct reflection from the facets 12 of the waveguide 1. This arrangement can advantageously achieve a very high luminance screen with low power consumption. The orientation angle α 238 may be set to a high value so that most of the light incident on facet 12 is transmitted to the back reflector facet 710. [0233] The angle between facets 710, 712 can be adjusted substantially to 90° in order to achieve polarization recirculation, as described elsewhere in the present embodiments. [0234] FIGURE 33A is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a directional display device that may include a waveguide 1 with a rear reflector. The directional display device may include a directional backlight and a transmissive spatial light modulator. The rear reflector may include an array of reflective facets, a Fresnel lens, and an asymmetric diffuser. Fresnel lens 62 can be arranged with optical power in the x-z plane. In this way, while the angular intensity of the light can vary, as shown, for example, in FIGURE 32, the Fresnel lens 62 can achieve pupillation of light directed to the viewing window 26 in the window plane 106. Thus, for a eye of the observer at position 354, advantageously, a substantially uniform intensity can be seen through the height of the spatial light modulator 48. [0235] A directional backlight may additionally include a Fresnel lens 62 that has optical power at least in the lateral direction, disposed between the first guide surface of the waveguide and the asymmetric diffuser and may also include a Fresnel lens that has power optics at least in the lateral direction arranged to receive the light output through the first guide surface. Additionally, the Fresnel lens can have optical power in the direction orthogonal to the lateral direction. [0236] Optimization of viewing brightness, freedom and crosstalk may be desirable in order to achieve overlapping windows 26 on a single viewing plane 106 for reflected light from both light extraction facilities 12 and from the reflective facets 310. Additionally, it may be desirable to reduce device thickness and complexity by using curved light extraction features 12. A method for calculating the radius of curvature of reflective facets 310 for a given radius of feature curvature of light extraction 12 will now be described. [0237] FIGURE 33B is a schematic diagram illustrating the optional trajectories of an incident guide ray 1500 that has a plane angle (in the xy plane) 1550. Depending on its angle outside the 1552 plane, the ray can either reflect the feature extraction 12 how to exit the guide towards an observer as ray 1510 or pass through feature 12 and reflect a reflection facet 310 and exit as ray 1520. Ray tracing can relate deflection angles 1560 and 1570 to the 1580 plane orientations of the pull feature 12 and 1590 of the reflector facet 310. [0238] FIGURE 33C is a schematic diagram of a graph showing an example of the existing ray angles 1560 and 1570 along the geometry axis 1620 as a function of orientation angles in the reflector plane 1580 and 1590 along the geometry axis 1630. Trace 1610 is a ray that propagates -x (angle 1550 equals zero in FIGURE 33B) that reflects the pull feature, where trace 1600 is similarly that of an incident ray that reflects a facet of reflector. The approximately 10% difference in gradients between these two traces can determine the difference in orientations required to provide the same existing angle or focal point for the two ray paths. This indicates that the facet radius of a curved reflection film can be approximately 10% shorter than the radius of curvature of curved optic valve extraction features for equivalent focal points. Alternatively, the reflector facet radii and light extraction features may be substantially the same. Alternatively, the radii can be different so that the viewports are created on different window planes and with different sizes. Advantageously, the display uniformity and the freedom of longitudinal viewing can be increased. Additionally, Moiré can be reduced between the two structures and the SLM 48 pixel structure. [0239] In an illustrative example, a screen of size 75x50 mm can be illuminated by an optical valve comprising waveguide 1 and rear reflector 300. It can be established that the window plane distance 106 is 300 mm. For a waveguide refractive index of 1.5, the radius of curvature of the light extraction features 12 can be approximately 450 mm. The radii can be fixed so that the range of features 12 in the radial direction may vary slightly with the lateral position, although it may remain constant in the axis direction orthogonal to the lateral direction. The radius of the reflective facets 310 of the backreflector 300 may be approximately 400 mm. [0240] In a further illustrative example, the range of structures can be set differently to minimize Moiré beating between the various structures. The range of the back reflector facets can, for example, be 40 micrometers, the range of features of waveguide 1 features 12 could be 200 micrometers, and the range of diffuser features could be on the order of 10 micrometers or less and the Spatial light modulator pixel range can be 25 x 75 micrometers. A spacing of 250 micrometers can be introduced between waveguide 1 and reflector 300. Moiré can be substantially eliminated. [0241] FIGURE 33D is a schematic diagram illustrating the ray path of a ray 1650 emanating from a single nominal view point 1600, incident on either an extractor feature 12 or reflector facet 310 at position 1612, which guides inside optic valve 1 as ray 1660, which reflects from curved end 4 before propagating as ray 1670 through a position 1630 along the inlet port on side 2. [0242] FIGURE 33E is a schematic diagram illustrating the two optical paths from similar incident rays 1650 and 1651. Tracing these rays through the system allows for system optimization. Location of positions 1630 in FIGURE 33D for rays emanating from the same position 1600 is desirable. [0243] FIGURE 33F is a schematic diagram illustrating a resulting graph showing the ray position plotted 1710 in millimeters (mm) along the inlet opening on side 2 for different inlet positions 1712 in millimeters along a line horizontal line that divides the optic valve. In this graph, viewing position 1600 is normal and centered on the valve at a viewing distance of 400 mm. The two traces shown in the graph are for the two ray path options described in FIGURE 33E (1750 for rays that reflect outside the pull feature; trace 1760 for rays that reflect outside the reflector facets). The radii of the curved reflection features and those of the imaging surface 4 have been adjusted for better location along the inlet port on side 2. This result is consistent with the reflector facet radius of the curvature which is 10% smaller than the radius curvature of the valve pull-out features. Optimizing for different viewing distances and off-axis viewing positions suggests relative radii values of extraction features and reflective facets for best performance that are within 0-12% of each other with the reflection film having the smallest radius. [0244] In other words, the distance from the waveguide and reflector 300 to the window plane 106 can be substantially the same as light reflected directly from features 12 and light directed through features 12 and reflected from the reflective facet 310 and back through waveguide 1. Advantageously, the viewing windows can be substantially aligned achieving increased brightness and viewing freedom while reducing image crosstalk. [0245] Transmissive spatial light modulators 48, such as liquid crystal displays, typically require polarized input light of a certain first polarization. To optimize brightness and efficiency, it may be desirable to use both first polarization light and second polarization light that is orthogonal to the first polarization state in present embodiments comprising light-reflecting facets 310, as will now be described. [0246] FIGURE 34 is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of an embodiment of a directional display device with polarization recovery. The directional display device may include a directional backlight and a transmissive spatial light modulator. The directional display device includes waveguide 1 and illuminator array 15, as well as an SLM 48 that receives light output from waveguide 1, which is arranged as described above. The display device may further comprise the following components in series between the waveguide 1 and an SLM 48: Fresnel lens 62, optional phase inhibitor such as a half wave inhibitor 404, asymmetric diffuser 68, reflective polarizer 402 and cleaning polarizer 406 at the entrance to the spatial light modulator 48. A prismatic reflective film 300 is disposed beyond the second guide surface of the SLM 48 and functions as a backreflector. [0247] In operation, due to the reflective polarizer 402 which is arranged between the first guide surface of the waveguide 1 and the SLM 48 which is arranged to transmit the first polarization component, the propagating unpolarized light rays 408 in the waveguide 1 are directed as light rays 410 to the viewing window 26 as described above, with a first polarization being transmitted through the reflective polarizer 402 and the cleaning polarizer 406. The light rays 410 of the second component of polarization that has a polarization orthogonal to the first polarization are reflected by the reflective polarizer 402 as rejected light and are transmitted through waveguide 1 to prismatic reflective film 300 where they are reflected and directed as light rays 412 back to the SLM 48. The vertical position of the light ray 412 in the window 26 may then be different from the position of the light ray 410. However, such light rays may include the same optical window directionally in a lateral direction (y-axis). [0248] Prismatic Reflective Film 300 converts the polarization of the rejected light into the first polarization as will be described below. [0249] The reflective coating 315 arranged on the prismatic surface of the reflector 300 can be arranged to be partially transmitted, for example, by controlling its thickness so that light rays 454 with low intensity are directed towards the rear of the structure. display. A mask 450 may be arranged with aperture 452 configured to direct light to the back of the screen for product branding purposes, for example. [0250] FIGURE 35A is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a detail of a directional display device with polarization recovery of FIGURE 34. The directional display device may include a directional backlight and a spatial transmissive light modulator. FIGURE 35B illustrates a side view of an array of reflector 300, waveguide 1 and diffuser 68 in an illustrative example. FIGURE 35C is a schematic diagram illustrating a schematic front view of the polarization recovery mode of FIGURE 34. For purposes of clarification, Fresnel lens 62 and diffuser 68 are not shown in FIGURES 35A through 35C. [0251] The light rays 408 propagating in the waveguide of the waveguide 1 include unpolarized light state 430. The light rays reflected through the total internal reflection of the light extraction facility 12 are substantially unpolarized and incidents on the reflective polarizer 402 as described above. [0252] Light rays 410 transmitted through reflective polarizer 402 are directed through an optional inhibitor 404 which may be a properly oriented axis direction half-wave inhibitor 437 arranged to direct the first polarization component 436 to the axis transmission geometry of the clear input polarizer 406 of the spatial light modulator 48. Desirably, the polarization transmission geometry of the polarizer 402 and polarizer 406 are substantially parallel to minimize the visibility of off-axis delay variations in the inhibitor 404 which can be a stack of inhibitors. [0253] Diffuser 68 can be inserted into the stack with vertical diffusion angle (x axis axis) Y 223 and horizontal diffusion angle (y geometry axis) ε 235, additionally providing deflection δ 227 in the vertical direction (x axis axis ) as required. The diffuser 68 may be positioned between the waveguide 1 and the input polarizer 406 of the SLM 48. Preferably, the diffuser does not substantially alter the ray paths before the reflective polarizer 402 and is then positioned between the reflective polarizer and the cleaning polarizer. Furthermore, the diffuser may be incorporated between the waveguide 1 and the reflective facets 310; however the losses associated with the large angles of incidence and shown in FIGURE 32C for example may be present. [0254] Spatial light modulator 48 may additionally include substrates 420, 424 such as glass substrates, liquid crystal layer 422 and output polarizer 426. [0255] Light rays 412 reflected by reflective polarizer 402 as rejected light are transmitted through waveguide 1 and incident on prismatic reflective film 300. Prismatic reflective film 300 may comprise a linear array of pairs of reflective corner facets 310, 312. Corner facets 310, 312 are inclined in opposite directions on a common plane so that individual light rays 412 are reflected from a pair of corner facets 310, 312. That common plane in which the corner facets 310, 312 are tilted is oriented around the vector normal to the SLM 48 so that the after reflector converts the polarization of the supplied rejected light back to the spatial light modulator at the first polarization in the reflection of a pair of corner facets. This can be achieved by the common plane extending 45° to the polarization of the second polarization component at reflector 200. [0256] Thereby, as shown in FIGURE 20, light rays 412 are reflected by both facets 310, 312 of prismatic reflective film 300. Light rays 434 are incident with a polarization state 434 at an angle of 45°. ° relative to the elongated prismatic facets 310, 312 of the prismatic reflective film 300, as illustrated in FIGURE 35C. After reflections at facets 310, 312, a polarization state rotation to ray 412 is achieved so that polarization state 434 is rotated to polarization state 436 due to the respective phase changes in reflection at each tilted facet 310 , 312. Thus, the light ray 412 emitted through the spatial light modulator 48 has a polarization state 436 which is substantially the same as the polarization state 432 of the rays 412. [0257] In an illustrative example, the angle α 238 of waveguide 1 of features 12 can be adjusted to 45°, the angle β 305 can be adjusted to 60°, the angle K 307 can be adjusted to 30° so that the apex angle 405 shown in FIGURE 35B is set to 90° and the facets 310, 312 are arranged to achieve a retroreflection of light rays 412 in the xz plane, achieving a polarization reflection from state 434 to state 436 at reflection. If the apex angle 405 is adjusted to an angle other than 90°, the incident polarization state angle 434 can be adjusted in comparison to the extent of the facets 312, 310 in the y direction to minimize polarization recirculation, although full rotation of the polarization state 434 cannot be reached. As shown by curve 332 in FIGURE 32, the diffuser angle Y 225 and δ 227 can be adjusted to 15° and -15° respectively, which can increase brightness by adding 411 rays to 410 rays by a factor of two. Furthermore, the spokes 411, 412 can be subjected to polarization recirculation so that the screen brightness can be further increased by a fact of up to two. In this way, the total screen brightness can be subjected by a factor of up to four compared to that achieved by 410 rays. [0258] FIGURE 35D is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of a symmetrical diffuser that may alternatively be used in the arrangement of FIGURE 35C. Such a symmetric diffuser can be used in arrangements where the amount of diffusion desired on the y-axis is similar to the amount of diffusion desired on the x-axis. In an illustrative example, a maximum diffusion angle of 12 degrees on the y-axis may be arranged with a high-brightness 2D screen or a low-power 2D screen to reach the viewing window (which may be composed of multiple optical windows) which has a nominal width in the window plane 106 of 300 mm to 60 mm. A diffusion angle may be desired on the x axis to achieve a light intensity variation that is similar to the profile 352 shown in FIGURE 32C. [0259] FIGURE 35E is a schematic diagram illustrating a perspective view of an optical array comprising an optical valve comprising waveguide 1, a backreflector 300, an optical control layer 504 and a spatial light modulator 48. The reflective end 4 of waveguide 1 may comprise a Fresnel mirror and a narrow region 500 may be introduced to the waveguide 1 to achieve light coupling enhancement of the light emitting element array 15 in the waveguide. wave 1. Shaded layer 502 with aperture region 503 can be arranged to hide the edges of the backlight from a screen viewer. Optical control layer 504 may comprise diffuser, inhibitor, and reflective polarizer layers as described elsewhere in the present embodiments. Spatial light modulator 48 may comprise input polarizer 406, TFT glass substrate 420, liquid crystal layer 422, color filter glass substrate 424 and output polarizer 426. Red pixels 516, green pixels 518 and blue pixels 520 can be arranged inside the liquid crystal layer. [0260] FIGURES 35F to 35I are schematic diagrams illustrating side views of an optical array comprising an optical control layer 504 and a spatial light modulator 48. FIGURE 35F illustrating the optical control layer 504 may comprise the reflective polarizer 402, half-wave inhibitor 404 and diffuser 68. Polarizers 406, 426 may each comprise a polarizing absorption layer 532 such as an iodine and extended PVA, which further comprises encapsulated layers 530, 534. FIGURE 35G illustrates a further embodiment in which optical control layer 504 is affixed to input polarizer 406, for example, by means of a pressure sensitive adhesive layer (not shown). The diffuser 68 may be formed on the input side of the layer 504. Advantageously, optical losses are reduced compared to the arrangement of FIGURE 35F, increasing the efficiency of the screen. [0261] In addition, it may be desirable to reduce the number of layers. FIGURE 35H shows that the output encapsulating agent layer 536 of the input polarizer 406 may further comprise an inhibitory function to achieve polarization rotation as described for example in FIGURES 38A to 38B. Layer 534 may comprise TAC (cellulose triacetate) while layer 536 may, for example, comprise TAC-R, which further comprises a half-wave delay function. Thus, the spatial light modulator input polarizer may comprise an encapsulating agent layer which is an optical inhibitor. [0262] In addition, it is desirable that diffuser 68 be provided between reflective polarizer 402 and spatial light modulator 48 to increase polarization recirculation efficiency. Such an arrangement can be performed as shown in FIGURE 351 where the diffusion adhesive layer 538 is incorporated in a position between the reflective layer 402 and the pixel plane 422. The diffusion adhesive layer can include the provision of different high and low regions. low refractive index, for example, minimizing depolarization effects within the adhesive layer 538 while achieving desirable diffusion characteristics. Advantageously, the cost and complexity of the spatial light modulator and optical control layer combination can be reduced while optical efficiency can be increased. [0263] FIGURES 36A to 36B are schematic diagrams that further illustrate side views of polarization recovery arrangements similar to those shown in FIGURE 35A, which further comprise diffuser layers 68. The diffuser 68 may have low birefringence and may be arranged with inhibitor 404 and as shown in FIGURE 36A may be formed on the surface of inhibitor 404. Light rays 403 that are reflected by reflective polarizer 402 may be incident on rear reflector regions and redirected on waveguide 1 via features 12 Light rays 401 that are inside the inlet aperture of the reflectors at the corner of the rear reflector (comprising facets 310, 312) are retro-reflected and directed into the cone 407 through the diffuser 68. [0264] In FIGURE 36B, the diffuser 68 is arranged between the waveguide 1 and the reflective polarizer 402 and can be formed into the reflective polarizer 402. In this way, the scattering of light rays 409 can change the proportion of the rays 403 that are directed back into the waveguide. Advantageously, the polarization recirculation properties can be varied. [0265] FIGURES 37A to 37B are schematic diagrams illustrating a side view of a polarization recovery arrangement using aligned rear reflectors. In addition, FIGURE 37B utilizes a waveguide similar to that shown in FIGURE 28C and a rear reflector similar to that shown in FIGURE 28A. Advantageously, the light rays 417 can be substantially reflected by the planar reflective regions 314. The additional quarter-wave plate 398 can be arranged to rotate the polarization state of the reflected light rays 417 so that they are transmitted through the polarizer. 402. Advantageously, the screen light intensity can be increased for certain viewing angles. [0266] FIGURE 37C is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of an optical valve comprising the waveguide 1 which further comprises a light scattering feature and a back reflector 300. In operation, light propagation from the end input 2 comprising light emitting element array 15 aligned with reflective end 4 may experience scatter loss, for example due to mode coupling losses or scatter features 540 which may be scratches or tool marks. In this way, light rays 542 can exit the waveguide 1 and are incident on the rear reflector 300, particularly the output facet 312. [0267] FIGURE 37D is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of the appearance of an optical valve comprising a light scattering feature 540 and rear reflector 300. In operation, the light source array 15 will produce the appearance of a band region 546 within a dark region 544 of light that appears to propagate from matrix 15 to the reflective end 4 of waveguide 1, depending on the density and shape of features 540. It may be desirable to reduce the visibility of region 546. [0268] FIGURE 37E is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of an optical valve comprising waveguide 1; a light scattering feature 540 and a back reflector which further comprises a light scattering facet surface 312 which may be a rough reflective surface. Facet 310 can typically be a specular reflective surface although it can be slightly rough. Roughness can be provided at least in the y-z plane and can also be in the x-z plane as shown in FIGURE 37E. In this way, rays 543 that are incident on facet 312 are scattered to a wider cone than that of FIGURE 37C. [0269] FIGURE 37F is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of the appearance of an optic valve comprising a light scattering feature and a rear reflector 310 which further comprises a light scattering facet surface 312. Thereby, region 548 may be triangular in shape with lower peak luminance compared to region 546 of FIGURE 37D. Such an appearance can be substantially masked by the diffuser 68. [0270] FIGURE 37G is a schematic diagram illustrating a perspective view of a light extraction feature of an optical valve comprising an undulating structure. Such an undulating structure can be applied to the linear light-extracting facets 12 to reduce the appearance of Moiré between the light-extracting facets 12 and pixels of the SLM 48. The undulation can be provided for example during diamond stamping of the formed surface by controlling up the diamond height and side position during a cutting step. [0271] FIGURES 37H through 37I are schematic diagrams illustrating perspective views of rear reflectors comprising an undulating structure comprising an undulating location 560 from the peaks of facets 310 to rough and specular reflection facets 312, respectively. In addition, Moiré may be present between facets 12 and facets 310, 312. The curl may be arranged to reduce the appearance of Moiré. [0272] As used herein, the adjective "linear" as applied to a matrix of facets or features means that the matrix is a linear matrix or means that the facets in the matrix repeat in a linear direction. In contrast, the adjective "linear" as applied to facets or features means that the facets or features themselves are linear. However, in general, the facets or features in a linear matrix can be linear or they can have another shape such as curved. Similarly, facets or features may be flat or may have an uneven shape, for example, one that is wavy along its length or that is rough. [0273] FIGURE 38A is a schematic diagram illustrating an additional schematic front view of the polarization recovery mode of FIGURE 34 comprising additionally curved extraction features 12 and curved reflection facets 310 to provide focusing without the requirement for a lens of Additional Fresnel, in a manner similar to that described in FIGURE 15A, for example. The varying orientation of the reflector film facets rotates the incident linear polarization state 434 to one of the varying polarization orientations such as 436 and 437 depending on the location of the lateral direction (y-axis). To continue the illustrative example, the radius of curvature of the extraction features 12 in the x-y plane may be approximately 440 mm while the radius of curvature of the reflective facets 310 of the backreflector 300 may be in the x-y plane. Advantageously, polarization recirculation is achieved in a fine structure, achieving brightness and efficiency and low power consumption. [0274] FIGURE 38B is a schematic diagram illustrating a ray path modified from that shown in FIGURE 33D, from which ray 1650 emanating from a single viewing point 1600 (representing the position of an observer's eye 99) reflects from the reflector film at region 1610 before creating the propagation ray of the counterpropagating ray 1680. This is reflected back to the reflection polarizer 402 before reaching an extractor feature 12 or reflector facet 310 at substantially the same position 1610 ; thereby guiding within the waveguide 1 as ray 1660, which reflects from the curved end surface 4, and finally propagating as ray 1670 towards a position 1630 along the inlet opening of side 2. It can then be shown that the rays from the spot 1600 can be directed to substantially the same position in the side inlet opening 2 and thus the same light source from the array 15a-n. In this way, facets 310 can be arranged to produce light converted from polarization in the same direction as the light that was transmitted through the reflective polarizer at first incidence. Advantageously, the screen preview windows can be brightened and deduplicated. [0275] FIGURE 39 illustrates in more detail the double reflection of an incident ray 1650 off surfaces 310 and 312 of the prismatic reflector film that creates the counterpropagating ray 1680. Thus, facets 310, 312 can be arranged at an angle comprised 1681 of 90° which provides a retroreflection for rays of light 1650 separated in a foreground parallel to the normal surfaces of the surfaces 310, 312, but a mirror reflection in the orthogonal plane. [0276] FIGURE 40 illustrates a graph showing a radius position plotted (in millimeters) along the side 2 inlet opening (axis 1710) for different inlet positions in millimeters along a horizontal line dividing the optical valve (geometric axis 1712). The viewing position 1600 in this exemplary case is 65 mm off the geometry axis in both horizontal and vertical dimensions at a viewing distance to plane 106 (as shown in FIGURE 12) of 400 mm from the normal vector of the center of the guide. wave 1. The four traces shown in the graph are for two ray path options described in FIGURE 33E (1750, 1770 which are outside the pull feature and the 1760, 1780 trace which is outside the reflector facets) combined with recirculation path (1770, 1780) or not (1750, 1760). The radii of the curved reflection features and those of the imaging surface 4 can be adjusted for optimal location for viewing on the geometry axis. The result suggests that recirculated light emanates at source positions close to that non-recirculated light preserving the mapping between source and observer positions necessary for accurate lighting control. [0277] It may be desired to achieve a display that has the ability to view in bright lighting conditions, eg 25,000 lux, or can operate at high efficiency for a desired luminance, eg 500 cd/m2 (500 nits). The directional backlights of the present embodiment can efficiently direct light in a narrow range of angles compared to conventional 2D backlight systems and thus can achieve high brightness for a given power consumption or high efficiency for a given luminance. [0278] FIGURE 41 is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of a backlight arrangement that produces a horizontal viewing window 800 with a portrait-oriented optical valve waveguide 1 illuminated with a vertical LED array 15 for use on a high-brightness or high-efficiency display device. Note that the coordinate geometric axes refer to the waveguide orientation and not to the viewer space, thus, the horizontal viewing window 800 is provided to an observer 99 with the left eye position 804 and the position of the left eye. right eye 806. [0279] The reflective end 4 may comprise a Fresnel mirror arranged to substantially collimate light from the matrix sources 15 of the reflective facets 813. In cooperation with the extraction features 12 and the optional light reflecting facets 310 (not shown) form viewing window 800. Advantageously, a Fresnel mirror can achieve a small bevel compared to the domed surface 4 shown in FIGURE 35C, for example. Fresnel mirror output facets 803 can provide dispersion in the optical system. Scattering on such a high-efficiency or high-brightness 2D screen can achieve desired levels of viewport uniformity without the low image crosstalk restrictions that are desired in autostereoscopic screens. In addition, diffusion properties can be incorporated into output facets 803 to minimize the effects of non-uniformity of light reflected from facets 803. [0280] Input diffuser 801 may be an asymmetric diffuser with x-y plane diffusion and arranged to reduce the visibility of gaps between array LEDs 15 without substantially increasing light coupling loss in the x-z plane waveguide. Input diffuser 801 may be arranged with diffusion properties that are different in the region of groups 812 than in region of groups 810, for example. [0281] The light emitting element array 15 such as an LED array may comprise a first group 808 of LEDs which may have high brightness output capability; second groups 810 of LEDs which have a similar range 816 to the range 814 LEDs of group 808 and third groups 812 of LEDs which may have a range 818 which may be greater than the range 814 of the LEDs of group 808. In addition, the groups may be incorporated or there may be a gradual increase in the range from the center of the matrix 15 to the outer regions, for example. Group 808 LEDs can have higher brightness output but lower efficiency than group 810, 812 LEDs. [0282] When operating in a high brightness operating mode, the LEDs 809 of the first group 808 can be directed via the optic valve arrangement to the viewing window 800 which comprises two optical windows and size 802. observer 99 with eyes located at positions 804, 806 can view an image across the area of the SLM 48 (not shown). As the viewer's eye 99 moves, the optical windows can be adjusted so that the viewing windows move in correspondence with the position of the viewer, thereby increasing viewing freedom. [0283] In an illustrative example, a diagonal screen can be illuminated by LEDs in the first group 808 of size 2.6xl mm in a range of 3.5 mm. The output of the LEDs can be 50 lumens at 600 mW, so a total power of 1.2 W can be arranged to supply the 800 window. A 50 mm height optical tube suitable for mobile phone applications can be arranged to supply viewing windows at viewing distance of 300 mm, with window height 802 approximately 60 mm. In cooperation with 300 faceted reflection film and polarization recirculation, the output luminance on the display's geometric axis can be approximately at least 2,000 cd/m2 (2,000 nits) when used in cooperation with a 6.5" broadcast LCD. % for non-polarized light. The reflections from the front of the screen can, for example, be 5%. At a screen illuminance of 25,000 lux, a contrast ratio of 5:1 can be achieved compared to a contrast ratio of 1.3:1 for a screen luminance of 500 cd/m2 (500 nits). Thereby, advantageously, the screen contrast ratio can be substantially increased in high brightness environments. [0284] For operation at 500 cd/m2 (500 nits) screen luminance, a power consumption of 300 mW can be achieved. Advantageously, the display brightness is substantially higher than can be achieved for the same input power in a conventional backlight, for example, a display comprising 3M Corporation's ESR™, BEF II™ and DBEF™ and diffusers. [0285] Continuing the illustrative example in the present document, group 808 LEDs can have a luminous efficiency of 60 lumens per Watt (lm/W), while the luminous efficiency of group 810, 812 LEDs can be 80 lm/W at a peak triggering luminous flux of 20 lumens. The 818 gap can be 5 mm or more. The inlet diffuser 801 can vary in its diffusion properties across the inlet port to accommodate the different LED spacings. Advantageously, the cost and number of LEDs in groups 810, 812 can be reduced. [0286] In a further illustrative example, a screen height of 50 mm may be provided with a light-emitting element array 15 with an array-pack luminous emittance of 7 lumens per millimeter. A screen output luminance of 1500 cd/m2 (1500 nits) for viewing positions on the geometry axis can be achieved with a transmission display of approximately 5%. In outdoor operation at 25,000 1ux with 50% white background reflectance, the adapted eye white level is approximately 4,000 cd/m2 (approximately 4,000 nits). The relative screen luminance compared to the adapted eye white level is 37% and close to the reflectance of monochrome electrophoretic screens of known high reflectivity. This compares to less than 15% for a standard screen. Thus, the image readability of the present modalities is substantially higher in environments with high ambient lighting. In addition, full color moving images are achieved for outdoor operations. [0287] FIGURE 42A illustrates a lighting system similar to that of FIGURE 41 arranged in landscape orientation with respect to observer 99, reaching vertical viewing window 800 comprising four optical windows when illuminated by LEDs of group 811. To continue the illustrative example, the viewing window width can be increased to approximately 120 mm, which comprises four optical windows. In addition, FIGURE 42 illustrates LED driving circuits 830, 832, 834 and controller 74 can be arranged to individually drive group 808 LEDs with a high current demand and group 810 LEDs with low current demand. In addition, the 812 group LEDs can be driven by the 834 driver as a chain, to reduce the cost of the 834 driver compared to the 830, 832 drivers. In this way, the angles close to the display axis can be arranged to provide operation. in high brightness environments while the most off-axis angles can be arranged to provide observer tracked low power mode operation and the 812 LED strings can be triggered when the display is required to operate in wide angle mode , which is a directional distribution that is similar to a standard 2D display. [0288] FIGURES 42B to D are schematic diagrams illustrating the graphs of light emitting element luminous flux 263 with position 261 through a light matrix emitting element arrays. FIGURE 42B shows the arrangement of FIGURE 41 in which the group 808 of LEDs are each illuminated with luminous flux 900 with a gray level location profile of matrix 902. The output luminous intensity function can be related to the distribution of luminous flux through the propagation of light within the waveguide 1 and in the reflector 300 and diffuser 68 film arrangements. Such luminous flux distribution can be arranged for example to achieve a high brightness screen for viewing images with ratios of light. desirable contrast in environments with high illuminance, such as 25,000 lux. In lower illuminance environments, such as indoors, the luminous flux distribution 908 may be arranged as shown in FIGURE 42C. In this way, screen efficiency can be further increased while achieving a desired luminance for indoor views. [0289] In addition, it may be desirable to increase screen viewing freedom. As shown in FIGURE 42A, luminous flux distribution 910 may be provided. LED regions 904, 912, 914 can be provided by LED groups 811, 810, 812 respectively in FIGURE 42A. Advantageously, a wide viewing angle screen can be provided with a light intensity distribution similar to that of a conventional 2D backlight, for example profile 352 in FIGURE 32C. Such an arrangement does not require additional position control or window structure for wide-angle viewing. [0290] Advantageously, a screen that can achieve high contrast in environments with high levels of illuminance can be arranged. Furthermore, the display can achieve very low levels of power consumption indoors for acceptable contrast ratios. Additionally, the display can achieve angular light intensity distributions that are similar to conventional 2D backlights for similar power operation. In addition, such a screen can operate in both portrait and landscape operating modes. In addition, the peak luminance can be arranged for better viewing of the screen substantially in the direction of the normal display surface and is thus suitable for screens arranged to operate in either portrait or landscape mode of operation. [0291] FIGURE 43A is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of an optical valve arranged with a reflector on the inlet side and FIGURE 43B is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of an optical valve arranged with a reflector on the inlet side. input 2 arranged to redirect return light into a wide viewing cone and an integrated Fresnel mirror. Reflector 842 may comprise a metallic reflector or a polymeric reflector, e.g. ESR™, and may be additionally arranged with a diffuser 843 which may be an asymmetrical diffuser arranged to diffuse light so that rays 841 incident on reflector 842 are scattered in the xy plane, but not in the xz plane, giving diffuse rays 839 as well as direct reflected rays 837. In operation, some of the light from an LED that is not extracted at resources 12 is incident on the input side 2 and reflected. In this way, this light recirculates in the system and then reaches a source that is substantially the width of the optic valve. The ratio of the inlet aperture height 845 to the mirror aperture height 847 can be adjusted to achieve an increase in light that fits the inlet aperture, thus increasing the amount of light that can be directed through a wide range of angles and increasing upward lighting levels. The array 15 may comprise a single group 844 of high brightness LEDs, thereby advantageously reducing the cost of the display. Such a screen can be tracked to reach the motion viewing windows or it can be untracked with a central peak of high brightness. [0292] FIGURES 43C to 43D are schematic diagrams illustrating additional front views of an optical valve arranged with a reflector on the inlet side to redirect back light into a wide viewing cone and an integrated Fresnel mirror. FIGURE 43E is a schematic diagram illustrating a graph of a light intensity distribution from the arrangement of FIGURE 43D. [0293] FIGURE 43C shows an arrangement where a single light source 880 driven by a single controller 882 is arranged to provide display lighting. The directional backlight may then comprise a waveguide 1 comprising an input end 2; a single light source 880 disposed at a predetermined input position in a lateral direction across input end 2 of waveguide 1, wherein waveguide 1 further comprises first and second opposing guide surfaces 6, 8 to guide light along the waveguide 1 and where a reflective end 4 is facing the input end 2 to reflect the input light back through the waveguide 1, where the first guide surface 6 is arranged to guide light through total internal reflection and wherein the second guide surface 8 has a staggered shape comprising (a) a plurality of facets 12 oriented to reflect light from the light source 880 after reflection from the reflective end 4, through the first guide surface 6 into an optical window in an output direction positioned in a lateral direction (y axis axis) depending on the input position of the light source 880 and (b) intermediate regions arias 10 between facets 12 which are arranged to guide light through waveguide 1; wherein a backreflector 300 comprises an array of reflective facets 310 arranged to reflect light from the light source 808, which is transmitted through the plurality of facets 12 of the waveguide 1, back through the waveguide 1 to exiting through the first guide surface 6 in said optical windows. [0294] Advantageously, the cost and complexity of the device is reduced and a wide angle of lighting profile can be performed. FIGURE 43D further shows an arrangement where a single high-brightness LED 886 and two low-brightness, but high-efficiency LEDs 884, 888 are arranged to provide a 265 viewport light intensity profile with position 267 in the plane. window 106 comprising one of the central appearance 815 with light directly from the LEDs and one of the external appearance 817 with light reflected from the reflector 842. The ratio of the height of the reflective end 4 to the inlet end 2 can be set to determine the light ratio in the 815 and 817 regions. The output efficiency can then be optimized while achieving a wide viewing angle mode and a high brightness mode in 2D. [0295] FIGURES 44A to 44B are schematic diagrams illustrating side and front views, respectively, of an optical valve that further comprises an asymmetric diffuser 848 arranged near the reflection end 4 to improve output uniformity. The diffuser 848 may be arranged to provide substantially low diffusion for rays 845 propagating in the x-y plane while providing a small amount of scattered rays 847 for rays propagating in the x-z plane. Such a diffuser can advantageously achieve increased display area uniformity due to the non-uniform angular distribution of light rays in the x-z plane. Such non-uniform angular distribution of rays may arise from mode coupling effects and diffraction effects within the waveguide 1 of the optical valve. In an illustrative example, a diffuser with angular diffusion properties of 0.1° x 3° may be arranged at end 4. Such a diffuser may be buried in materials with different refractive indices to reduce Fresnel reflections from the surface of structures. [0296] FIGURES 44C to 44D are schematic diagrams illustrating front views of a method for forming an optical valve comprising waveguide 1. Waveguide 1 may be formed by molding into an integrated body comprising facets curves 12. The body may comprise a flat end 610. A Fresnel mirror assembly 600 may comprise a Fresnel surface 602 which is metallized and formed between encapsulated layers 604, 606. Alternatively, the Fresnel mirror may comprise a stamped reflector. formed in a similar manner to that shown in FIGURES 28F-I and may additionally be provided with protective layers 604, 606. Adhesive layer 608 which may comprise some diffusion function similar to that shown in FIGURE 44B may be provided to affix the mirror mount to the end 610 of the integrated body of the waveguide 1. In addition, the reflective layers 612, 614 can be affixed to the side walls of the gas. Waveguide 1 to reduce the visibility of off-axis voids. Advantageously, the Fresnel mirror assembly can be formed with high precision and high reflectivity in a process that is separate from the integrated body, achieving higher optical performance. [0297] It may be desirable to reduce the size of the device by integrating the backlight components with the display system structure, eg mobile phone, tablet or phablet (tablet with phone functionality). [0298] FIGURE 45A is a schematic diagram illustrating a front view of an optical tube in a first assembly stage comprising an LED array arranged in a first device frame and a Fresnel mirror arranged in a second device frame and FIGURE 45B shows the arrangement during a second assembly step. In a first step, the light source array 15 such as an LED array is mounted on a substrate comprising an insulating and electrode layer 851 and a metal frame 850 which may be the outer frame of a display device such as like a mobile phone or tablet. In addition, films such as ESR 842 can be applied to regions of the matrix 15 to reuse light within the waveguide 1 as shown in FIGURES 44A to B. In addition, a Fresnel mirror 854 can be formed on or in the frame. 852 of the device. Such a Fresnel mirror can be molded directly into the frame itself or can be formed into the frame. During the assembly step, the Fresnel mirror can be affixed by means of an index fitting material 856 to the waveguide 1 which forms an integrated component. Furthermore, the light source array can be placed in close proximity to the input side of the waveguide 1 during the assembly step. In addition, 858 plates and electronics can be arranged around the backlight. [0299] Advantageously, the bevel size of the display device can be reduced and the number of separate components further reduced, minimizing the cost. In addition, the 850 frame can provide a heat sink for the array 15 LEDs, thereby improving thermal contact with the external environment, improving the efficiency and lifespan of the LEDs. [0300] FIGURES 46A to 46C are schematic diagrams illustrating a front view and side views of a battery pack 860 for display devices comprising a reflective layer. The reflective film comprising facets 310, 312 may be arranged on battery 860 with external contacts 862 to the battery. Along cross-section 864, FIGURE 46B shows that film 300 may be affixed to top cover 866 of the battery, with battery material 870 and bottom cover 868. Advantageously, the battery may be arranged as a support layer substantially flat so that the optical output windows of the reflective layer 300 are aligned across the screen area. Alternatively, as shown in FIGURE 46C, the reflective layer can be arranged on the battery cover 872, achieving a thinner structure and more integrated with the desired flatness for the imaging windows. [0301] Display brightness can be substantially increased compared to arrangements that do not use 300 Prismatic Reflective Film and 402 Reflective Polarizer. Light source cost can be reduced and battery life can be extended. [0302] FIGURE 47 is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a display device comprising a reflective film arranged on a wedge-shaped battery 870 with wedge angle 871 combined with the tapered angle of waveguide 1. Advantageously , the rear reflector 300 can be integrated into the battery, optimizing the battery volume. [0303] FIGURE 48 is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a display device comprising a slotted side wall for LED placement to achieve reduced bevel width. Spatial transmissive light modulator 48 such as a liquid crystal display may further comprise a boundary region 427 which may comprise dealing with electronics and sealing material and which is external to the active area of the SLM 48. Shaded layer 502 is arranged to hide the visibility of the directional backlight edge regions. The LED package 622 with the emission region 624 and electrical connection regions 626 can be arranged in the electrical fan outlet and affixed to the side wall 850 of the mobile device, optionally in the cavity region 851. In an illustrative example, a width of Side bevel of less than 2.5 mm can be achieved, where the gap between the edge of the active area and that of region 624 is approximately three times the height of the input end 2 of waveguide 1. [0304] FIGURE 49 is a schematic diagram illustrating a side view of a screen device comprising a side wall with slits for mirror placement to achieve reduced bevel width. Shaded layer 502 is arranged partially in optical cutout 853 in side wall 852 to hide mirror edge scatter 600. To continue the illustrative example, a side bevel width of less than 2.5 mm can be achieved, where gap between the edge of the active area and mirror 600 is approximately three times the height of mirror 600. [0305] As may be used in the present disclosure, the terms "substantially" and "approximately" represent an accepted industry tolerance for their corresponding term and/or item-to-item relativity. Such industry accepted tolerance ranges from zero percent to ten percent and corresponds to, but is not limited to, component values, angles, etc. This inter-item relativity varies between approximately zero percent and ten percent. [0306] Although various modalities have been described above in accordance with the principles disclosed herein, it should be understood that they have been presented only by way of example, and not limitation. Accordingly, the extent and scope of this disclosure should not be limited by any of the exemplifying embodiments described above, but should be defined only in accordance with any claims and their equivalents arising from this disclosure. In addition, the advantages and remedies presented above are provided in the modalities described, but will not limit the application of such granted claims to processes and structures that provide any or all of the above advantages. [0307] Additionally, the section headings in this document are provided for consistency with suggestions under 37 CFR 1.77 or to otherwise provide organizational clues. These headings will not limit or characterize the embodiment(s) defined in any of the claims that may be derived from this disclosure. Specifically and by way of example, although the headings refer to a "Technical Field", claims should not be limited by the language chosen under that heading to describe the so-called field. Additionally, a description of a technology in the "Background" section should not be interpreted as an admission that a particular technology is prior art for any embodiment in this disclosure. Likewise, the "Summary" section should not be considered as a characterization of the modality(ies) presented in the granted claims. Furthermore, any reference in this revelation to "invention" used in the singular mode should not be used as an argument that there is only a single point of innovation in this revelation. Multiple embodiments may be presented in accordance with the limitations of the multiple claims arising from this disclosure, and such claims accordingly define the embodiments, and their equivalents, which are so protected. In all instances, the scope of such claims shall be considered on their own merits in light of this disclosure, but shall not be constricted by the headings described herein.
权利要求:
Claims (26) [0001] 1. Directional backlight characterized in that it comprises: a waveguide (1) comprising an input end (2); an array of light sources (15) arranged at different input positions in a lateral direction through the input end (2) of the waveguide (1), the waveguide (1) further comprising the first and second opposing guide surfaces (6, 8) to guide light along the waveguide (1) and a reflective end (4) that faces the inlet end (2) to reflect incoming light back through the waveguide. waveguide (1), wherein the first guide surface (6) is arranged to guide light through total internal reflection and wherein the second guide surface (8) has a staggered shape comprising: a plurality of facets (12) oriented to reflect light from the light sources (15), after reflection from the reflective end (4), through the first guide surface (6) in optical windows in output directions distributed in a direction lateral to the normal vector to the first guide surface (6) depending on the entry positions and intermediate regions diaries between facets (12) which are arranged to guide light through the waveguide (1); a rear reflector (300) comprising a linear array of reflective facets (310) arranged to reflect light from the light sources (15), which is transmitted through the plurality of facets of the waveguide (1), back through the waveguide (1) to exit through the first guide surface (6) in said optical windows. [0002] 2. Directional backlight, according to claim 1, characterized in that it additionally comprises a diffuser (68) arranged to receive light output through the first guide surface (6). [0003] 3. Directional backlight according to claim 2, characterized in that the diffuser (68) is an asymmetric diffuser that is arranged to provide greater angular dispersion in a direction orthogonal to said lateral direction than in said lateral direction . [0004] 4. Directional backlight, according to claim 2, characterized in that it additionally comprises a Fresnel lens (62) having optical power at least in said lateral direction, arranged between the first guide surface (6) of the waveguide (1) and diffuser (68). [0005] 5. Directional backlight, according to claim 1, characterized in that it additionally comprises a Fresnel lens (62) having optical power at least in said lateral direction arranged to receive light output through the first guide surface (6). [0006] 6. Directional backlight, according to claim 1, characterized in that the facets (2) of the waveguide (1) and the reflective facets (310) of the rear reflector (300) are inclined in the same direction in an orthogonal plane common to said lateral direction. [0007] 7. Directional backlight, according to claim 6, characterized in that the facets (12) of the waveguide (1) are inclined at an angle (π/2-α) to the vector normal to the first surface -guide (6) and the reflective facets (310) of the rear reflector (300) are inclined at an angle β to the vector normal to the first guide surface (6) and 2β > π/2 - sin-1 (n. sin (a - θC)), where θC is the critical angle of the waveguide facets and where n is the refractive index of the waveguide material (1). [0008] 8. Directional backlight according to claim 1, characterized in that the rear reflector (300) is spaced from the waveguide (1) so that light from an individual facet (12) of the waveguide (1) is incident on the plural reflective facets (310) of the rear reflector (300), wherein the rear reflector (300) additionally comprises intermediate facets (312) that extend between the reflective facets (310) of the rear reflector (300) , wherein the intermediate facets (312) are inclined in a direction opposite the reflective facets (310) of the rear reflector (300) at an angle such that said light from the light sources (15) which is transmitted through the plurality of facets (12) of the waveguide (1) is not incident on the intermediate facets (312). [0009] 9. Directional backlight, according to claim 1, characterized in that the reflective facets (310) of the rear reflector (300) have an irregular spacing. [0010] 10. Directional backlight, according to claim 9, characterized in that the reflective facets (310) of the rear reflector (300) have an irregular random spacing. [0011] 11. Directional backlight according to claim 1, characterized in that the reflective facets (310) of the rear reflector (300) have an inclination that varies across the reflective facet array (310). [0012] 12. Directional backlight, according to claim 1, characterized in that the reflective facets (310) of the rear reflector (300) are linear. [0013] 13. Directional backlight, according to claim 1, characterized in that the reflective facets (310) of the rear reflector (300) are curved. [0014] 14. Directional backlight, according to claim 1, characterized in that the reflective facets (310) of the rear reflector (300) are concave and arranged in alignment with the facets (12) of the waveguide (1) . [0015] 15. Directional backlight, according to claim 1, characterized in that the reflective facets (310) of the rear reflector (300) are undulating along its length. [0016] 16. Directional backlight, according to claim 1, characterized in that the rear reflector (300) additionally comprises a rigid diffusion surface in at least some of the reflective facets (310). [0017] 17. Directional backlight, according to claim 1, characterized in that the facets of the rear reflector (300) are arranged behind the respective facets of the waveguide (1) and arranged to reflect the entire incident of light therein from the light sources which is transmitted through respective one of the facets (12) of the waveguide (1). [0018] 18. Directional backlight, according to claim 1, characterized in that the reflective end (4) has positive optical power in a lateral direction through the waveguide (1). [0019] 19. Directional backlight, according to claim 1, characterized in that the rear reflector (300) is formed by at least two polarized reflector blades (569) arranged to reflect light that is polarized in polarization directions respective orthogonal to each other, polarized reflector blades (569) shaped to form said linear array of reflective facets (310). [0020] 20. A directional display device characterized in that it comprises: a directional backlight comprising: a waveguide (1) comprising an input end (2); an array of light sources (15) arranged at different input positions in a lateral direction through the input end (2) of the waveguide (1), the waveguide (1) further comprising the first and second opposing guide surfaces (6, 8) to guide light along the waveguide (1) and a reflective end (4) that faces the inlet end (2) to reflect incoming light back through the waveguide. waveguide (1), wherein the first guide surface (6) is arranged to guide light through total internal reflection and wherein the second guide surface (8) has a staggered shape comprising: a plurality of facets (12) oriented to reflect light from the light sources (15), after reflection from the reflective end (4), through the first guide surface (6) in optical windows in output directions distributed in a direction lateral to the vector normal to the first guide surface (6) depending on the input positions and inter regions mediators between facets (12) which are arranged to guide light through the waveguide (1); a rear reflector (300) comprising a linear array of reflective facets (310) arranged to reflect light from the light sources (15), which is transmitted through the plurality of facets of the waveguide (1), back through the waveguide (1) to exit through the first guide surface (6) in said optical windows; a transmissive spatial light modulator (48) arranged to receive light output through the first guide surface (6) and arranged to modulate a first polarization component of which the light has a first polarization; and a reflective polarizer (402) disposed between the first guide surface (6) of the waveguide (1) and the spatial light modulator (48) and arranged to transmit the first polarization component and to reflect a second polarization component. of the output light having a polarization orthogonal to the first polarization of the rejected light, the after reflector (300) which additionally comprises intermediate facets (312) that extend between the reflective facets (310) of the after reflector (300) and inclined in directions of the reflective facets (310) of the rear reflector (300) in a common plane, so that the pairs of a reflective facet (310) and an intermediate facet (312) together form corner facets arranged to reflect rejected light for supplying returns to the spatial light modulator (48), wherein the pairs of a reflective facet (310) and an intermediate facet (312) are tilted in a plane that is oriented around the vector normal to the light modulator (312). spatial light (48) such that the afterreflector converts the supplied rejected light polarization back to the spatial light modulator (48) into the first polarization in the reflection. [0021] 21. Directional display device, according to claim 20, characterized in that it additionally comprises a polarization rotator (348) arranged between the reflective polarizer (310) and the spatial light modulator (48) and arranged to rotate the first polarization component. [0022] 22. Directional display device, according to claim 20, characterized in that it additionally comprises a transmissive spatial light modulator (48) arranged to receive output light from the first guide surface (6). [0023] 23. Display apparatus characterized in that it comprises: a directional backlight comprising: a waveguide (1) comprising an input end (2); an array of light sources (15) arranged at different input positions in a lateral direction through the input end (2) of the waveguide (1), the waveguide (1) further comprising the first and second opposing guide surfaces (6,8) to guide light along the waveguide (1) and a reflective end (4) that faces the input end (2) to reflect incoming light back through the waveguide. waveguide (1), wherein the first guide surface (6) is arranged to guide light through total internal reflection and wherein the second guide surface (8) has a staggered shape comprising: a plurality of facets (12) oriented to reflect light from the light sources (15), after reflection from the reflective end (4), through the first guide surface (6) in optical windows in output directions distributed in a direction lateral to the normal vector to the first guide surface (6) depending on the input positions and intermediate regions lines between the facets (12) which are arranged to guide light through the waveguide (1); a rear reflector (300) comprising a linear array of reflective facets (310) arranged to reflect light from the light sources (15), which is transmitted through the plurality of facets (12) of the waveguide (1) , back through the waveguide (1) to exit through the first guide surface (6) in said optical windows; a transmissive spatial light modulator (48) arranged to receive light output through the first guide surface (6) and arranged to modulate a first polarization component of which the light has a first polarization; and a reflective polarizer (402) disposed between the first guide surface (6) of the waveguide (1) and the spatial light modulator (48) and arranged to transmit the first polarization component and to reflect a second polarization component. of the output light having a polarization orthogonal to the first polarization of the rejected light, the after reflector (300) which additionally comprises intermediate facets (312) that extend between the reflective facets (310) of the after reflector (300) and inclined in directions of the reflective facets (310) of the rear reflector (300) in a common plane, so that the pairs of a reflective facet (310) and an intermediate facet (312) together provide corner facets arranged to reflect rejected light for supplying back to the spatial light modulator (48), wherein the pairs of a reflective facet (310) and an intermediate facet (312) are tilted in a plane that is oriented around the vector normal to the modulator d and spatial light (48) such that the backreflector (300) converts the supplied rejected light polarization back to the spatial light modulator (48) into the first polarization in the reflection; wherein the reflective end (4) has positive optical power in a lateral direction through the waveguide (1); and a control system (75, 77) arranged to selectively operate the light sources (15) to direct light into optical windows corresponding to said output directions. [0024] 24. Display apparatus according to claim 23, characterized in that the display apparatus is an autostereoscopic display apparatus wherein the control system (75, 77) is further arranged to control the display device to display temporally multiplexed right and left images and simultaneously direct the images displayed in the optical windows into positions that correspond to an observer's right and left eyes. [0025] 25. Display apparatus according to claim 24, characterized in that the control system (75, 77) further comprises a sensor system (74) arranged to detect the position of an observer through the display device and the control system (75, 77) is arranged to direct the output light into selected optical windows depending on the detected position of the observer. [0026] 26. Directional backlight characterized in that it comprises: a waveguide (1) comprising an input end (2); a single light source (15) disposed at a predetermined input position in a lateral direction through the input end (2) of the waveguide (1), the waveguide (1) further comprising the first and second opposing guide surfaces (6, 8) to guide light along the waveguide and the reflective end (4) facing the input end (2) to reflect incoming light back through the waveguide (1), wherein the first guide surface (6) is arranged to guide light through total internal reflection and wherein the second guide surface (8) has a staggered shape comprising (a) a plurality of facets ( 12) oriented to reflect light from the light source (15), after reflection from the reflective end (4), through the first guide surface in an optical window in an output direction positioned in a lateral direction depending on the light source entry position (15) and (b) intermediate regions between the faces tabs (12) which are arranged to guide light through the waveguide (1); a rear reflector (300) comprising an array of reflective facets (310) arranged to reflect light from the light source (15), which is transmitted through the plurality of facets (12) of the waveguide (1), back through the waveguide (1) to exit through the first guide surface (6) in said optical windows.
类似技术:
公开号 | 公开日 | 专利标题 BR112015020160B1|2022-01-18|DIRECTIONAL BACKLIGHTING US10401638B2|2019-09-03|Optical stack for imaging directional backlights US11061181B2|2021-07-13|Wide angle imaging directional backlights US9225971B2|2015-12-29|Temporally multiplexed display with landscape and portrait operation modes US9350980B2|2016-05-24|Crosstalk suppression in a directional backlight BR112013011777B1|2021-01-19|light valve to guide the light, optical valve system and optical viewfinder US20130328866A1|2013-12-12|Spatially multiplexed imaging directional backlight displays US20130335821A1|2013-12-19|Source conditioning for imaging directional backlights US9436015B2|2016-09-06|Superlens component for directional display US10488578B2|2019-11-26|Light input for directional backlight US10330843B2|2019-06-25|Wide angle imaging directional backlights BR112014028612B1|2021-12-28|DIRECTIONAL SCREEN DEVICE
同族专利:
公开号 | 公开日 WO2014130860A1|2014-08-28| JP2016514283A|2016-05-19| TW201439593A|2014-10-16| AU2014218711A1|2015-09-10| JP6584008B2|2019-10-02| CN105324605B|2020-04-28| KR20150120456A|2015-10-27| CA2901917C|2021-08-24| KR20200123175A|2020-10-28| CN111487707A|2020-08-04| US10054732B2|2018-08-21| CN105324605A|2016-02-10| CA2901917A1|2014-08-28| BR112015020160A2|2017-07-18| TWI622811B|2018-05-01| US20140240828A1|2014-08-28| EA031850B1|2019-03-29| EA201500864A1|2016-01-29| AU2018201933A1|2018-04-12| EP2959213A4|2016-11-16| AU2018201933B2|2019-05-16| EP2959213A1|2015-12-30|
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法律状态:
2018-05-15| B25A| Requested transfer of rights approved|Owner name: REALD SPARK, LLC (US) | 2018-11-13| B06F| Objections, documents and/or translations needed after an examination request according [chapter 6.6 patent gazette]| 2020-01-14| B06U| Preliminary requirement: requests with searches performed by other patent offices: procedure suspended [chapter 6.21 patent gazette]| 2021-07-06| B06A| Patent application procedure suspended [chapter 6.1 patent gazette]| 2021-11-09| B09A| Decision: intention to grant [chapter 9.1 patent gazette]| 2022-01-18| B16A| Patent or certificate of addition of invention granted [chapter 16.1 patent gazette]|Free format text: PRAZO DE VALIDADE: 20 (VINTE) ANOS CONTADOS A PARTIR DE 21/02/2014, OBSERVADAS AS CONDICOES LEGAIS. |
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申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题 US201361768371P| true| 2013-02-22|2013-02-22| US61/768,371|2013-02-22| US201361791112P| true| 2013-03-15|2013-03-15| US61/791,112|2013-03-15| US201361890456P| true| 2013-10-14|2013-10-14| US61/890,456|2013-10-14| PCT/US2014/017779|WO2014130860A1|2013-02-22|2014-02-21|Directional backlight| 相关专利
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