Samsung · Filed Jan 28, 2026 · Published Jun 18, 2026 · verified — real USPTO data

Samsung Patents a Dual Light-Blocking Shield Camera Design to Cut Lens Glare

Lens flare and stray light are silent photo killers — and Samsung is filing patents on a physical fix built right into the camera module itself.

Samsung Patent: Dual-Baffle Camera Module Design — figure from US 2026/0172662 A1
FIG. 1A — rendered from the official USPTO publication PDF.
Publication number US 2026/0172662 A1
Applicant Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
Filing date Jan 28, 2026
Publication date Jun 18, 2026
Inventors Jiyeon JO, Jeongkil SHIN
CPC classification 348/374
Grant likelihood Medium
Examiner CENTRAL, DOCKET (Art Unit OPAP)
Status Docketed New Case - Ready for Examination (Mar 20, 2026)
Parent application is a Continuation of PCTKR2024011357 (filed 2024-08-01)
Document 20 claims

What Samsung's dual-baffle camera system actually does

Imagine you're trying to take a photo in a bright room, but the light bouncing around inside your phone's camera creates a hazy wash over the image. That's stray light — and it's one of the most common reasons phone photos look worse than you'd expect from the specs.

Samsung's patent describes a camera module with two baffles — think of them as tiny internal light shields — placed parallel to each other inside the camera housing. One attaches to the moving lens carrier, and one sits fixed inside the housing between the lens and the image sensor. Together, they intercept light that would otherwise bounce around and degrade the image.

The design is about physical light control rather than software tricks. Instead of relying purely on post-processing to clean up a photo, the baffles stop the problem at the source before the sensor ever sees the unwanted light.

How the two baffles work together inside the lens housing

The camera module described in the patent has five key parts: a housing (the outer shell), a lens carrier that moves the lens along the optical axis for focusing, an image sensor that captures the final image, and the two baffles at the center of the invention.

Baffle one is mounted on the lens carrier itself — meaning it moves with the lens as it shifts during autofocus. Baffle two is fixed to the inside of the housing, positioned between the lens and the image sensor, and runs parallel to the first baffle.

The parallel arrangement is the key detail. Because the two baffles face each other across the light path, stray light rays that sneak past one baffle hit the other before reaching the sensor. The fixed baffle handles light that comes from odd angles or reflects off internal surfaces; the moving baffle handles light that strays as the lens shifts position during focus.

The patent doesn't describe complex electronics or software — this is a mechanical and optical engineering solution, the kind of thing that adds manufacturing precision but relatively little cost at scale.

What this means for photo quality in Samsung phones

Stray light is a real and persistent problem in thin phone cameras, where the optical path is cramped and reflective surfaces are unavoidable. Software dehazing and lens flare correction exist, but they introduce their own artifacts. A hardware fix that stops unwanted light before it hits the sensor is generally cleaner.

For Samsung, which competes directly with Apple and Google on camera quality, small optical engineering wins matter. If this baffle design makes it into Galaxy camera modules, you might notice slightly crisper shots in high-contrast scenes — bright windows, outdoor backlit portraits, or anything with a strong light source in or near the frame — without any AI processing doing the heavy lifting.

Editorial take

This is a quiet but sensible optical engineering patent. Dual-baffle systems are a known technique in dedicated cameras, and filing a patent on a specific implementation for phone camera modules is exactly the kind of incremental work that actually ships in products. It won't make headlines on its own, but it's the type of detail that separates good cameras from great ones.

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Source. Full patent text and figures from the official USPTO publication PDF.

Editorial commentary on a publicly published patent application. Not legal advice.