Paper
14 May 2007 Flexible precision asphere manufacturing
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The manufacturing of precision aspheres has traditionally been a long-lead-time, labor-intensive process that is made even more expensive by the need for specific process expertise, dedicated tooling for polishing, and dedicated nulls for metrology. These challenges have limited the widespread use of optical aspheres. New technology is currently being developed to enable flexible and lower-cost manufacturing of precision aspheres, without the need for dedicated tools or null optics. Subaperture Stitching Interferometry (SSI®) combined with Magnetorheological Finishing (MRF®) enable a flexible and deterministic approach to finishing precision aspheres in a wide variety of materials and geometries. MRF systems use highly stable, subaperture tools that perfectly conform to the changing curvature of aspheric optics during the polishing process. This enables a single machine to process plano, spherical, and aspheric surfaces (both convex and concave) without the delays and costs associated with maintaining and switching between sets of dedicated tooling. SSI systems mathematically "stitch" together subaperture measurements to generate high-resolution, high-precision, fullaperture aspheric surface measurements. By locally nulling and using maximum pixel resolution over a subaperture, the SSI extends general-purpose, null-free interferometry to aspheres with departures from best-fit-sphere on the order of 100ë. When these technologies are combined with either the latest grinding and pre-polishing or diamond-turning technology, fast, flexible prototyping, or small-batch production of precision aspheres is available at an attractive cost.
© (2007) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Paul Dumas, Gregory Forbes, Stephen O'Donohue, and Marc Tricard "Flexible precision asphere manufacturing", Proc. SPIE 10316, Optifab 2007: Technical Digest, 103160H (14 May 2007); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.719815
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Aspheric lenses

Polishing

Magnetorheological finishing

Optics manufacturing

Manufacturing

Metrology

Surface finishing

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