Optical lens design is the process of
designing a
lens to meet a set of performance requirements and constraints, including cost and manufacturing limitations. Parameters include surface profile types (
spherical,
aspheric,
holographic,
diffractive, etc.), as well as
radius of curvature, distance to the next surface, material type and optionally tilt and decenter. The process is computationally intensive, using
ray tracing or other techniques to model how the lens affects light that passes through it.
Design requirements
Performance requirements can include:
#
Optical performance (image quality): This is quantified by various metrics, including
encircled energy,
modulation transfer function
The optical transfer function (OTF) of an optical system such as a camera, microscope, human eye, or image projector, projector specifies how different spatial frequencies are captured or transmitted. It is used by optical engineers to describe h ...
,
Strehl ratio, ghost reflection control, and pupil performance (size, location and aberration control); the choice of the image quality metric is application specific.
#Physical requirements such as
weight, static
volume, dynamic volume,
center of gravity and overall configuration requirements.
#Environmental requirements: ranges for
temperature,
pressure,
vibration and
electromagnetic shielding.
Design constraints can include realistic lens element center and edge thicknesses, minimum and maximum air-spaces between lenses, maximum constraints on entrance and exit angles, physically realizable glass
index of refraction
In optics, the refractive index (or refraction index) of an optical medium is a dimensionless number that gives the indication of the light bending ability of that medium.
The refractive index determines how much the path of light is bent, or ...
and
dispersion properties.
Manufacturing costs and delivery schedules are also a major part of optical design. The price of an optical glass blank of given dimensions can vary by a factor of fifty or more, depending on the size, glass type, index
homogeneity quality, and availability, with
BK7
Borosilicate glass is a type of glass with silica and boron trioxide as the main glass-forming constituents. Borosilicate glasses are known for having very low coefficients of thermal expansion (≈3 × 10−6 K−1 at 20 °C), m ...
usually being the cheapest. Costs for larger and/or thicker optical blanks of a given material, above 100–150 mm, usually increase faster than the physical volume due to increased blank
annealing time required to achieve acceptable index homogeneity and internal
stress birefringence levels throughout the blank volume. Availability of glass blanks is driven by how frequently a particular glass type is made by a given manufacturer, and can seriously affect manufacturing cost and schedule.
Process
Lenses can first be designed using
paraxial theory to position
image
An image is a visual representation of something. It can be two-dimensional, three-dimensional, or somehow otherwise feed into the visual system to convey information. An image can be an artifact, such as a photograph or other two-dimensiona ...
s and
pupils, then real surfaces inserted and optimized. Paraxial theory can be skipped in simpler cases and the lens directly optimized using real surfaces. Lenses are first designed using average
index of refraction
In optics, the refractive index (or refraction index) of an optical medium is a dimensionless number that gives the indication of the light bending ability of that medium.
The refractive index determines how much the path of light is bent, or ...
and
dispersion (see
Abbe number) properties published in the glass manufacturer's catalog and though
glass model calculations. However, the properties of the real glass blanks will vary from this ideal; index of refraction values can vary by as much as 0.0003 or more from catalog values, and dispersion can vary slightly. These changes in index and dispersion can sometimes be enough to affect the lens focus location and imaging performance in highly corrected systems.
The lens blank manufacturing process is as follows:
#The
glass batch ingredients for a desired glass type are mixed in a powder state,
#the powder mixture is melted together in a furnace,
#the fluid is further mixed while molten to maximize batch homogeneity,
#poured into lens blanks and
#
annealed according to empirically determined time-temperature schedules.
The glass blank pedigree, or "melt data", can be determined for a given glass batch by making small precision
prisms from various locations in the batch and measuring their index of refraction on a
spectrometer
A spectrometer () is a scientific instrument used to separate and measure spectral components of a physical phenomenon. Spectrometer is a broad term often used to describe instruments that measure a continuous variable of a phenomenon where the ...
, typically at five or more
wavelengths. Lens design programs have
curve fitting routines that can fit the melt data to a selected
dispersion curve, from which the index of refraction at any wavelength within the fitted wavelength range can be calculated. A re-optimization, or "melt re-comp", can then be performed on the lens design using measured index of refraction data where available. When manufactured, the resulting lens performance will more closely match the desired requirements than if average glass catalog values for index of refraction were assumed.
Delivery schedules are impacted by glass and mirror blank availability and lead times to acquire, the amount of tooling a shop must fabricate prior to starting on a project, the manufacturing tolerances on the parts (tighter tolerances mean longer fab times), the complexity of any
optical coatings that must be applied to the finished parts, further complexities in mounting or bonding lens elements into cells and in the overall lens system assembly, and any post-assembly alignment and quality control testing and tooling required. Tooling costs and delivery schedules can be reduced by using existing tooling at any given shop wherever possible, and by maximizing manufacturing tolerances to the extent possible.
Lens optimization
A simple two-element air-spaced lens has nine variables (four radii of curvature, two thicknesses, one airspace thickness, and two glass types). A multi-configuration lens corrected over a wide spectral band and field of view over a range of
focal length
The focal length of an optical system is a measure of how strongly the system converges or diverges light; it is the inverse of the system's optical power. A positive focal length indicates that a system converges light, while a negative foca ...
s and over a realistic temperature range can have a complex design volume having over one hundred dimensions.
Lens optimization techniques that can navigate this multi-dimensional space and proceed to local
minima
In mathematical analysis, the maxima and minima (the respective plurals of maximum and minimum) of a function, known collectively as extrema (the plural of extremum), are the largest and smallest value of the function, either within a given ran ...
have been studied since the 1940s, beginning with early work by
James G. Baker, and later by Feder, Wynne, Glatzel, Grey and others. Prior to the development of
digital computers, lens optimization was a hand-calculation task using
trigonometric and
logarithmic tables to plot 2-D cuts through the multi-dimensional space. Computerized ray tracing allows the performance of a lens to be modelled quickly, so that the design space can be searched rapidly. This allows design concepts to be rapidly refined. Popular optical design software includes
Zemax Zemax is a company that sells optical design software. OpticStudio is its flagship product and a commonly used optical design program for Microsoft Windows. It is used for the design and analysis of both imaging and illumination systems.
History
O ...
's OpticStudio,
Synopsys's Code V, and Lambda Research's
OSLO. In most cases the designer must first choose a viable design for the optical system, and then numerical modelling is used to refine it.
[Fischer (2008), pp. 171–5.] The designer ensures that designs optimized by the computer meet all requirements, and makes adjustments or restarts the process when they do not.
See also
*
Optical engineering
*
Fabrication and testing (optical components)
*
Ray transfer matrix analysis
*
Photographic lens design
*
Stray light Stray light is light in an optical system, which was not intended in the design. The light may be from the intended source, but follow paths other than intended, or it may be from a source other than the intended source. This light will often set a ...
References
Notes
Bibliography
*Smith, Warren J., ''Modern Lens Design'', McGraw-Hill, Inc., 1992,
*Kingslake, Rudolph, ''Lens Design Fundamentals'', Academic Press, 1978
*Shannon, Robert R., ''The Art and Science of Optical Design'', Cambridge University Press, 1997.
External links
The GNU Optical design and simulation library
{{Design
Geometrical optics
Glass chemistry
Glass engineering and science
Lenses
Physical optics