Fluidic Shaping of Freeform Optical Components
Mor Elgarisi, Valeri Frumkin, Omer Luria, Moran Bercovici

TL;DR
This paper introduces a rapid prototyping method for freeform optical components by shaping and solidifying liquids, enabling high-quality, customizable optical surfaces in minutes.
Contribution
It presents an analytical approach to design freeform surfaces via controlling liquid interface energy states, facilitating fast and precise manufacturing.
Findings
Successful fabrication of a 35 mm freeform optical component
Achieved sub-nanometer surface roughness within minutes
Demonstrated deterministic design of complex freeform topographies
Abstract
Freeform optical components offer significant compactization of multi-lens systems, as well as advanced manipulation of light that is not possible with traditional systems. However, their fabrication relies on machining processes that are complex, time-consuming, and incompatible with rapid prototyping. This work presents the ability to shape liquid volumes and solidify them into desired freeform components, enabling rapid freeform prototyping with high surface quality. The method is based on controlling the minimum energy state of the interface between a curable optical liquid and an immersion liquid, by dictating a geometrical boundary constraint. The boundary shape is modeled as a cylinder whose arbitrary height is expressed as a Fourier series, allowing for an analytical solution of the resulting freeform surface as a sum of Fourier-Bessel functions. Each of these functions…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Surface Polishing Techniques · Advanced Numerical Analysis Techniques · Adhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions
