The present invention relates generally to gradient refractive index (GRIN) lenses and optical structures. More specifically, it relates to GRIN optical structures having low dispersion.
Gradient refractive index (GRIN) optical structures are composed of an optical material whose index of refraction, n, varies along a spatial gradient in the axial and/or radial directions of the lens. They have many useful applications such as making compact lenses with flat surfaces. However, for various reasons it has proven difficult and expensive to make GRIN lenses that overcome problems due to optical dispersion.
There are several known techniques for fabricating GRIN lenses. One approach is to press films of widely varying refractive indices together into a lens using a mold. Proposals exist for making low dispersion GRIN lenses in this manner, e.g., as taught in U.S. Pat. No. 5,689,374. This process, however, is expensive to develop.
A second approach for fabricating GRIN lenses is to infuse glass with ions at varying density. This approach has reached commercial production, but is effectively limited to small radially symmetric lenses by the depth to which ions will diffuse into glass, and has also failed to solve the optical dispersion problem.
A third approach for fabricating GRIN lenses is to use 3D printing technology with inks composed of appropriately matched polymer and nanoparticle technology. Each droplet can deliver a distinct refractive index depending on the mix of nanoparticles and polymer material in the droplet. Therefore this technology allows 3D creation of GRIN optical elements of arbitrary shape. Producing low dispersion lenses using this approach, however, remains a challenge.
As with conventional lenses, a challenge in the design of GRIN optical lenses is correcting for chromatic aberration resulting from dispersion, i.e., the variability of the index of refraction with respect to wavelength. In a conventional glass lens, for example, the dispersion of the glass causes red and blue light to be focused at different points.
The amount of dispersion of a homogenous lens material is often quantified by the Abbe number,
V
d=(nyellow−1)/(nblue−nred)
where nyellow is the index of refraction of the lens material at a 587.56 nm wavelength, nblue is the index of refraction of the lens material at a 486.13 nm wavelength, and nred is the index of refraction of the lens material at a 656.27 nm wavelength. Red, yellow, and blue are used here for convenience and convention. In the near infrared (NIR) portion of the electromagnetic spectrum a different set of low, high, and mid value wavelengths would be chosen.
When nred and nblue are nearly equal, the Abbe number Vd becomes large, an indication that the optical dispersion is small. Since the two numbers are equivalent (and because the transition from one to the other is usually smooth, meaning the nyellow will be in between) the lens will bend the colors of the spectrum the same amount, leading to a small dispersion. Vd above 100 is considered quite good, and above 500 adequate for high quality optics.
GRIN lenses also suffer from chromatic aberration for the same reasons as conventional homogeneous lenses. Correcting for dispersion effects in a GRIN lens, however, is far more complicated due to the spatial gradient of the index of refraction. Specifically, because of the wavelength dependence of the index of refraction, the total change in the index of refraction along the spatial gradient may be wavelength dependent as well. In other words, the difference in index of refraction between the higher index material and the lower index material may vary across the spectrum in a GRIN lens, resulting in more complicated chromatic aberration effects than in a homogeneous lens.
For GRIN materials, research at facilities such as the labs of Dr. Duncan T. Moore at the University of Rochester, in papers such as the doctoral thesis “Integration of the Design and Manufacture of Gradient-Index Optical Systems” by Julie Lynn Bentley in 1995, has shown that it convenient to define a gradient-index Abbe number, Vgrin, in terms of the total change in the refractive index across the spatial gradient of the lens at the yellow, blue, and red wavelengths as
V
grin(Δnyellow)/(Δnblue−Δnred)
where Δnyellow is the total change in index of refraction across the spatial gradient of the lens at a 587.56 nm wavelength, Δnblue is the total change in index of refraction across the spatial gradient of the lens at a 486.13 nm wavelength, and Δnred is the total change in index of refraction across the spatial gradient of the lens at a 656.27 nm wavelength. When Δnred and Δnblue are nearly equal, the magnitude of this GRIN Abbe number Vgrin becomes large, which indicates that the spatial gradient of the GRIN lens has small wavelength dependence (see D T Moore, et al, “Model for the chromatic properties of gradient-index glass”, Applied Optics, Vol. 24, No. 24, 15 December 1985). As with Vd, Vgrin magnitudes above 100 are considered quite good, and above 500 adequate for high quality optics. However, it remains an outstanding challenge to design and inexpensively manufacture a GRIN lens that has materials of different refractive indices arranged in the proper geometry to focus light without focal length variations (aberrations) over the light spectra of interest.
In one aspect, the present invention provides GRIN optical structures composed of nanocrystals as a dopant to a polymer matrix to realize magnitudes for Vgrin larger than 100 for a predetermined wavelength range, and hence nearly uniform focal lengths in lenses using GRIN materials regardless of the wavelength of light in the range. By careful selection of such materials, Vgrin magnitudes higher than 500 or even 1000 can be obtained. GRIN structures can also be intentionally designed with very low Vgrin magnitudes, e.g., below 10. The nanocrystal dopants may be of a single type or a mixture of two types of nanocrystals. This latter method can be used for any host polymer in which nanocrystals can be chemically dispersed. The host polymer may also be a mixture of polymers.
When designing a GRIN lens, chromatic aberration (i.e., different focal lengths at different wavelengths) is smaller when the total change in index of refraction Δnred is closer to the total change in index of refraction Δnblue. Embodiments of the present invention provide for the use of nanocrystals as a dopant to a polymer matrix to satisfy this desired constraint. The nanocrystal-doped polymer material is also suitable for inexpensive GRIN lens fabrication using 3D printing technology.
Doping of a polymer matrix with a nanocrystal will alter the index of refraction of the polymer matrix. The nanocrystal dopant particles, however, preferably do not create scattering at the wavelengths of interest. Thus, each nanocrystal itself is preferably sufficiently small (i.e., less than 50 nm for visible spectrum GRIN optics, or less than 100 nm for IR spectrum GRIN optics) that it does not induce Mie or Rayleigh scattering, essentially rendering the nanomaterial “invisible” at the wavelengths of interest. Examples of suitable materials for the nanocrystals are ZnS, ZrO2, ZnO, BeO, AlN, TiO2, SiO2, SiO2 hollow nanospheres, and combinations of these materials with shells of ZrO2 and ZnO. The coefficient of extinction, combining the absorbance and reflection, of the nanocrystal material is low enough (preferably below 10%, more preferably below 1%) for the application and spectrum in which the optical device is to be employed.
The nanocrystals are first coated with a ligand material (such as acrylic acid, phosphonic acid, or silane) which provides chemical compatibility with the optical polymer and chemical dispersion of the nanoparticles for optical clarity. The ligands are selected to covalently bind to the surface of the nanocrystal with an “anchor”, repel each other with a “buoy” for good dispersion (preventing aggregation and light scattering), and bond covalently to the monomer so that good dispersion is maintained during polymerization.
The functionalized nanocrystals are then blended with the monomeric form of an optical polymer material. Examples of suitable polymer matrix materials are di(ethylene glycol) diacrylate, neopentyl glycol diacrylate, hexanediol diacrylate, bisphenol a novolak epoxy resin (SU8), 2-Hydroxyethylmethacrylate (HEMA), polyacrylate, polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), styrene, and poly[(2,3,4,4,5,5 -hexafluorotetrahydro furan-2,3 -diyl)(1,1,2,2-tetrafluoro ethylene)] (CYTOP)). The monomers as a class are UV crosslinkable with minimal shrink (20% or less is desirable to minimize the strain and subsequent deformation of the optical structure), clear (i.e., less than 10% haze and extinction combined), low viscosity in the monomer form (i.e., less than 20 cPoise so that it can be inkjet printed), and offer covalent (and, preferably, anionic as well) bonding sites for the ligands.
The blend of the monomeric polymer and functionalized nanocrystals, once deposited into the form of an optical device by various 3D printing processes (such as digital drop on demand inkjet, continuous flow inkjet, screen printing, lithographic printing, tampo printing, etc) is then polymerized into transparent solids through UV or thermal curing, though UV is preferred due to speed and reduced or eliminated material shrinkage. Experience shows that the cured monomer, now a polymer, will have a somewhat (<5%) lower index of refraction than the liquid monomer. 2D and 3D GRIN optical components designed using principles of GRIN optics well known in the art are fabricated by standard drop-on-demand inkjet printing or by other printing techniques known in the art (such as screen printing, tampo printing, aerosol jet printing, and laser cure printing).
For example,
Similarly,
Various different nanocrystals and polymers may be used according to the principles of the present invention in order to produce GRIN optical structures whose total gradient Δn is substantially wavelength independent over the range of wavelengths for which the structure is designed to operate. Several illustrative examples are described below.
For Polyacrylate, nred=1.4995, nyellow=1.4942, and nblue=1.4917. For BeO, nred=1.7239, nyellow=1.7186, and nblue=1.7162. Thus for a Polyacrylate matrix doped with BeO the maximum Δnred=0.2244, Δnyellow=0.2244, Δnblue=0.2245, and thus Vgrin=−2560.
For Bisphenol A Novolak Epoxy Resin (SU8), nred=1.5994, nyellow=1.5849, and nblue=1.5782. For AlN, nred=2.1704, nyellow=2.1543, and nblue=2.1476. Thus for an SU8 matrix doped with AlN the maximum Anred=0.5710, Δnyellow=0.5694, Δnblue=0.5694, and thus Vgrin=375.
For Bisphenol A Novolak Epoxy Resin (SU8), nred=1.5994, nyellow=1.5849, and nblue=1.5782. For ZrO2, nred=2.2272, nyellow=2.2148, and nblue=2.2034. Thus for an SU8 matrix doped with ZrO2 the maximum Δnred=0.6278, Δnyellow=0.6299, Δnblue=0.6253, and thus Vgrin=248.
For Polyacrylate, nred=1.4995, nyellow=1.4942, and nblue=1.4917. For wurtzite w-AlN, nred=2.1730, nyellow=2.1658, and nblue=2.1659. Thus for a Polyacrylate matrix doped with wurtzite w-AlN the maximum Δnred=0.6735, Δnyellow=0.6717, Δnblue=0.6742, and thus Vgrin=−962.
These examples demonstrate the degree to which the dispersion can be controlled with careful material selection.
Another way to accomplish a high Vgrin is by combining two (or more) types of nanocrystals when doping the polymer. The nanocrystal's relative contribution to the change in refractive index will depend on the percentage of the total employed in the polymer matrix. That is, for the nanocrystals nblue=X*nblue+Y*nblue for the percentage of nanoparticles X and Y employed, respectively.
For Bisphenol A Novolak Epoxy Resin (SU8), nred=1.5994, nyellow=1.5849, and nblue=1.5782. For ZrO2, nred=2.2272, nyellow=2.2148, and nblue=2.2034. For MgO, nred=1.7471, nyellow=1.7375, and nblue=1.7334. For a mixture of 80% ZrO2 and 20% MgO nanocrystals nred=2.1312, nyellow=2.1194, and nblue=2.1094. Thus for an SU8 matrix doped with a mixture of 80% ZrO2 and 20% MgO nanocrystals the maximum Anred=0.5318, Δnyellow=0.5345, Δnblue=0.5312, and thus Vgrin=992.
SiO2 Hollow Nanospheres (66% air, 33% SiO2) in SU8, combined with 1.8 vol % TiO2 in SU8.
For Bisphenol A Novolak Epoxy Resin (SU8), nred=1.5994, nyellow=1.5849, and nblue=1.5782. For SiGe, nred=3.8463, nyellow=3.9838, and nblue=4.3970. For SiO2 Hollow Nanospheres, nred=1.1521, nyellow=1.1529, and nblue=1.1544. For TiO2, nred=2.8537, nyellow=2.9124, and nblue=3.0639. For 1 vol % SiGe with 10 vol % SiO2 Hollow Nanospheres in SU8, nred=1.5582, nyellow=1.5657, and nblue=1.5829. For 1.8 vol % TiO2 in SU8, nred=1.6011, nyellow=1.6088, and nblue=1.6258. Thus for a pair of inks, SU8 doped with 1 vol % SiGe and 10 vol % SiO2 Hollow Nanospheres, and SU8 doped with 1.8 vol % TiO2, Δnred=−0.0429, Δnyellow=−0.0431, Δnblue=−0.0429, and thus Vgrin=13,213.74.
For PMMA, nred=1.4880, nyellow=1.4914, and nblue=1.4973. For TiO2/ZrO2, nred=2.6370, nyellow=2.6799, and nblue=2.7850. For ZrO2, nred=2.2034, nyellow=2.2148, and nblue=2.2272. For 1 vol % TiO2/ZrO2 in PMMA, nred=1.4995, nyellow=1.5033, and nblue=1.5102. For 10 vol % ZrO2 in PMMA, nred=1.5595, nyellow=1.5637, and nblue=1.5703. Thus for a pair of inks, PMMA doped with 1 vol % TiO2/ZrO2 and PMMA doped with 10 vol % ZrO2, Δnred=−0.0601, Δnyellow=−0.0605, Δnblue=−0.0601, and thus Vgrin=1,091.83.
For PMMA, nred=1.4880, nyellow=1.4914, and nblue=1.4973. For BeO, nred=1.7162, nyellow=1.7186, and nblue=1.7239. For SiO2 Hollow Nanospheres, nred=1.1521, nyellow=1.1529, and nblue=1.1544. For 20 vol % BeO in PMMA, nred=1.5336, nyellow=1.5368, and nblue=1.5426. For 6 vol % SiO2 Hollow Nanospheres in PMMA, nred=1.4678, nyellow=1.4711, and nblue=1.4767. Thus for a pair of inks, PMMA doped with 20 vol % BeO and PMMA doped with 3 vol % SiO2 Hollow Nanospheres, Δnred=0.0658, Δnyellow=0.0658, Δnblue=0.0659, and thus Vgrin=668.25.
This latter method, mixing nanocrystals to tune the change in refractive index to match that of the host polymer, can be repeated for any host polymer in which nanocrystals can be chemically dispersed.
If a great degree of dispersion is desired (Vgrin<10) for a particular application, such as prismatic dispersal of spectra, diffractive optics, etc., the following technique can also be used.
For PMMA, nred=1.4880, nyellow=1.4914, and nblue=1.4973. For SiO2 Hollow Nanospheres, nred=1.1521, nyellow=1.1529, and nblue=1.1544. For TiO2, nred=2.8537, nyellow=2.9124, and nblue=3.0639. For 5 vol % TiO2 in PMMA, nred=1.5562, nyellow=1.5625, and nblue=1.5756. For 5 vol % SiO2 Hollow Nanospheres in PMMA, nred=1.4712, nyellow=1.4745, and nblue=1.4802. Thus for a pair of inks, PMMA doped with 5 vol % SiO2 Hollow Nanospheres, and PMMA doped with 5 vol % TiO2, Δnred=0.0955, Δnyellow0.0880, Δnblue=0.0851, and thus Vgrin=8.46.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US14/36707 | 5/2/2014 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61818534 | May 2013 | US | |
61818544 | May 2013 | US | |
61818548 | May 2013 | US | |
61819104 | May 2013 | US |