1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a method of producing aspherical optical surfaces of optical elements, in particular for use in microlithography for producing semiconductor elements.
2. Description of the Related Art
U.S. Pat. No. 6,373,552 discloses a method of producing an aspherical surface profile on a plane-parallel plate to which a material has been applied. A thin layer is applied to the plate, the plate then being turned over and placed with the layer onto a vacuum table and sucked into place. The surface remaining free is polished flat. This produces a new surface, the plate being of a constant thickness. After releasing the plate, it is once again turned over, sucked into place again by the vacuum table and machined flat, the original aspherical profile being removed and consequently a new surface once again being created. After removal of the plate from the vacuum table, a plate of a constant thickness with the desired aspherical surface on both sides is obtained.
However, a factor contributing to the inaccuracy of this method is that short-wave and fine structures that have been produced during the machining operation on the vacuum table are transferred to the plane-parallel plate to be machined.
Furthermore, U.S. Pat. No. 3,837,125 discloses a holding device for receiving a lens blank in a machine for grinding aspherical lens surfaces. In the case of the holding device, the lens to be machined is sucked into place onto a lens holder, which has a base surface which is formed inversely in relation to the desired aspherical lens surface. The surface of the lens to be machined that is not resting on the base surface of the lens holder is ground flat. When the machined lens body is released, the lens surface assumes the desired aspherical form. Consequently, membranes that are subjected to force by actuators are used during the polishing operation.
However, this arrangement has the disadvantage that the actuators result in undesired removal of material at the edge region. The machining of the edge region of an optical surface is extremely difficult with such a membrane.
Furthermore, the production of aspherical lenses or mirror surfaces by means of a molding technique is generally known. It is critical, however, that an epoxy resin which is used for replication in a molding technique of this type remains a component part of an optical surface. The method can be used only conditionally in the production of optical surfaces with large diameters, for example in the range of 10-30 cm, since a “curling” of the epoxy resin occurs, and consequently the surfaces produced with this method are no longer usable for each precision.
The invention is based on the object of providing a quick and low-cost method which can produce axial and off-axial aspherical surfaces with high accuracy.
This object is achieved according to the invention by the optical element, wherein
The starting point for the optical machining is an optical element pre-machined for example in the form of a meniscus. The advantage of the meniscus is a minimum application of material and a minimum weight. However, the quality of the surface does not have to meet any special requirements. An aspherical form bed is first milled into a basic form with machine accuracy, i.e. a usual accuracy of commercial machines for metal machining. The optical element is then placed in the form bed in a distance over the form bed. The cavity and the distance respectively between the optical element and the form bed is filled, free from bubbles, with silicone rubber as an intermediate medium, which is advantageously in a liquid state. This intermediate medium polymerizes and, after curing, is removed together with the optical element from the basic form.
In a second machining step, the aspherical basic form, computed in advance, is milled into the form bed with machine accuracy. If the optical element is then placed together with the silicone rubber layer into the form bed and the form is evacuated, this then produces the desired system, which in the case of spherical machining produces the required asphere after release. Since the silicone rubber provides a perfect seal, there are no air losses and a very small vacuum pump is sufficient.
It may be provided in an advantageous way that the asphere contains a radius term, a coma tern and an astigmatism term.
These terms behave orthogonally, which means that they do not influence one another. The radius term, which is introduced last into the optical surface, is chosen such that there is minimal removal of material for the coma term and astigmatism term. It should also be ensured that no tensile forces occur in the basic form.
Use of the method considerably reduces the machining time and produces extremely smooth surfaces. Since the optical element has no overrun, therefore with the known production procedures, because of the machining technology a figure error is produced at the edge. This figure error would affect the test ability in a construction. According to the invention now each optical element can be interferometrically tested free from errors toward the center in the overall system, which means that the individual optical elements can be centred on a common focus.
Advantageous refinements and developments emerge from the further subclaims and the exemplary embodiment described in principle below on the basis of the drawing.
The individual method steps for producing an off-axial aspherical surface are represented in
In a first step (
In the next step (
Furthermore, in another step (
If the material parameters for the silicone rubber layer 6 are not known sufficiently accurately, a fine calibration can be performed in such a way that only the coma term is produced in a first step and the coma and the astigmatism are perfectly set in a second step. This is possible since orthogonal functions are concerned.
After the machining of the form bed 3′, the mirror 1 embedded in the silicone rubber layer 6 is then reintroduced into the basic form 2 (
Introducing the silicone rubber layer 6 achieves the effect that only the longwave deformations, for example a desired 2-wavy astigmatism or coma of the form bed 3′ are transferred to the mirror surface 7 to be machined.
Higher-wave and fine structures that have been produced in the form bed 3 during the machining operation with the CNC machine are not transferred in a negative way to the mirror surface 7 to be machined on account of the elasticity of the silicone rubber layer 6. Such structures would be produced in Particular whenever aspherical surfaces are produced by punctiform reworking. This means that a very good optical surface 7 is obtained by the procedure described despite of low surface quality or higher roughness of the form bed 3′.
The mirror 1 deformed by the vacuum is then spherically machined on its surface 7 by lapping and polishing. The spherical surface 7 is preferably produced by tools of a large surface, which means that high removal rates, no overrun and any desired edgings of the mirror 1 are possible. The radius produced can then be checked in a simple manner with a spherometer or else with a test glass.
After removing the negative pressure, the mirror surface 7 assumes the desired aspherical form and can be removed from the basic form 2 (step f, according to
Furthermore, an ion-beam etching process can be used for the fine machining of the aspherical surface 7′, whereby even greater accuracy of the aspherical mirror surface 71 is achieved.
If lenses are used instead of mirrors, the silicone rubber layer 6, which here again acts as a intermediate medium, must be removed by suitable cleaning methods.
The purpose of the silicone rubber layer 6 is to isolate the short-wave figure errors from the optical surface 7, so that the form only has to have a surface roughness accurate to within a few 0.01 mm in order to achieve a roughness in the micrometer range on the optical surface 7.
After machining of the surfaces and removal of the mirror 1 from the basic form 2, there is advantageously no warping, which is produced by bending of the surface 7 after cutting off or detaching the mirror body from the blank to the desired geometry. Furthermore, this method does not lead to a rippled surface.
Furthermore, there is a considerable advantage for the interferometric testing of the off-axial optical elements, since they can be adjusted in relation to a central reference element and undergo absolute interferometric measurement since there is no overrun.
With this method, the mirror element 1, which, if need be, is only part of a much larger overall mirror, can have axial off-axial aspherical surfaces.
It is also possible for aspherical lenses, for example for camera lenses or for spectacles, to be produced by this method.
The method makes it possible to quickly produce aspherical surfaces in optical quality, which can be examined economically and simply.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 31 390.7 | Jul 2003 | DE | national |