The invention relates to moulds for use in production of components having external (solid) corner-cubes and to methods of making such moulds. It also relates to components, for example optical components, having internal (hollow) corner cubes and to methods of making such components.
To clarify nomenclature, in this specification an “internal corner cube”, or “hollow corner-cube”, means an object like that indicated generally by 10 in
Certain optical components are required to have three flat, planar surfaces which are substantially mutually perpendicular to a high tolerance and form a solid or hollow corner-cube. For example, a solid glass corner-cube reflector is required to have three such surfaces forming a solid corner-cube, wherein adjacent surfaces intersect at 90° to a tolerance of four arc seconds or better. The corner-cube in such a reflector may be an external, or solid, corner cube, in which case in use one or more of the flat, planar surfaces retro-reflects light back into the body of the reflector. Alternatively, the corner-cube may be an internal, or hollow corner-cube, whereby light from free-space is retro-reflected back into free space. In either case the surfaces may be coated to increase reflectivity.
Components having solid or hollow corner-cubes are generally produced by a lengthy cutting and polishing process which results in a high unit cost both for the components hence also for systems and devices into which they are incorporated. Even after careful polishing, bevels exist between pairs of adjacent flat, planar surfaces; these degrade performance in certain applications, for example when the component is used as a corner-cube reflector. The fabrication of a component having an internal (hollow) corner-cube (for example for use as a hollow corner-cube reflector) is especially difficult due to the inaccessibility of surfaces to be polished.
Components having solid corner-cubes may be produced by moulding (e.g. U.S. Pat. Nos. 1,591,572 and 3,417,959) however the known moulds involve production of mould elements also having three mutually perpendicular surfaces forming a solid corner-cube. Thus, whilst allowing mass production of components having solid corner-cubes, production of such mould elements involves the same difficulties as making a finished component having a solid corner-cube by cutting and polishing techniques.
A first aspect of the invention provides a mould comprising first, second and third substantially cuboid mould elements each having a pair of adjacent substantially rectangular faces which are flat and planar and which intersect at an angle of substantially 270°, the mould elements being arranged such that first and second such faces of a first mould element are in contact with a flat, planar face of a second mould element and a flat, planar face of a third mould element respectively, whereby said faces of the mould elements are moulding surfaces and form two internal corner-cubes having their apexes co-located.
A mould of the invention has the advantage that it may be used to produce a component having an accurate solid corner-cube, but is composed of mould elements each of which is required to have only two adjacent surfaces which are flat and planar and which intersect at 270°, instead of three such surfaces. Production of the mould is therefore considerably simplified with respect to the prior art moulds, but without sacrificing accuracy in the corner-cube of a moulded component made using the mould.
To further simplify production of the mould elements, preferably these elements are substantially identical cuboids, each rectangular cuboid face having a length dimension substantially twice its width dimension.
When the mould elements are placed in contact, dust trapped between contacting surfaces may result in misalignment of the mould elements. The effects of dust trapping may be mitigated by providing each of the flat, planar surfaces of any given mould element with a central recess, each recess being located on respective cubic half of the cuboid. By reducing the common area of contact between adjacent mould elements, the probability of dust being trapped in this area is reduced. If dust is trapped in this area, then misalignment is reduced because the dust is trapped towards the edge of the common contact area. If the mould elements are clamped together to form the mould, then the pressure exerted by one mould element on an adjacent element is increased for a given clamping force due the reduction in the common contact area; this improves the rigidity of the mould and provides for easier separation of the mould elements, should this be required.
The mould elements may be fused in contact, e.g. by application of heat and pressure. Alternatively, clamping means may be provided to clamp adjacent pairs of mould elements together to form the two internal corner-cubes. For example each pair of mould elements may be adapted to be clamped together by a nut and bolt arrangement. Preferably the bolt is made of a material having a lower coefficient of thermal expansion than that of the material of the mould elements so that when the mould is heated the mould elements remain rigidly clamped together. As an alternative, the bolt may be made of material having a higher coefficient of thermal expansion than that of the material of the mould elements, the clamping means further comprising a washer adapted to cooperate with the bolt, and the washer material having a coefficient of thermal expansion higher than that of the material of the bolt.
The mould is especially suitable for moulding glass if each of the mould elements is made of a material having a thermal conductivity of at least 10 Wm−1K−1. In general, the mould elements may be made from tungsten carbide, or silicon or silica for example. Tungsten carbide is particularly useful for moulding chalcogenide glasses because there is low adhesion between tungsten carbide and such glasses.
A second aspect of the invention provides a component, for example an optical component, comprising first, second and third substantially cuboid elements each having a pair of adjacent substantially rectangular faces which are flat and planar and which intersect at an angle of substantially 270°, the elements being arranged such that first and second such faces of a first element are in contact with a flat, planar surface of a second element and a flat, planar surface of a third element respectively, whereby said faces of the elements form two internal corner-cubes having their apexes co-located.
The component provides two accurate internal corner-cubes, but is made up from components each of which only requires a pair of adjacent faces which are flat and planar and which intersect at an angle of substantially 270°. Fabrication of the elements making up the component (and their subsequent assembly) is very much easier than fabrication of an internal corner-cube by cutting and polishing methods. Production of the elements of the component is simplified if they are substantially identical cuboids, each rectangular cuboid face having a length dimension substantially twice its width dimension.
Preferably the flat, planar surfaces of any given mould element each have a central recess, each recess being located on respective cubic half of the cuboid, for reasons discussed above.
The elements of the component may be fused in contact, for example if the elements are glass elements.
Parts of the flat, planar faces which form the internal corner-cubes may carry reflective coatings (e.g. metal or dielectric coatings) to provide or enhance reflectivity, if the component is intended for use as an internal (hollow) corner-cube reflector.
The elements could be clamped together to form the component. For example, pairs of elements could be clamped together with a nut and bolt arrangement as described above in relation to the mould of the invention.
According to a third aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of making a mould, the method comprising the steps of:
A fourth aspect of the invention provides a method of making a component, for example an optical component, by corresponding steps.
A fifth aspect of the invention provides a method of making an external corner-cube comprising the steps of introducing a charge into a mould of the invention, heating the charge to form a softened charge and stamping the softened charge into an internal corner-cube of the mould in the general direction of an apex of the mould.
For example, the charge could be a glass charge so that a glass component having an external (solid) corner-cube results. When the softened glass charge is stamped in the general direction of the apex of one of the internal (hollow) corner-cubes of the mould, a surface of optical quality may be simultaneously formed on the side of the charge remote from the corner-cube, thus producing a window allowing light to reach the corner-cube. The surface of the window may be flat or curved, for example it may have spherical curvature. Also, the stamping process may provide a window having a textured surface so that the window provides an optical function. For example, it could be textured to provided an anti-reflection function. An example of such a textured surface is a so-called moth-eye anti-reflection surface. The stamping process may also be arranged to provide a peripheral raised edge to the window, allowing the finished corner-cube to be bonded to another component.
Embodiments of the invention are described below with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
The assembled mould 80 has two internal (hollow) corner-cubes having moulding surfaces. The apexes of the internal corner-cubes are co-located. If the mould elements 82, 84, 86 have length 2a and width a, the assembled mould 80 has the form of a cube of side 2a having two smaller cubes of side a removed (thus forming the internal corner-cubes), the smaller cubes lying on a diagonal of the cube of side 2a. The mould 80 allows simultaneous moulding of two solid glass corner cubes.
Referring to
The moulds of
A monolithic glass component having two internal corner-cubes may be produced by taking three glass elements equivalent to the mould elements 52, 54, 56 of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0715632.6 | Aug 2007 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB08/02658 | 8/4/2008 | WO | 00 | 2/9/2010 |