OPTICAL ELEMENTS WITH TOROIDAL ENGAGEMENT INTERFACES AND METHOD FOR ASSEMBLING SUCH ELEMENTS
20190011609 · 2019-01-10
Inventors
Cpc classification
G02B3/0075
PHYSICS
G02B3/0031
PHYSICS
B29D11/00019
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G02B3/0062
PHYSICS
G02B3/04
PHYSICS
International classification
B29D11/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
Optical assemblies include optical elements aligned through the engagement of toroidal protrusions and toroidal grooves. A plurality of optical elements each having an inner portion having and a surrounding outer portion form a stack. Pairs of contiguous optical elements along the stack engage each other at an engagement interface including a toroidal protrusion on the outer portion of one optical element and a toroidal groove on the outer portion of the other optical element. The toroidal protrusions and groove have a symmetry of revolution about an optical axis of the inner portion of the corresponding optical element, with toroidal protrusions and toroidal grooves engaging each other having a same radius of revolution. Similar toroidal engagement of an optical element is with an annular support.
Claims
1. An optical assembly, comprising: a plurality of optical elements, each optical element comprising an inner portion having an optical axis and an outer portion surrounding the inner portion, said optical elements forming a stack, the optical axes of the inner portions of said optical elements being aligned along said stack, at least one pair of contiguous optical elements along said stack engaging each other at an engagement interface, the engagement interface comprising: a toroidal protrusion extending along the outer portion of one of the contiguous optical elements of said pair, the toroidal protrusion having a symmetry of revolution about the optical axis of the inner portion of the corresponding optical element; and a toroidal groove extending in the outer portion of the other one of the contiguous optical elements of said pair, the toroidal groove having a symmetry of revolution about the optical axis of the inner portion of the corresponding optical element; wherein the toroidal protrusion and the toroidal groove have a same radius of revolution and engage each other.
2. The optical assembly according to claim 1, wherein each optical element is one of a lens, a baffle, an iris, a Diffractive Optical Element or a pinhole.
3. The optical assembly according to claim 1, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the inner portion, the outer portion and any toroidal protrusion thereon or toroidal groove therein are molded as a monolithic element.
4. The optical assembly according to claim 3, wherein said monolithic element is made of a plastic material.
5. The optical assembly according to claim 1, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the outer portion and the inner portion are fabricated separately and assembled through Insert Precision Molding.
6. The optical assembly according to claim 1, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the inner portion has a cylindrical profile.
7. The optical assembly according to claim 1, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the outer portion is flange shaped.
8. The optical assembly according to claim 1, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the toroidal protrusion has a truncated circular cross-section.
9. The optical assembly according to claim 1, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the toroidal protrusion has a curved non-circular cross-section.
10. The optical assembly according to claim 1, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the toroidal groove has a V-shaped cross-section.
11. The optical assembly according to claim 1, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the toroidal groove has a curve-shaped cross-section.
12. The optical assembly according to claim 1, in combination with an annular support having a support surface engaging a bottommost optical element of said stack.
13. The combination of claim 12, wherein the support surface of the annular support comprises one of a toroidal protrusion or a toroidal groove engaging a matching toroidal groove or toroidal protrusion provided underneath a bottom surface of the outer portion of the bottommost optical element of said stack.
14. An optical assembly, comprising: an optical element comprising an inner portion having an optical axis and an outer portion surrounding the inner portion; an annular support having a support surface engaging the optical element at an engagement interface, the engagement interface comprising a toroidal protrusion and a toroidal groove engaging each other, the toroidal protrusion and the toroidal groove each extending on a corresponding one of the outer portion of the optical element and the support surface of the annular support, the toroidal protrusion and the toroidal groove each having a symmetry of revolution about the optical axis of the inner portion of the optical element and having a same radius of revolution.
15. The optical assembly according to claim 14, wherein the optical element is one of a lens, a baffle, an iris, a Diffractive Optical Element or a pinhole.
16. The optical assembly according to claim 14, wherein the inner portion and the outer portion of the optical element and the toroidal protrusion thereon or the toroidal groove therein are molded as a monolithic element.
17. The optical assembly according to claim 16, wherein said monolithic element is made of a plastic material.
18. The optical assembly according to claim 14, wherein the outer portion and the inner portion of the optical element are fabricated separately and assembled through Insert Precision Molding.
19. The optical assembly according to claim 14, wherein the toroidal protrusion has a truncated circular cross-section.
20. The optical assembly according to claim 14, wherein the toroidal protrusion has a curved non-circular cross-section.
21. The optical assembly according to claim 14, wherein the toroidal groove has a V-shaped cross-section.
22. The optical assembly according to claim 14, wherein the toroidal groove has a curve-shaped cross-section.
23. An optical element, comprising: an inner portion configured for light interaction and defining an optical axis; and an outer portion surrounding the inner portion, the outer portion having opposite first and second surfaces, at least one of the first and second surfaces being provided with one of: a toroidal protrusion having a symmetry of revolution about the optical axis of the inner portion; and a toroidal groove having a symmetry of revolution about the optical axis of the inner portion.
24. The optical element according to claim 23, wherein the first surface is provided with said toroidal protrusion or said toroidal groove and the second surface is free of any toroidal protrusion or toroidal groove.
25. The optical element according to claim 23, wherein the first surface is provided with said toroidal protrusion and the second surface is provided with said toroidal groove.
26. The optical element according to claim 23, wherein the first and the second surfaces are both provided with a corresponding toroidal protrusion.
27. The optical element according to claim 23, wherein the first and the second surfaces are both provided with a corresponding toroidal groove.
28. The optical element according to claim 23, wherein the inner portion and the outer portion are molded as a monolithic element.
29. The optical element according to claim 28, wherein said monolithic element is made of a plastic material.
30. The optical element according to claim 23, wherein the outer portion and the inner portion are fabricated separately and assembled through Insert Precision Molding.
31. The optical element according to claim 23, wherein the toroidal protrusion has a truncated circular cross-section.
32. The optical element according to claim 23, wherein the toroidal protrusion has a curved non-circular cross-section.
33. The optical element according to claim 23, wherein the toroidal groove has a V-shaped cross-section.
34. The optical element according to claim 23, wherein the toroidal groove has a curve-shaped cross-section.
35. A method of making an optical assembly, comprising: a. providing a plurality of optical elements, each comprising an inner portion having an optical axis and an outer portion surrounding the inner portion, the outer portion having opposite first and second surfaces, at least one of the first and second surfaces being provided with one of a toroidal protrusion or a toroidal groove having a symmetry of revolution about the optical axis of the inner portion; and b. stacking the optical elements with their optical axes aligned, contiguous optical elements along said stack engaging each other at an engagement interface comprising one of said toroidal protrusions and one of said toroidal grooves engaging each other, the toroidal protrusion and toroidal groove of each of said engagement interfaces having a same radius of revolution.
36. The method according to claim 35, wherein each optical element is one of a lens, a baffle, an iris, a Diffractive Optical Element or a pinhole.
37. The method according to claim 35, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the inner portion, the outer portion and any toroidal protrusion thereon or toroidal groove therein are molded as a monolithic element.
38. The method according to claim 37, wherein said monolithic element is made of a plastic material.
39. The method according to claim 35, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the outer portion and the inner portion are fabricated separately and assembled through Insert Precision Molding.
40. The method according to claim 35, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the inner portion has a cylindrical profile.
41. The method according to claim 35, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the outer portion is flange shaped.
42. The method according to claim 35, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the toroidal protrusion has a truncated circular cross-section.
43. The method according to claim 35, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the toroidal protrusion has a curved non-circular cross-section.
44. The method according to claim 35, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the toroidal groove has a V-shaped cross-section.
45. The method according to claim 35, wherein, for at least one of said optical elements, the toroidal groove has a curve-shaped cross-section.
46. The method according to claim 35, wherein the step of stacking the optical elements comprises mounting said stack on an annular support having a support surface engaging a bottommost optical element of said stack.
47. The method according to claim 46, wherein the support surface of the annular support comprises one of a toroidal protrusion or a toroidal groove engaging a matching toroidal groove or toroidal protrusion provided underneath a bottom surface of the outer portion of the bottommost optical element of said stack.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0060] The present description relates to optical assemblies including stacked optical elements.
[0061] It will be readily understood that the optical elements of such optical assemblies may act on incident light in various ways, for example to direct or change the direction of a light beam, focus, expand, collimate, filter, or otherwise transform or affect light. In some embodiments, at least some of the optical elements of the optical assemblies described herein are made of plastic or any other suitable material. Advantageously, the optical elements may be fabricated through conventional molding techniques according to a predetermined shape and profile providing both optical and mechanical properties.
[0062] Alternatively, at least some of the optical elements may be fabricated through other techniques such as for example using the Insert Precision Glass Molding (IPGM) technique, through which an insert provided with a suitable mechanical interface may be assembled with a glass or plastic lens during fabrication (see for example A. Symmons and B. Auz, Design Considerations and Manufacturing Limitations of Insert Precision Glass Molding (IPGM), Proc. of the SPIE vol. 8489, 84890H, (2012)).
[0063] The optical elements may be embodied by molded lenses. Examples of lens types which may embody at least some of the optical elements include plano-convex, biconvex, plano-concave, biconcave, and positive or negative meniscus lenses. Cemented doublet or triplet lenses of the types listed above can also be considered. Some of the optical elements may also be embodied by diffractive lenses, mirrors, baffles, irises, diffractive optical elements (DOEs), pinholes, or the like. The optical elements may have spherical or aspherical surfaces and may have an off-axis profile.It will be readily understood that the optical elements that form a given optical assembly may be of different types without departing from the scope of the present invention.
[0064] Examples of applications of the present optical assemblies include miniature lenses provided in camera objectives for phones or other mobile devices. In other examples, such optical assemblies may be used for imaging, scanning, light detection or general illumination. In some variants, optical assemblies such as presented herein may be used in medical diagnosis and treatment devices, vision and inspection, displays and videoconferencing, barcode scanning, identification and security, etc.
[0065] Referring to
[0066] In the illustrated example of
[0067] The optical elements 22 of the optical assembly 20 are stacked with their respective optical axes A mutually aligned along the stack 34, as shown in
[0068] Still referring to
[0069] The engagement interface 28i includes a toroidal protrusion 30 extending along the outer portion 26 of one of the two contiguous optical elements 22a and 22b. By way of example, for the present engagement interface 28i the toroidal protrusion extends on the top surface of the outer portion 26 of the second lens 22b. The toroidal protrusion 30 has a symmetry of revolution about the optical axis A of the corresponding optical element 22b which, incidentally, coincides with the optical axes of the other optical elements 22a, 22c and 22d and defines the center axis of symmetry of the stack 34.
[0070] Mathematically, a toroid is understood as a surface of revolution about a center axis, here the optical axis A, where the surface does not intersect the center axis. As is well understood by those skilled in the art, the expression surface of revolution is commonly used in mathematics to designate a surface in the Euclidean space which corresponds to the rotation of a curve, referred to as the generatrix, around an axis of rotation. Despite its connotation to movement, this expression refers to a static surface and is not associated with the physical rotation of an object. A donut shape is an example of a toroid where the generatrix curve is a full circle, the resulting solid being called a torus in mathematical terminology. It will be readily understood that in the context of the present description, the reference to toroidal elements is not meant to be limited to torus shapes and may designate structures generated from generatrix curves other than circular.
[0071] The engagement interface 28i further includes a toroidal groove 32 extending in the outer portion 26 of the other one of the two optical elements, in this case the bottom surface of the first optical element 22a. The toroidal groove 32 also has a symmetry of revolution about the optical axis A.
[0072] The toroidal protrusion 30 and the toroidal groove 32 have a same radius of revolution. The radius of revolution may be understood as the distance between the optical axis A and the center of the shape defining the surface of revolution of the toroidal protrusion 30 and of the toroidal groove 32. The toroidal protrusion 30 and the toroidal groove 32 engage each other, that is, the toroidal protrusion 30 is inserted in the toroidal groove 32 and their respective walls are in contact with each other.
[0073] The radii of revolution of engaging toroidal protrusions and toroidal grooves may be considered the same if they have a same nominal value. The nominal value of the radius of revolution refers to its theoretically value, or the target manufacturing value specified on the manufacturing drawing of the corresponding optical element. As is known in the art, nominal dimensions can be used to describes the theoretically exact size, profile, orientation or location of a feature, and can be provided on data sheets or other documentation associated with the optical elements.
[0074] The radii of revolution of engaging toroidal protrusions and toroidal grooves may additionally or alternatively be considered the same if their exact measured values fall within the tolerance range of the same nominal value. By way of example, engaging toroidal protrusions and groove having a nominal diameter value of 3 mm and a precision tolerance of +/0.05 mm could have slightly different measured radii of revolution both falling within the range of 2.95 mm to 3.05 mm while still being considered the same by one skilled in the art. In some implementations, the radii of revolution of each pair of engaging toroidal protrusion and groove are the same within a tolerance range of +/0.02 mm. In some implementations, the radii of revolution of each pair of engaging toroidal protrusion and groove are the same within a tolerance range of +/0.1 mm.
[0075] In the illustrated embodiment, the toroidal protrusion 30 corresponds to a section of a torus cut along a radial plane, such that the curve of revolution is a portion of a circle, for example a half circle. It can also be said that the toroidal protrusion has a truncated circular cross-section, in the sense that this cross-section corresponds to a portion of a full circle. The toroidal groove of this embodiment has a V-shaped cross-section, that is, the generatrix curve of the surface of revolution is a V shape. The V-shaped toroidal groove can also be called a V-groove. In some implementations, the toroidal groove may have a flat or rounded bottom section instead of a pointed through, as best illustrated in
[0076] It will be readily understood that in other embodiments the toroidal protrusion 30 and the toroidal groove 32 may have cross-sectional shapes differing from the one discussed above or illustrated in the figures without departing from the scope of the present description. By way of example, the toroidal protrusion 30 may be a surface of revolution based on an ovoid or other curved non-circular generatrix. Preferably, the toroidal protrusion 30 has rounded edges where it engages the toroidal groove 32, although in some variants it may nonetheless define sharp edges. Also by way of example, the walls of the toroidal groove 32 may be straight as in the V-groove embodiment described herein, or define a curved surface in other variants, thereby having a curved-shaped cross-section.
[0077] Referring to
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[0079] In some implementations, optical elements having suitable combinations of protrusions and grooves such as explained above may be provided unassembled for later assembly, for example as single component or jointly as a kit for integration into an optical assembly. Each optical element may be configured to have: [0080] a first surface provided with a toroidal protrusion and the second surface free of any toroidal protrusion or toroidal groove; [0081] a first surface provided with a toroidal groove and the second surface free of any toroidal protrusion or toroidal groove; [0082] a first surface provided with a toroidal protrusion and the second surface provided with a toroidal groove; [0083] a first and a second surface both provided with a corresponding toroidal protrusion; or [0084] a first and a second surface both provided with a corresponding toroidal groove.
[0085] It will be readily understood that the references to first and second surfaces in this context are made for differentiation purposes only and are not meant to connotes a preferred orientation of theses surface within an optical assembly.
[0086] Referring to
[0087] The annular support 36 may be embodied by any structure apt to engage the outer portion 26 of the bottommost optical element 22d while providing a light path for light transmitted and/or directed by its inner portion 24. In some embodiments the annular support may be embodied by a ledge, flange, projection, shoulder or other types of structure providing the desired support. The annular support may be integral to a barrel or other structure typically receiving a stack of lenses in an aligned relationship. In some variants, the annular support is continuous around the bottommost optical elements, whereas in other variants it may includes gaps along its periphery.
[0088] The example of
[0089] It will be readily understood that the optical assembly may be mounted or otherwise provided in a housing, a barrel or in other structure, depending on the intended context of use of the assembly and the requirements to be met. In some embodiments, the annular support of the embodiments of
[0090] In accordance with another aspect, there is provided a method of making optical assemblies comprising a plurality of optical elements.
[0091] The method includes providing a plurality of optical elements each having an inner portion having an optical axis and an outer portion surrounding the inner portion, the outer portion having opposite first and second surfaces, at least one of the first and second surfaces being provided with one of a toroidal protrusion or a toroidal groove having a symmetry of revolution about the optical axis of the inner portion. This may be done in a single molding step as explained above, using the agility of molding techniques to shape the optical element according to desired structural and optical properties to provide both mechanical and optical functionalities. The manufacturing of the optical elements may also involve Insert Precision molding techniques such as the aforementioned IPGM technique, or the like.
[0092] The method further involves stacking the optical elements with their optical axes aligned and the toroidal protrusion and toroidal groove of contiguous ones of the optical elements engaging each other and defining an engagement interface. The toroidal protrusion and the toroidal groove at each engagement interface having a same radius of revolution, as explained above. It will be readily understood that the opposite surfaces of the outer portion of each optical element may be provided with various combinations of toroidal protrusions and grooves in accordance with the desired configuration of the stack, so that each engagement interface between contiguous optical element has matching protrusion and groove. The radii of revolution of the toroidal protrusions and grooves located at different interfaces may be different. However, for ease of manufacturing, in one implementation all the protrusions and grooves of the optical assembly may have the same radius of revolution.
[0093] Advantageously, embodiments of the engagement interface described above may provide a better mounting precision than prior art techniques since the nominal configuration (i.e. excluding fabrication errors) results in a theoretically perfect alignment. Indeed, in prior art approaches, such as for example the securing of lenses in barrels using retaining rings, a minimal clearance or play between the lenses and other components is required so that the lenses can be assembled without mechanical interference. Typically, the present approach reduces the statistical centering error by a factor of 2 for a same manufacturing tolerance range, as the manufacturing tolerance can be assigned on either side of the nominal value, as illustrated in
[0094] The impact of the manufacturing tolerance on the centering of the lenses using the approach described herein was studied in detail. A particularity of engagement interfaces such as described above is that a mismatch of the radii of the toroidal protrusion and of the toroidal groove results in a tilt error in the relative position of the assembled lenses, in addition to a centering error. However, the tilt error is of the same order as the centering error, unlike traditional centering methods where a small tilt is typically associated with a larger decentering. This can be visualized on
[0095] In summary, optical assemblies as described herein may be assembled with improved performances when compared to more traditional assemblies involving a radial play between the components. It has been found that the present approach can cut by a factor of 2 the statistical decentering of optical elements compared to prior art methods, which opens the door at obtaining equivalent optical performances at lower cost. Advantageously, the mutual alignment of the optical elements does not require specialty tools.
[0096] Of course, numerous modifications could be made to the embodiments above without departing from the scope of the invention.