Paper
7 January 2015 Field proven technologies for fabrication of high-precision aspheric and freeform optical surfaces
Jean Pierre Lormeau, Chris Supranowitz, Paul Dumas, Tobias Nitzsche, Rich Jenkins
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 9442, Optics and Measurement Conference 2014; 944203 (2015) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2176586
Event: Optics and Measurement Conference 2014, 2014, Liberec, Czech Republic
Abstract

The subaperture and conformal nature of the MRF® polishing tool has proven its unmatched production capability and efficiency for more than a decade at leading optics manufacturers worldwide. The introduction of the third generation of manufacturing systems combined with newly developed MRF fluids pushes the limits of the technology to extend its benefits to very low roughness surfaces and high-precision freeform surfaces. In this article, after reviewing the benefits of the new platforms, two specific examples of very advanced capability will be discussed:

- A new super-fine MRF polishing fluid that is able to meet both form and roughness specifications for very demanding optics required for EUV applications and high power laser systems.

EUV optics, made of calcium fluoride or similar materials, ideally require sub-Angstrom surface roughness while achieving nm level form error. To achieve the above specifications, optics must undergo iterative global and local polishing processes. The new MRF polishing fluid minimizes the number of steps required if MRF® is used as the final step, or a reduction in the post-processing if a final smoothing step is performed.

- The total manufacturing process, including generation, pre-polishing, MRF and metrology, of a very steep freeform surface, highlighting the capabilities available in today’s optical fabrication companies.

Non-rotationally symmetric surfaces pose challenges to optical fabrication, mostly in the areas of polishing and metrology. The varying curvature of freeform surfaces drives the need for smaller, more “conformal” tools for polishing and reference beams for interferometry. In this paper, we present the fabrication results of a high-precision freeform surface.

© (2015) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jean Pierre Lormeau, Chris Supranowitz, Paul Dumas, Tobias Nitzsche, and Rich Jenkins "Field proven technologies for fabrication of high-precision aspheric and freeform optical surfaces ", Proc. SPIE 9442, Optics and Measurement Conference 2014, 944203 (7 January 2015); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2176586
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Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Polishing

Surface finishing

Magnetorheological finishing

Optics manufacturing

Metrology

Optical spheres

Freeform optics

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