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Microlens
 
Microlenses are small lenses, generally with diameters less than a millimetre (mm) and often as small as 10 micrometres (µm). The small sizes of the lenses means that a simple design can give good optical quality but sometimes unwanted effects arise due to optical diffraction at the small features. A typical microlens may be a single element with one plane surface and one spherical convex surface to refract the light. Because microlenses are so small, the substrate that supports them is usually thicker than the lens and this has to be taken into account in the design. More sophisticated lenses may use aspherical surfaces and others may use several layers of optical material to achieve their design performance.
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These very small lenses are made from high index optical glass. They are precision polished to very high tolerances so that they can be mounted into complex imaging systems. These lenses are supplied uncoated.
Plano Convex Microlenses
Biconvex Microlenses
Plano Concave Microlenses
Biconcave Microlenses
microlenses
 

General Specifications

Diameter: +0, -0.1mm
Surface accuracy: λ/2 @633nm or better
Thickness: ±0.2mm
Centration: ±0.04mm
Surface quality:20-10
Bevel: 0.2mm typical
Material: SK2; BK7 and more
Applications:
Single microlenses are used to couple light to optical fibres.
Microlens arrays are often used to increase the light collection efficiency of CCD arrays. They collect and focus light that would have otherwise fallen on to the non-sensitive areas of the CCD. Microlens arrays are also used in some digital projectors, to focus light to the active areas of the LCD used to generate the image to be projected.
Combinations of microlens arrays have been designed that have novel imaging properties, such as the ability to form an image at unit magnification and not inverted as is the case with conventional lenses. Microlens arrays have been developed to form compact imaging devices for applications such as photocopiers and mobile-phone cameras.
Another application is in 3D imaging and displays.