What's so ingenious in diffractive lenses?
To my naive eye they seem to be just Fresnel lenses with smaller features.
What makes it so magic and why all the fuss about it?
|
What's so ingenious in diffractive lenses? To my naive eye they seem to be just Fresnel lenses with smaller features. What makes it so magic and why all the fuss about it? |
|||||||||||||
|
|
Diffractive optics aren't magic, they are simply another tool that can be used in designing an optical system. They can do things that refractive optics cannot, and they are often lighter and smaller than an equivalent refractive optic. It is important to keep in mind, however, that the benefits of a Diffractive Optical Element (DOE) are not free. DOEs have limitations of their own. They are harder to produce, and typically produce the desired results only under very specific conditions. For example, lets say you want to produce a circular laser beam with a very uniform intensity profile. What are your options for achieving this?
Like any tool available to a lens designer, DOE's have their uses. They can have very strong negative dispersion, which is often useful to correct chromatic aberration, and as I said they can be designed to produce arbitrary illumination patterns which would be outrageously difficult to make with purely refractive optics. Lastly, while you can say they are "just Fresnel lens with smaller features," it is important to understand that a Fresnel lens is a diffractive optic, just a very simple one. In fact, when your understanding of diffraction is deep enough, you will realize that, in some sense, all lenses are diffractive optics. While you can engineer the phase profile of a DOE to produce a highly complex optical field, you could also design one to produce a simple focal spot; the resulting design would be a simple lens! |
|||
|
|