2020
T. Feng P.K Sahoo, M. Sharma; Qiao, J.
Dynamic modelling for predicting temperature evolution and modification during fs-laser welding of borofloat glass Conference
vol. ATu3K.2, C:EO 2020 OSA 2020.
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: CeFO, CeFO manufacturing, Freeform surfaces, Optical surfaces
@conference{CLEOc,
title = {Dynamic modelling for predicting temperature evolution and modification during fs-laser welding of borofloat glass},
author = {P.K Sahoo, T. Feng, M.Sharma, S. Patra, R.Haque, and J. Qiao},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-06-01},
volume = {ATu3K.2},
organization = {C:EO 2020 OSA},
abstract = {A dynamic heat accumulation modelling for femtosecond laser welding of Borofloat glass is developed
and verified experimentally. The temperature evolution and internal modifications are predicted by incorporating
the nonlinear electron dynamics along with temperature dependent thermal properties.},
keywords = {CeFO, CeFO manufacturing, Freeform surfaces, Optical surfaces},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {conference}
}
A dynamic heat accumulation modelling for femtosecond laser welding of Borofloat glass is developed
and verified experimentally. The temperature evolution and internal modifications are predicted by incorporating
the nonlinear electron dynamics along with temperature dependent thermal properties.
and verified experimentally. The temperature evolution and internal modifications are predicted by incorporating
the nonlinear electron dynamics along with temperature dependent thermal properties.
2019
Aaron Bauer Nick Takaki,; Rolland, Jannick P.
On-the-fly surface manufacturability constraints for freeform optical design enabled by orthogonal polynomials Journal Article
In: Optics Express, vol. 27, no. 5, pp. 6129-6146, 2019.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Aberration correction, CeFO, Freeform surfaces, Image quality, Optical design, Optical surfaces, Optical systems
@article{Takaki_manufacturability,
title = {On-the-fly surface manufacturability constraints for freeform optical design enabled by orthogonal polynomials},
author = {Nick Takaki, Aaron Bauer, and Jannick P. Rolland},
editor = {James Leger, Ulrike Fuchs },
url = {https://doi.org/10.1364/OE.27.006129},
doi = {10.1364/OE.27.006129},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-02-20},
journal = {Optics Express},
volume = {27},
number = {5},
pages = {6129-6146},
abstract = {When leveraging orthogonal polynomials for describing freeform optics, designers typically focus on the computational efficiency of convergence and the optical performance of the resulting designs. However, to physically realize these designs, the freeform surfaces need to be fabricated and tested. An optimization constraint is described that allows on-the-fly calculation and constraint of manufacturability estimates for freeform surfaces, namely peak-to-valley sag departure and maximum gradient normal departure. This constraint’s construction is demonstrated in general for orthogonal polynomials, and in particular for both Zernike polynomials and Forbes 2D-Q polynomials. Lastly, this optimization constraint’s impact during design is shown via two design studies: a redesign of a published unobscured three-mirror telescope in the ball geometry for use in LWIR imaging and a freeform prism combiner for use in AR/VR applications. It is shown that using the optimization penalty with a fixed number of coefficients enables an improvement in manufacturability in exchange for a tradeoff in optical performance. It is further shown that, when the number of coefficients is increased in conjunction with the optimization penalty, manufacturability estimates can be improved without sacrificing optical performance.},
keywords = {Aberration correction, CeFO, Freeform surfaces, Image quality, Optical design, Optical surfaces, Optical systems},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
When leveraging orthogonal polynomials for describing freeform optics, designers typically focus on the computational efficiency of convergence and the optical performance of the resulting designs. However, to physically realize these designs, the freeform surfaces need to be fabricated and tested. An optimization constraint is described that allows on-the-fly calculation and constraint of manufacturability estimates for freeform surfaces, namely peak-to-valley sag departure and maximum gradient normal departure. This constraint’s construction is demonstrated in general for orthogonal polynomials, and in particular for both Zernike polynomials and Forbes 2D-Q polynomials. Lastly, this optimization constraint’s impact during design is shown via two design studies: a redesign of a published unobscured three-mirror telescope in the ball geometry for use in LWIR imaging and a freeform prism combiner for use in AR/VR applications. It is shown that using the optimization penalty with a fixed number of coefficients enables an improvement in manufacturability in exchange for a tradeoff in optical performance. It is further shown that, when the number of coefficients is increased in conjunction with the optimization penalty, manufacturability estimates can be improved without sacrificing optical performance.