Excimer laser fabrication of diffractive optical elements
暂无分享,去创建一个
Abstract Excimer lasers are well known for their ability to machine features on the micron scale. Recently, they have been used to fabricate diffractive optical elements (DOEs). These elements are patterns of pixels machined to the depth required, in order that a reconstructed pattern is formed in the image plane when the DOE is illuminated by a coherent source. The patterns are designed using computer phase retrieval code. These designs are used to create XY co-ordinate data files for conversion to machining routines where the pixels are machined individually. The laser used is an ArF excimer operating at 193 nm. We describe research undertaken on the fabrication and testing of some typical DOEs. The measurements include efficiency of reconstruction as well as the measurements of profile and surface roughness. The work compares the reconstruction results with the topographical measurements made on the DOE for 2, 4 and 8 phase-level designs. Newly developed simulation code was used to generate reconstructions without machining imperfections.
[1] E. Kley. Continuous profile writing by electron and optical lithography , 1997 .
[2] M. T. Gale. Replication techniques for diffractive optical elements , 1997 .
[3] M. Stern. Pattern transfer for diffractive and refractive microoptics , 1997 .
[4] Walter Bacher,et al. The LIGA technique and its potential for microsystems-a survey , 1995, IEEE Trans. Ind. Electron..
[5] Matt Clark. A direct search method for the computer design of holograms , 1993 .