Six Angles Available: 0.5°, 1.0°, 2.0°, 5.0°, 10.0°, and 20.0°
AR Coated for Maximum Transmission
Applications
Laser Drilling/Optical Trepanning
Optical Trapping
Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT)
Corneal Surgery
Telescopes
Axicons, also commonly referred to as rotationally symmetric prisms, are lenses that feature one conical surface and one plano surface. They are commonly used to create a beam with a Bessel intensity profile or a conical, non-diverging beam. When converting a collimated beam into a ring, the plano side should face the collimated source. For more information, please see the Beam Shape tab above.
Thorlabs' precision-polished axicons Ø25.4 mm ( Ø1") are offered with base angles from 0.5° to 20°. These axicons are made from high-quality UV Fused Silica using computer numerical controlled (CNC) grinding and polishing machines. This provides a high-quality surface, making them ideally suited for high-power laser applications. Our axicons have an anti-reflection coating for one of four ranges: -UV (290 - 370 nm), -A (350 - 700 nm), -B (650 - 1050 nm), and -C (1050 - 1620 nm). These coatings reduce surface reflections from the lens to maximize transmission (Ravg < 0.5%). For an uncoated axicon or a custom coating, please contact Tech Support for a quote.
To see what each symbol means, please click the info icon in the Reference Drawing column of the table below.
Item #*
Angle (α)
Angular Tolerance
Center Thickness
Edge Thickness Tolerance
Surface Deviation (RMS)
Reference Drawing
AX2505
0.5°
±0.01%
5.1 mm
+0.1/-0.0 mm
<0.07 µm
AX251
1.0°
±0.01%
5.2 mm
+0.1/-0.0 mm
<0.07 µm
AX252
2.0°
±0.01%
5.4 mm
+0.1/-0.0 mm
<0.07 µm
AX255
5.0°
±0.01%
6.1 mm
+0.1/-0.0 mm
<0.07 µm
AX2510
10.0°
±0.01%
7.2 mm
+0.1/-0.0 mm
<0.07 µm
AX2520
20.0°
±0.01%
9.6 mm
+0.1/-0.0 mm
<0.07 µm
*Specifications are the same for the -UV, -A, -B, and -C AR-Coatings.
Fig 3: Axicon ray tracing diagram.
Fig 4: The photograph above shows the beam of a collimated laser beam after it is transmitted by an axicon.
Fig 5: The photograph above shows the beam from Fig 1 if a plano-convex lens is placed after the axicon.
Axicon Beams
Bessel Beam: Non-Diffracting
Ring-Shaped Beam: Ideal for Laser Drilling
A Bessel beam is a non-diffracting beam of concentric rings, each having the same power as the central ring. Technically, a bessel beam cannot be created as it requires infinite energy. By using an axicon with a collimated Gaussian beam, a beam closely resembling a bessel distribution is possible. To accomplish this, the projected beam must be close to the conical surface of an axicon. The absolute value of a 0th order Bessel function of the first kind is shown in Fig 1 (below).
Fig 1: The absolute value of a 0th order Bessel function. A true Bessel Beam requires each ring to have the same energy as the central peak, thus an infinite amount of energy is needed.
When the beam is projected further from the lens, a ring-shaped beam is formed as seen in Fig 4. The beam is actually conical (i.e., diameter increases with distance), but the rays are non-diverging so that the thickness of the ring remains constant (see Fig 3). The ring's thickness will be half of the input laser beam's diameter. This beam is commonly used in laser-drilling applications.
The photograph below shows a HeNe laser, BE10M-A beam expander, AX255-A axicon, and a DG100X100-600 ground glass diffuser. Although the laser beam's diameter is roughly Ø1 mm, a beam expander increases the beam diameter to Ø10 mm before the axicon. The beam shape is then projected onto a ground glass diffuser. This setup forms a ring, which is shown in Fig 4. When a plano-convex lens is placed after the axicon, the resulting beam will be more focused, and thus a more intense ring will be formed, which can be seen in Fig 5.
Fig 2: A setup including a HeNe laser, beam expander, axicon, and diffuser.
Selection Guide for Prisms
Thorlabs offers a wide variety of prisms, which can be used to reflect, invert, rotate, disperse, steer, and collimate light. Prisms are available in N-BK7, UV Fused Silica, F2, N-SF11, α-BBO, N-KZFS8, Ge, and CaF2. For prisms and substrates not listed below, please contact tech support.
Double prism configuration and dielectric coating transmit p-pol. light and reflect s-pol. light.
For highest polarization use the transmitted beam.
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Posted Comments:
Poster: tcohen
Posted Date: 2013-01-03 15:07:00.0
Response from Tim at Thorlabs: The rings could be a result from imperfections in the tip of the axicon, however, the quality of the tip of these optics are unrivaled in the industry and would make this an unlikely reason. Misalignment could contribute. Possibly you are seeing artifacts of the Bessel beam that is generated when a Gaussian beam is inputted. This is touched upon under the “Beam Shape tab on this page. We will work to improve the discussion on this page to better explain the performance of these parts and options you may have to achieve desirable results. We will contact you to troubleshoot this artifact in your setup.
Poster: totlab
Posted Date: 2012-12-11 23:05:54.373
We bought a axicon and found the ring is not so clean, and several smaller rings are in the inner side. The laser beam is collimated and dia=2mm.
Is it because the imperfection of the tip of the axicon? I found no dust or damage on the surface.
Poster: jjurado
Posted Date: 2011-02-04 10:57:00.0
Response from Javier at Thorlabs to info: Thank you very much for contacting us with your inquiry. Since axicons produce a ring-shaped beam, they work well for replacing the dark field patch stop in a dark field microscope. Although we have not yet developed an application in dark field microscopy using axicons, there have been several publications in this field. You can find one of these publications through the following link: http://spiedigitallibrary.org/jbo/resource/1/jbopfo/v13/i4/p044024_s1?isAuthorized=no
Poster: info
Posted Date: 2011-02-03 14:54:44.0
Would this be a good lens to use in a the light source path of a dark field microscope?
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350 - 700 nm AR Coating Ravg<0.5% Over Range Ideal for Use with HeNe and Other Visible Lasers
Thorlabs' -A AR-coated axicons are well-suited for applications within part of the NUV spectrum and all of the visible spectrum. For more information on these lenses, please see the Specs tab above.
650 - 1050 nm AR Coating Ravg<0.5% Over Range Covers Common Wavelengths Used in Optical Trapping and Corneal Surgery
Thorlabs' -B AR-coated axicons are suitable for many NIR applications, such as with optical traps, which commonly use 832 nm or 980 nm lasers. For more information on these lenses, please see the Specs tab above.
1050 - 1600 nm AR Coating Ravg<0.5% Over Range Covers Common Wavelengths Used in OCT, Optical Trapping, and Laser Drilling
For applications into the NIR, we offer -C AR-coated axicons. Axicons can be used in optical coherence tomography (OCT) applications, which commonly use lasers between 1050 nm and 1600 nm. In these applications, an axicon can increase the depth of focus in the sample arm. Please see the Specs tab for more information on these lenses.