Focus or Collimate Light without Introducing Spherical Aberration
Ø4.00 mm, Ø5.00 mm, or Ø7.80 mm Unmounted Clear Aperture
AR Coated for 1.8 - 3 µm (-D), 3 - 5 µm (-E), or 8 - 12 µm (-F)
Available Unmounted or Mounted in a Threaded, Engraved Stainless Steel Housing
Black Diamond Substrate Provides Stable Operation up to 130 °C
Spherical aberration often prevents a spherical lens from achieving diffraction-limited performance. The surfaces of an aspheric lens are corrected for spherical aberration, thereby providing a robust single element solution for many applications, such as collimating the output of a fiber or laser diode, coupling light into a fiber, spatial filtering, or imaging light onto a detector. In particular, our IR aspheric lenses are ideal for collimating light from mid-wavelength infrared (MWIR) and long-wavelength infrared (LWIR) sources, including Quantum Cascade Lasers (QCLs).
See the Refractive Index tab for the wavelength-dependent refractive index.
The damage threshold of these lenses is limited by the AR coating.
Our molded glass aspheres are available unmounted or premounted in stainless steel lens housings that are engraved with the part number for easy identification. These housings have a metric external threading that makes them easy to integrate into an optical setup or OEM application. For example, they are readily adapted to our SM1 (1.035"-40) Lens Tubes by using our Aspheric Lens Adapters. Mounted aspheres can also be used as a drop-in replacement for multi-element microscope objectives in conjunction with our RMS-threaded Objective Replacement Adapters.
Black Diamond Black Diamond-2 (BD-2), a chalcogenide made of an amorphous mixture of germanium (28%), antimony (12%), and selenium (60%), has several advantages over germanium, which is traditionally used to fabricate IR optics. BD-2's thermally stable refractive index (see the Refractive Index tab) and low coefficient of thermal expansion (13.5 x 10-6 / °C) result in a smaller change in focal length as a function of temperature than for germanium. Additionally, germanium suffers from transmission loss as temperature increases, while BD-2 aspheric lenses can be used in environments up to 130 °C. This material performs particularly well over the 1.7 - 2.2 µm spectral range, providing >99% transmission and a flat dispersion curve.
If an unmounted aspheric lens is being used to collimate the light from a point source or laser diode, the side with the greater radius of curvature should face the point source or laser diode. To collimate light using one of our mounted aspheric lenses, orient the housing so that the externally threaded end of the mount faces the source.
The refractive index of Black Diamond-2 (BD-2) as a function of wavelength, shown above, was calculated using the Herzberger Equation, an infrared-specific analog of the Sellmeier Equation. The Herzberger coefficients for BD-2 are given to the table to the right.
Herzberger Equation (for λ in µm)
Choosing a Lens for Fiber Coupling
Aspheric lenses are commonly used to couple incident light with a spot size of 1 - 5 mm into a single mode fiber. The following simple example illustrates the key specifications to consider when trying to choose the correct lens.
At 2 µm, Thorlabs' P1-2000-FC-1 single mode patch cable is specified with a mode field diameter (MFD) of 13 μm. This specification should be matched to the diffraction-limited spot size given by the following equation:
Here, f is the focal length of the lens, λ is the wavelength of the input light, and D is the diameter of collimated beam incident on the lens. Solving for the desired focal length of the collimating lens yields
The mounted aspheric lens that is AR coated for our 2 µm wavelength and most closely matches the desired focal length of 10.2 mm is our C021TME-D (f = 11.00 mm), shown below. Its clear aperture of 4.00 mm is easily larger than the collimated beam diameter of 2 mm. It therefore meets the requirements of the example setup.
For optimal coupling, the spot size of the focused beam should be smaller than the MFD of the single mode fiber. Therefore, if an aspheric lens is not available that provides an exact match, choose an aspheric lens with a focal length that is shorter than that yielded by the calculation above. Alternatively, assuming the clear aperture of the aspheric lens is sufficiently large, the beam can be expanded before the aspheric lens to allow the focused beam to have a tighter spot.
Lens Design Formula
Positive Radius Indicates that the Vertex is Located Left of the Center
Negative Radius Indicates that the Vertex is Located Right of the Center
Variable Definitions
z
SAG as a Function of Y
R
Radius of Curvature
k
Conic Constant
A4
4th Order Aspheric Coefficient
A6
6th Order Aspheric Coefficient
A8
8th Order Aspheric Coefficient
A10
10th Order Aspheric Coefficient
A12
12th Order Aspheric Coefficient
Aspheric Lens Coefficients
The aspheric lens coefficients are listed on the product page that is loaded by clicking on the part number in the price table below and in the .pdf and .dxf files available for each lens. Links to the files can be found under the Documents & Drawings tab or by clicking on the part number in the price table below.
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Posted Comments:
Poster: hans.sohlstrom
Posted Date: 2013-03-28 16:20:24.393
When I look at the the pop-up drawing of the lens it seems that the suggested short focus side is on the threaded side of the lens. This would make the lens mount the wrong way in the objective replacement holder, where I assume the threaded end goes first into the holder. Probably there is something I do not understand here. Could you help me?
Poster: jlow
Posted Date: 2013-03-28 12:05:00.0
Response from Jeremy at Thorlabs: The threaded side should face the focus side as indicated by the drawing. From your description, it seems that you are using the E09RMS adapter. Please note that you have to drop the lens in from the RMS threaded side with the lens in the right orientation and then screw it in with a spanner wrench (SPW301). For clarification, please see the drawing of the E09RMS at http://www.thorlabs.com/Thorcat/0800/E09RMS-AutoCADPDF.pdf showing the way the lens should be mounted.
Poster: tcohen
Posted Date: 2012-11-13 14:48:00.0
Response from Tim at Thorlabs: The table provides links to our different selections of aspheres: -A, -B, -C, V coats and uncoated and isn’t meant to refer to these IR aspheres without coating. We will work on clarifying this in our web presentation. All of the aspheres have the glass listed in the window that opens when clicking on the info button in the table directly above the part number. Transmission curves for the uncoated glass can be found here. If you would like to discuss a part suitable for your application, please contact us at techsupport@thorlabs.com for direct support.
Poster:
Posted Date: 2012-11-08 10:51:43.643
clicking on the uncoated link in the table sends reader to a page that seems unrelated to these IR optic, i'd like to know what the uncoated performance of these optics is as your coating ranges don't line up with my application.
Poster: jlow
Posted Date: 2012-10-04 16:28:00.0
Response from Jeremy at Thorlabs: The lens is bonded in the cell via epoxy on the perimeter of the lens.
Poster: nick
Posted Date: 2012-10-04 16:07:52.0
Can you tell me how the lens is bonded/captured in the cell (ie.. as an example for C028TME-F)?
Poster: bdada
Posted Date: 2012-02-24 16:24:00.0
Response from Buki at Thorlabs to
Thank you for your feedback. The discrepancy in the transmission comes from the fact that both the front and back surfaces have the same Fresnel reflection coefficients. 1 x 0.8 x 0.8 = ~65%.
Please contact TechSupport@thorlabs.com if you have any questions.
Poster: pierrelucas
Posted Date: 2011-11-05 03:46:05.0
What is the total transmission of a 390036-E lenses at 5 micron. The reflectivity is less than 1% but what is the % transmission. The index of 2.6 should give 20% reflection losses in the uncoated lenses but its transmission is only 65%. Does that mean the lenses has 15% materials loss and the Ar coated has only 84% transmission?
Poster: jjurado
Posted Date: 2011-07-01 15:09:00.0
Response from Javier at Thorlabs to pmm: Thank you very much for your feedback. I will contact you with information for the overall transmission of these lenses shortly.
Poster: pmm
Posted Date: 2011-06-30 11:56:20.0
The data for transmission of the BD-2 is only given for an uncoated sample. But how much of this is material absorption and how much is refelction loss from interfaces which can be reduced by selecting the right coating? It would be simpler if you could simply spec the transmission of the coated lenses. Regards. Peter
Poster: bdada
Posted Date: 2011-04-13 17:06:00.0
Response from Buki at Thorlabs to Max:
We have contacted you directly with the Zemax file for the uncoated 390036 lens. We have also sent you the data sheet for the substrate of the 390036-D, which is BD-2. This is a substrate made specifically for the IR; the transmission specifications are included in this document. At 2.1microns, the transmission is about 65%. The AR curve shows a reflectivity of 0.35% at 2.1microns.
Please contact TechSupport@thorlabs.com with further questions.
Poster: max.schiler
Posted Date: 2011-04-13 13:40:22.0
Hi.
1. Can you send me the glass info in ZEMAX-format?
2. What is the overall transmittance of the lens at 2.1 um?
Regards,
Max
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