立体光刻
材料科学
3D打印
抛光
光学
数字光处理
镜头(地质)
表面粗糙度
触针
计算
数字微镜装置
计算机科学
制作
光电子学
纳米技术
投影机
计算机视觉
病理
医学
物理
替代医学
复合材料
作者
Xiangfan Chen,Wenzhong Liu,Biqin Dong,Jongwoo Lee,Henry Oliver T. Ware,Hao F. Zhang,Cheng Sun
标识
DOI:10.1002/adma.201705683
摘要
Abstract Advancements in three‐dimensional (3D) printing technology have the potential to transform the manufacture of customized optical elements, which today relies heavily on time‐consuming and costly polishing and grinding processes. However the inherent speed‐accuracy trade‐off seriously constrains the practical applications of 3D‐printing technology in the optical realm. In addressing this issue, here, a new method featuring a significantly faster fabrication speed, at 24.54 mm 3 h −1 , without compromising the fabrication accuracy required to 3D‐print customized optical components is reported. A high‐speed 3D‐printing process with subvoxel‐scale precision (sub 5 µm) and deep subwavelength (sub 7 nm) surface roughness by employing the projection micro‐stereolithography process and the synergistic effects from grayscale photopolymerization and the meniscus equilibrium post‐curing methods is demonstrated. Fabricating a customized aspheric lens 5 mm in height and 3 mm in diameter is accomplished in four hours. The 3D‐printed singlet aspheric lens demonstrates a maximal imaging resolution of 373.2 lp mm −1 with low field distortion less than 0.13% across a 2 mm field of view. This lens is attached onto a cell phone camera and the colorful fine details of a sunset moth's wing and the spot on a weevil's elytra are captured. This work demonstrates the potential of this method to rapidly prototype optical components or systems based on 3D printing.
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