• Title/Summary/Keyword: Thermal aberrations

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Simulation Research on the Thermal Effects in Dipolar Illuminated Lithography

  • Yao, Changcheng;Gong, Yan
    • Journal of the Optical Society of Korea
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    • v.20 no.2
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    • pp.251-256
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    • 2016
  • The prediction of thermal effects in lithography projection objective plays a significant role in the real-time dynamic compensation of thermal aberrations. For the illuminated lithography projection objective, this paper applies finite element analysis to get the temperature distribution, surface deformation and stress data. To improve the efficiency, a temperature distribution function model is proposed to use for the simulation of thermal aberrations with the help of optical analysis software CODE V. SigFit is approved integrated optomechanical analysis software with the feature of calculating OPD effects due to temperature change, and it is utilized to prove the validation of the temperature distribution function. Results show that the impact of surface deformation and stress is negligible compared with the refractive index change; astigmatisms and 4-foil aberrations dominate in the thermal aberration, about 1.7 λ and 0.45 λ. The system takes about one hour to reach thermal equilibrium and the contrast of the imaging of dense lines get worse as time goes on.

Electron sources for electron microsocpes (전자현미경의 전자원)

  • Cho, Boklae
    • Vacuum Magazine
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    • v.2 no.2
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    • pp.24-28
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    • 2015
  • The brightness of an electron source, along with the aberrations of an objective lens, determines the image resolution and beam current on samples, which are two important parameters for evaluating the performance of an electron microscope. Here we introduce thermal electron source, Schottky emitter and cold field electron emitter. Thermal electron source is the cheapest and stable electron source but it has the lowest brightness. Schottky emitter is 10000 times brighter than tungsten thermal electron source, but requires ultrahigh vacuum operating condition. Cold field electron emitter is 10 times brighter than Schottky emitters, but it is rather unstable and its operation requires most stringent vacuum condition, hindering its widespread use.

Design of a PIV objective maximizing the image signal-to-noise ratio

  • Chetelat Olivier;Kim Kyung Chun
    • 한국가시화정보학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2001.12a
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    • pp.123-137
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    • 2001
  • PIV (particle image velocimetry) systems use a camera to take snapshots of particles carried by a fluid at some precise instants. Signal processing methods are then used to compute the flow velocity field. In this paper, the design of the camera objective (optics) is addressed. The optimization is done in order to maximize the signal-to-noise ratio of in-focus particles. Four different kinds of noise are considered: photon shot noise, thermal and read noise, background glow shot noise, and noise made by the other particles. A semi-empirical model for the lens aberrations of a two-doublet objective is first addressed, since further, it is shown that lens aberrations (low f-value $f_{\#}$) should be used instead of the Fraunhofer diffraction (high f-value) for the fitting of the particle image size with the pixel size. Other important conclusions of the paper include the expression of optimum values for the magnification M, for the exposure period $\tau$ and for the pixel size $\xi$.

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Design and Analysis of an Optical System for an Uncooled Thermal-imaging Camera Using a Hybrid Lens (Hybrid 렌즈를 이용한 비냉각 열상장비 광학계 설계 및 분석)

  • Ok, Chang-Min;Kong, Hyun-Bae;Park, Hyun-Woo
    • Korean Journal of Optics and Photonics
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    • v.28 no.5
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    • pp.241-249
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    • 2017
  • This paper presents the design and evaluation of the optical system for an uncooled thermal-imaging camera. The operating wavelength range of this system is from $7.7{\mu}m$ to $12.8{\mu}m$. Through optimization, we have obtained a LWIR (Long Wave Infrared) optical system with a focal length of 5.44 mm, which consists of four aspheric surfaces and two diffractive surfaces. The f-number of the optical system is F/1.2, and its field of view is $90^{\circ}{\times}67.5^{\circ}$. The hybrid lens was used to balance the higher-order aberrations, and its diffraction properties were evaluated by scalar diffraction theory. We calculated the polychromatic integrated diffraction efficiency, and the MTF drop generated by background noise. We have evaluated the thermal compensation of a LWIR fixed optical system, which is optically passively athermalized to maintain MTF performance in the focal depth. In conclusion, these design results are useful for an uncooled thermal-imaging camera.

Achromatic and Athermal Design of a Mobile-phone Camera Lens by Redistributing Optical First-order Quantities

  • Tae-Sik Ryu;Sung-Chan Park
    • Current Optics and Photonics
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    • v.7 no.3
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    • pp.273-282
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    • 2023
  • This paper presents a new method for redistributing effectively the first orders of each lens element to achromatize and athermalize an optical system, by introducing a novel method for adjusting the slope of an achromatic and athermal line. This line is specified by connecting the housing, equivalent single lens, and aberration-corrected point on a glass map composed of available plastic and glass materials for molding. Thus, if a specific lens is replaced with the material characterized by the chromatic and thermal powers of an aberration-corrected point, we obtain an achromatic and athermal system. First, we identify two materials that yield the minimum and maximum slopes of the line from a housing coordinate, which specifies the slope range of the line spanning the available materials on a glass map. Next, redistributing the optical first orders (optical powers and paraxial ray heights) of lens elements by moving the achromatic and athermal line into the available slope range of materials yields a good achromatic and athermal design. Applying this concept to design a mobile-phone camera lens, we efficiently obtain an achromatic and athermal system with cost-effective material selection, over the specified temperature and waveband ranges.

Thermo-optical Analysis and Correction Method for an Optical Window in Low Temperature and Vacuum

  • Ruoyan Wang;Ruihu Ni;Zhishan Gao;Lingjie Wang;Qun Yuan
    • Current Optics and Photonics
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    • v.7 no.2
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    • pp.213-221
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    • 2023
  • The optical window, as a part of the collimator system, is the connector between the outside light source and the optical system inside a vacuum tank. The temperature and pressure difference between the two sides of the optical window cause not only thermoelastic deformation, but also refractive-index irregularities. To suppress the influence of these two changes on the performance of the collimator system, thermo-optical analysis is employed. Coefficients that characterize the deformations and refractive-index distributions are derived through finite-element analysis, and then imported into the collimator system using a user-defined surface in ZEMAX. The temperature and pressure difference imposed on the window seriously degrade the system performance of the collimator. A decentered and tilted lens group is designed to correct both field aberrations and the thermal effects of the window. Through lens-interval adjustment of the lens group, the diffraction-limited performance of the collimator can be maintained with a vacuum level of 10-5 Pa and inside temperature ranging from -100 ℃ to 20 ℃.

Optimization of 30 cm Lightweight Mirror (30 cm 급 반사경 경량화 최적 설계)

  • Kim, Bong-Ho;Lee, Jong-Ung;Moon, Il-Kwon;Yang, Ho-Soon;Kihm, Hag-Yong;Lee, Yun-Woo
    • Korean Journal of Optics and Photonics
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    • v.21 no.5
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    • pp.214-223
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    • 2010
  • Optimization of a 30 cm lightweight mirror was proposed with the best optical performance under various loads of gravity and thermal loads with proper boundary conditions. A pattern for a lightweight mirror was generated based on the best optical performance combined with ease of manufacturing for proper design parameters of physical properties of face sheet, back sheet, rib, and web. Evaluation of the optical performances of a telescope mirror was obtained by using the finite element analysis program, NX I-DEAS. Surface errors, individual aberration terms, such as piston, tilts, focus and other aberrations were calculated by using Zernike polynomials. The proposed telescope mirror meets well the opto-mechanical design consideration of RMS surface error less than 16 nm.

In Vitro Studies on the Genotoxic Effects of Wood Smoke Flavors

  • Chung, Young-Shin;Ahn, Jun-Ho; Eum, Ki-Hwan;Choi, Seon-A;Oh, Se-Wook;Kim, Yun-Ji;Park, Sue-Nie;Yum, Young-Na;Kim, Joo-Hwan;Lee, Michael
    • Toxicological Research
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    • v.24 no.4
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    • pp.321-328
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    • 2008
  • Smoke flavors based on the thermal decomposition of wood have been applied to a variety of food products as an alternative for traditional smoking. Despite its increasing use, the available genotoxicity data on wood smoke flavors (WSF) are still controversial. Thus, potential genotoxic effects of WSF in four short-term in vitro genotoxicity assays were investigated, which included the Ames assay, chromosomal aberration assay, micronucleus test and the alkaline comet assay. WSF did not cause any mutation in the Ames assay using five tester strains at six concentrations of 0.16, 0.31, 0.63, 1.25, 2.5 and 5 ${\mu}l/plate$. To assess clastogenic effect, the in vitro chromosomal aberration assay was performed using Chinese hamster lung cells. No statistically significant increase in the number of metaphases with structural aberrations was observed at the concentrations of 1.25, 2.5, and 5 ${\mu}l/ml$. The in vitro comet assay and micronucleus test results obtained on L5178Y cells also revealed that WSF has no genotoxicity potential, although there was a marginal increase in micronuclei frequencies and DNA damage in the respective micronucleus and comet assays. Taken together, based on the results obtained from these four in vitro studies, it is concluded that WSF is not a mutagenic agent in bacterial cells and causes no chromosomal and DNA damage in mammalian cells in vitro.

Athermalization and Narcissus Analysis of Mid-IR Dual-FOV IR Optics (이중 시야 중적외선 광학계 비열화·나르시서스 분석)

  • Jeong, Do Hwan;Lee, Jun Ho;Jeong, Ho;Ok, Chang Min;Park, Hyun-Woo
    • Korean Journal of Optics and Photonics
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    • v.29 no.3
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    • pp.110-118
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    • 2018
  • We have designed a mid-infrared optical system for an airborne electro-optical targeting system. The mid-IR optical system is a dual-field-of-view (FOV) optics for an airborne electro-optical targeting system. The optics consists of a beam-reducer, a zoom lens group, a relay lens group, a cold stop conjugation optics, and an IR detector. The IR detector is an f/5.3 cooled detector with a resolution of $1280{\times}1024$ square pixels, with a pixel size of $15{\times}15{\mu}m$. The optics provides two stepwise FOVs ($1.50^{\circ}{\times}1.20^{\circ}$ and $5.40^{\circ}{\times}4.23^{\circ}$) by the insertion of two lenses into the zoom lens group. The IR optical system was designed in such a way that the working f-number (f/5.3) of the cold stop internally provided by the IR detector is maintained over the entire FOV when changing the zoom. We performed two analyses to investigate thermal effects on the image quality: athermalization analysis and Narcissus analysis. Athermalization analysis investigated the image focus shift and residual high-order wavefront aberrations as the working temperature changes from $-55^{\circ}C$ to $50^{\circ}C$. We first identified the best compensator for the thermal focus drift, using the Zernike polynomial decomposition method. With the selected compensator, the optics was shown to maintain the on-axis MTF at the Nyquist frequency of the detector over 10%, throughout the temperature range. Narcissus analysis investigated the existence of the thermal ghost images of the cold detector formed by the optics itself, which is quantified by the Narcissus Induced Temperature Difference (NITD). The reported design was shown to have an NITD of less than $1.5^{\circ}C$.