Paper
18 May 2006 Using molded chalcogenide glass technology to reduce cost in a compact wide-angle thermal imaging lens
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
This paper presents the design, analysis, and fabrication of a telecentric f/1.3 thermal imaging lens. The 14.8 mm wideangle lens provides a 62° diagonal field-of-view, and was designed to operate over the 8-14 μm infrared spectral band. Focus can be manually adjusted from 0.5 m to infinity, maintaining constant image quality over the entire range. A compact air-spaced doublet design limits the overall length to 34 mm and the maximum diameter to 28 mm. Lens materials were chosen to minimize chromatic aberrations, reduce cost, and fit within the molded chalcogenide glass manufacturing capabilities. Combining a molded aspheric chalcogenide lens with a polished spherical Germanium lens eliminated the need for a diffractive surface to correct chromatic aberrations, and reduced the fabrication cost. Vignetting was purposely introduced at the extreme fields to compensate for the effects of aberrations on the relative illumination variation across the field-of-view. Athermalization of the lens was achieved mechanically over the entire operating temperature range (- 40 to + 80°C).
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
George Curatu, Brent Binkley, David Tinch, and Costin Curatu "Using molded chalcogenide glass technology to reduce cost in a compact wide-angle thermal imaging lens", Proc. SPIE 6206, Infrared Technology and Applications XXXII, 62062M (18 May 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.667250
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CITATIONS
Cited by 8 scholarly publications and 3 patents.
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KEYWORDS
Modulation transfer functions

Thermography

Chalcogenide glass

Chalcogenides

Germanium

Lens design

Aspheric lenses

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