Typical laboratory optical systems use commercially off-the-shelf components in which emphasis is oriented toward ease of assembly and a wide range of adjustability. However, these mounts often require individual alignments that, when each degree of adjustability is cumulated in a complex optical system, can be inefficient and time consuming. Furthermore, most of these optomechanical mounts lack the mechanical robustness required to maintain operational performances out of the laboratory environment. An optomechanical assembly method based on passively aligning design features is proposed to simplify breadboard level optical systems, to improve alignment accuracy and maintaining operational pointing stability. Given the recent improvements in lens passive centering techniques, it seemed worth exploring methods to reduce alignment time and improve the mechanical robustness of laboratory setups. Recent studies show that a typical optical lens centering of <1 arc min with respect to its mount can be achieved using patented auto centering and edge contact mounting technologies. To achieve similar position accuracy between multiple lenses on a portable breadboard, lens mounts should be designed and built with proper reference surfaces and a system should easily reference one mount with respect to the other. The use of reference spheres and dedicated optomechanical mounts is employed to leverage the standard threaded holes of laboratory breadboards and achieve precise lens mount positioning. A series of optomechanical mounts incorporating these techniques are therefore tested. Position accuracy and repeatability are measured mechanically with a coordinate measuring machine and optically with the active monitoring of a laser beam centroid position. Measured position accuracy at the optomechanical mount level is <50 μm with a repeatability of less than 5 μm per interface. The optomechanical mounts robustness is tested within typical storage temperature range of −46 ° C to 63°C and at vibrations levels exceeding typical shipping conditions. Measured optical pointing stability of a simple optical system after environmental testing was found to be under 25 μm. This method should be a promising solution to bridge the design technological gap between the early prototyping and the production phases. |
1.IntroductionIn the industry, the need in terms of optical component positioning accuracy may vary a lot from one application to the other. Meanwhile, according to Institut National d'Optique (INO)’s experience, most industrial optical systems fit within of lens centration. Nonetheless, almost all new optical systems require demonstration work done in the laboratory environment. The alignment of each lens or optical element of an optical system is often tedious and sometimes a difficult task that may last many hours up to multiple days of work. Moreover, it requires a lot of engineering work to achieve the state where the same optical design can be built to meet the mechanical stability required to withstand shipping conditions without losing its initial alignment settings, thereafter called as mechanical robustness. While presently available breadboards and optomechanical mounts on the market are well designed to achieve maximum flexibility and ease of use, they all lack the same features: built-in precise positioning, position repeatability, and mechanical robustness. Typical commercially available lens and mirror mounts, such as optical posts, lens tubes, and cage systems, are made to be positioned with unprecise laboratory fixtures as they do not have external mechanical references. Therefore, breadboard and table top optomechanical mounts usually rely on visual alignment rather than mechanical referencing. Initial position accuracy of a lens mount that is visually aligned is not well described in literature. However, it could be reasonably assumed that it is possible to center at resolution of 1/20’th of the clear aperture of the optomechanical mount without any special tooling. This corresponds to about in translation for a 25.4 mm diameter lens mount. Using a similar approximation for the angular position of the mount, a in rotation along the post axis (yaw) can be estimated due to the visual nature of the positioning made in the laboratory. Depending on the experiment sensitivity to misalignment, this initial optomechanical mount positioning is then refined through an iterative optimization process that requires the use of different techniques, tools such as targets, pin holes, wavefront sensors, point source microscopes, and the use of multiple linear translation and rotation stages to overcome the error buildup. By experience, after a first optimization process, it is not uncommon to find single optical elements decentered by 0.5 mm and tilted by 0.5 deg. Identifying misplaced optical elements and fine tuning their position to correct these last hundreds of microns can be time consuming. In addition, the lens position in its cell relies more on axial play between the cell thread and the lens outer diameter. Consequently, even after lens position optimization, if a lens must be removed for cleaning, inspection, or any other reason, there is a high probability that the lens will not return to its original position after reassembly. It implies that rework will be required on the optical system when a lens is removed. It is also worth noting that most commercially available translation and angular adjustable stages are not designed to survive mechanical shocks and vibration that would be encountered in commercial shipping conditions. These adjustable stages are usually heavy, fragile, and expensive; therefore, it is not practical to use them in optical assemblies destined to be shipped. With the ever-increasing speed of product development to achieve fast time-to-market goals, there is a need for a prototyping method that can reduce alignment time using accurate positioning, high position repeatability while being mechanically robust enough to be used as a product and to survive shipping constraints. A line of optomechanical mounts and breadboards was developed specifically for that purpose. It is designed to ease optical alignment by passively centering lenses and mirrors from 12.7 to 50.8 mm in diameter. High position and angular accuracies are expected without sacrificing robustness. 2.Operation PrincipleA trivial method used for decades to achieve repeatable mount referencing is the use of dedicated locating pins on custom-designed support structures or benches. It is generally accepted that abutting a lens mount on locating pin/bushing assembly can typically achieve 10 to in position repeatability.1 However, adding reference pins on breadboards is not practical, as it requires implementing a second matrix of holes specifically for the pins. Since typical breadboards already include an evenly spaced grid of mounting threaded holes, it is tempting to leverage existing holes into proper referencing features. Usually, conventional threaded holes are not considered reliable interfaces for precision positioning. However, it is possible to overcome this issue by adding a slightly oversized entrance cone (or chamfer) at the border of the threaded holes on the breadboard or optical table. It is then possible to use this conical interface as a locating surface for precision reference balls. A sphere inserted in a cone locks the reference ball’s three degrees of freedom (DOF) in translation, defining a single point in space for each mounting hole. The combination of two or three reference points can then be used to accurately locate lens or mirror mounts anywhere on the breadboard. The availability of known reference points at close intervals opens the possibility to assemble an optical system mostly like building blocks: Inserting the optical element, placing the reference spheres where needed, abutting the lens mount on the spheres, locking the mount in position, removing the spheres, and repeating for the following one. Figures 1 and 2 show the ball referencing arrangement in a hole and the lens mount typical ball abutment arrangement, respectively. The optomechanical mount six-DOF are defined in the coordinate system of Fig. 3. The breadboard mounting plane allows to fix three-DOF: vertical translation (), pitch, and roll rotations. Then the three other DOF are to be defined with the spheres. The first one is the yaw rotation or rotation about a vertical () axis. The second and third are the breadboard planar translations where axial refers to the direction parallel to the optical axis () and lateral refer to the direction perpendicular to the optical axis (). The developed line of breadboard is based on M4 screws and 12.5-mm hole spacing to allow maximum flexibility in the lens optical layout. As shown in Fig. 1, the reference ball tool construction is essentially the assembly of a small M4 thumb screw containing a captive high precision ball. The M4 thumb screw insertion tool serves the dual purpose of locking the reference ball in position against the breadboard’s reference cones and allows simpler ball manipulation in a lab environment. The 6.35-mm diameter ball through hole fit is loose on the insertion tool to allow the ball to freely locate itself in the breadboard reference cone. At the insertion, the ball must be free to move onto the shaft to obtain the bests results. Otherwise, the ball position would be driven by the threaded hole, which is not as precise as the reference cone. Even a small, threaded hole perpendicularity error can prevent the ball to sit correctly in the precise reference cone thus reducing the ball position accuracy and repeatability. Some of the advantages of using balls instead of pins to position lens mounts are reduced sensitivity to hole and lower chamfer perpendicularity errors, in addition to the ease of removal after the mount is locked in place. Angle errors for holes equally affects the pin and the reference sphere center’s position assuming contact height of the sphere and pin height are the same. The sphere’s contact height with respect to the breadboards surface can be described as where is the reference sphere diameter, is the entry cone half angle, and is the entry cone diameter on the breadboard top. The lateral shift of the sphere’s center, or position error, due to a tilted entry hole is where is the sphere center position error due to the pin tilt angle, is the reference sphere diameter, is the entry cone half angle, is the entry cone diameter on the breadboard top, and is the cone or threaded hole angular tilt error. However, for the sphere, the resulting error will be limited to its center translation and the contact point on the mount will be mostly unchanged in all possible contact orientations. In comparison, abutting an optomechanical mount on a tilted pin from different directions provides contact points at different heights on an optomechanical mount, thus increasing the total position uncertainty. This abutting position difference due to a tilted pin can be described as where is the position error due to the pin tilt angle, is the contact height difference on the optomechanical mount when abutting from different directions, and is the pin angle. is driven by the mount geometry but in the worst-case scenario it would be equal to the pin’s height extruding of the breadboard. As mentioned, for the case on a tilted pin, the position uncertainty of a mount abutting on a tilted pin is the sum of and . Figure 4 shows the optomechanical mount abutting position difference for a tilted pin compared to a ball when abutting from two different directions. Assuming and then from equations above we find . Therefore, in this example, the position uncertainty of a mount abutting on the tilted pin would be , essentially the double of the error expected for a sphere in a tilted cone with the same tilt error.According to Machinery’s Handbook,2 drilled holes accuracy is influenced by many factors such as accuracy of the drill point, the size of the drill, the work material, the length of the drill and the runout of the spindle and chuck assembly, and the rigidity of the machine tool to name a few. In this case, entry cone geometry can accommodate shorter and wider tools than threaded or pin holes of similar size, leading to stiffer tools and better position accuracy than tools required for deeper pin holes. Moreover, if the pins are removable, then some mechanical play must be accounted for between the pin and the hole to allow easy insertion/removal, which further increases the position uncertainty. The sum of these differences explains why spheres are more attractive for precise positioning than pins. The position accuracy of an optical element does not depend only on the optomechanical mount position. The optical element position in its mount also needs to be controlled carefully to achieve accurate positioning in a multi-element system. The position error of a lens with respect to its optomechanical mount can greatly vary depending on the lens geometry. As discussed by Lamontagne et al.,3 for self-centering to work the clamping angle criteria must be met, however, most long radius of curvature lenses [long focal lengths (FLs)] and negative (concave) lenses were still difficult to center as they often did not meet the auto-centering criteria or required custom-designed threaded rings and lens seats. With the integration of the patented edge contact mounting technique4 in the line of optomechanical mounts, it is possible to center most lenses without the need of custom-design threaded rings. The use of this technique, called QuickCTR-edge mounting, allows a good lens position and tilt accuracy. For example, results from Lamontagne et al.1 in Table 1 display measured lens position accuracy with respect to cell rim using edge contact mounting. Table 1Centering measurements of a lens surface in contact with a threaded ring using edge contact mounting.
To take advantage of these techniques, it was necessary to rethink the way the optomechanical mounts are constructed and used to maximize the position accuracy. Achieving high position accuracy “passively” can reduce the alignment process time by reducing the total number adjustable mounts required. Reducing the number of adjustable mounts can inevitably lower the total system weight on the breadboard and will also improve the behavior of the optical system when exposed to various vibrations levels. It is understood that cases exist where optical components, opto-electronic components, or other need to be inserted in the optical system but do not have well defined (precise) reference features for accurate positioning, but yet require to be accurately positioned in the optical system (often at the beginning or the end of an optical branch of the system). For this purpose, a set of adjustable mounts compatible with the line of optomechanical mounts were designed. These mounts were designed with the same mechanical robustness philosophy and includes locking mechanisms suitable to survive similar environmental conditions. Once installed and aligned a first time, the adjustable mount provides the position accuracy features to the unprecise component to match with the line of optomechanical mounts. Now, with the lens edge centering method combined with adequate mount fabrication tolerance controls and the addition of patent pending ball referencing features on the breadboards,5 it is expected to achieve improved optical element position accuracies under at the optomechanical mount level. 2.1.Position Accuracy AspectsIn the development of the line of optomechanical mounts, one important aspect of the design focused on what could be the achievable absolute and relative position accuracies. When assembled in a mount, the lens maximum position and tilt errors with respect to a theoretical optical path is the sum of all components (optical and optomechanical) fabrication errors and components interfacing errors. They are defined as position error contributors: where is the sum of individual position error contributors from the lens up to the system global coordinate system.Table 2 displays a non-exhaustive list of possible errors sources (or contributors) to the lens position error and highlight typical error ranges expected for commercial grade components. Table 2Typical main contributors to optical element position error.
However, in practice, all forms of errors rarely occur in the same direction and at maximum value unless it is a systematic error. Therefore, a statistical approach often gives a better evaluation of the actual error stack-up. For this reason, the root-sum-squared method is often used: where is the square root of the sum of squared individual position error contributors from the lens up to the system global coordinate system.The , and position accuracy of an optomechanical mount can be directly measured with respect to a given reference system. The total position accuracy in a plane or in volume is where and are the scalar planar and volumetric position accuracies, respectively, and , , and are the components of position accuracy vector in mutually perpendicular axis. As shown in Fig. 5, the lens mounts angular errors are function of the distance between the ball contact points in the horizontal plane and depends on the lens mount base width along the vertical and lateral plane. These angular errors also generate translations of the optical element that adds to the error stack up of to the reference sphere direct contact point position error and can be described as where
Small rotations of the lens about its axis () can be neglected as first-hand approximation for lenses with symmetry of revolution. These roll angle deviations of the mount due to flatness errors, or surface irregularities at the breadboard and mount interface would be measured as a lateral displacement of the optical element (). Therefore, it is possible to extract the different position and angular errors from simple three-dimensional (3D) position sampling on an optomechanical mount. Then, for a given optomechanical mount with known lens seat position error and using Eqs. (8)–(13), it is possible to estimate the optical element position in space. 3.Mechanical Robustness ConsiderationsThe position accuracy and repeatability can be valuable features for optomechanical mounts. However, to be able to use these optomechanical mounts and breadboards outside of the classical laboratory environment, it is safe to assume that vibrations levels are likely to be higher. The design parameters available to control and improve the vibration stability at the optomechanical mount level, are the mount stiffness () and mass (), in other words, its stiffness to weight ratio. The optomechanical mount response to external vibration depends on the part’s intrinsic natural resonance frequency () as shown in Eq. (14). The mount geometry is determinant in the control of this vibration response. This can be demonstrated by simplifying the optomechanical mount to a rectangular cantilever beam extruding from the breadboard surface and assuming it is rigidly fixed on it, the equation of becomes where is the mount Youngs modulus, is the mount width perpendicular to the excitation axis and beam axis, is the mount thickness in the direction of the excitation axis (assuming the excitation axis is oriented in the mount’s weakest orientation to obtain ), is the mount and lens assembly mass, and is the mount height (cantilever arm length). An optomechanical mount exposed to vibration excitation at or near its resonance frequency will amplify the amplitude of movement and acceleration to a point where holding forces to maintain an optical element could be exceeded. This can lead to optical system alignment loss. Therefore, designing the optomechanical mounts to have a high natural frequency is desirable to reduce or prevent misalignment to occur in transport.Commercial transport random vibration spectrum can range from 0 to 2000 Hz according the minimum integrity exposure of department of defence test method standard (MIL-STD-810H).9 Therefore, the design of each element of the line of optomechanical mount included finite element analysis to optimize mount geometry to obtain high natural frequencies. The rationale behind the selection of this specific standard is, since these optomechanical mount have been designed to be used for several types of industrial applications, the minimum integrity exposure englobes most of worldwide shipping transportation vehicles. 4.Experimental ValidationThe position accuracy and the position repeatability have two different implications when it comes to practical use. The position accuracy refers to the possibility to expect or predict where any optical element will be in space with respect to a theoretical (or perfect) layout. The repeatability refers to the ability to fall back in the same position for a given layout if an element needs to be removed and replaced. Different experiments were performed to assess the achievable performance of the line of optomechanical mounts and breadboards:
Material and environment: For the experiments involving dimension probing, the experiments are performed in a clean room environment complying to ISO N class 7 standard10 with a stable temperature of . Optical and environmental testing is performed under normal laboratory conditions (ISO N class 8 to 9). Each experiment was performed over a short period of time extending from a few hours to less than a week. Environmental conditions in the laboratories during these experiments were stable. The components tested in the experiments are all from the line of breadboards and mounts named QuickPOZ,11 which include the position reference chamfers on each breadboard mounting hole and edge mount centering technology. Throughout the test campaign the components used were:
Included optical components: Other optical hardware used included:
4.1.Reference Spheres Position Accuracy and Repeatability ExperimentTo assess the position accuracy of the breadboard’s conical reference feature in combination with the reference spheres, experiment 1 is divided in two parts:
The reference ball position accuracy and repeatability test over the breadboard surface consists in placing different reference balls in multiple positions on the breadboard, repeating the ball insertion and removal multiple times for each position, measuring the ball center position each time. The probing is executed with a Mitutoyo model BRT-710 Coordinate Measuring Machine (CMM) and the data acquisition and post-processing is done with Polyworks Metrology Suite software.12 The CMM is a precision position probing arm mounted on a three-axis motorized gantry. CMMs are metrology machines primarily used for quality control to verify dimensional conformance of fabricated goods. The end probe of the CMM arm is a calibrated sphere mounted on a force feedback extension rod. The CMM’s probe makes small controlled contacts with the target component to measure the position coordinates at each contact point. By contacting multiple points on the reference sphere mounted in the breadboard’s conical interface, it is possible to determine the reference sphere’s center in 3D. Method: The breadboard is placed and secured in position on the CMM’s granite table. The first sphere inserted on the breadboard is probed and its center serves as the coordinate system origin. Two other spheres are inserted on the breadboard and their centers serves as reference points to define the experiment reference axis directions. Using Polyworks software and a 3D computer-aided design (CAD) model of the experiment as a nominal reference, a local coordinate system is defined with the probed reference points on the breadboard and a step by step probing sequence is defined. Figure 6 shows the general reference ball layout and axis definition for the experiment 1. At each position, the operator manually places the reference sphere on the predetermined position on breadboard and requests the CMM to probe the reference sphere’s position for determining the relative position error. After the probing is completed, the sphere is removed, and the process is repeated for the next positions on the breadboard. Experiment 1a: The tested breadboard dimensions are with M4 threaded holes and positioning chamfers at a 12.5-mm spacing. For each reference ball insertion, the sphere’s center position is determined by the average calculation of 10 probed points around its external diameter. The position accuracy () and orientation accuracy () of the ball in a 3D space is evaluated as where is the theoretical position of the ball defined in the CAD model and is the measured position, and is the theoretical orientation of the ball defined in the CAD model and is the measured orientation. However, in this experiment the three rotations of the sphere are not useful due its symmetry of revolution and the height ( axis) is not useful in the context of the breadboard positioning features. This leaves only the and coordinates in the experiment 1 . The standard deviation is computed over the total accuracy measurements made along each axis.Experiment 1b: The reference ball assembly repeatability is evaluated by measuring an initial position and by comparing it with multiple assembly-removal operations on the same breadboard grid position. The process is then repeated at multiple locations on the breadboard. The position repeatability ) and angular repeatability () are where and are the initial measured position and angles respectively for a given tested position (), and and are the repeated position and rotations measurement (1 to ) for its given position. Once again, in this case only the and values are useful for the experiment thus only those values will be monitored.4.2.Optomechanical Mount Position Accuracy and Repeatability ExperimentExperiment 2: To assess the position accuracy of the optomechanical mount, the experiment is also divided in two parts:
The optomechanical mount accuracy and repeatability tests performed with the same principle than in experiment 1, equations (16 to 19), but measurements are made in three axes instead of two and two rotations . The optomechanical mount is inserted and removed multiple times in each position after the three reference balls are positioned properly for a specific lens mount position. For each mount insertion, the mount is installed on the breadboard and lightly pressed by hand against the three reference spheres and fixed in place with two M4 screws. The , , and positions are measured with the CMM, by probing the mount at seven distinct location for each three sides (see Figure 7). The associated tip and tilt errors are extracted from the face probing of the mount. The deviation in and axis for each mount is retrieved from the top and side probing of the optomechanical mount respectively. The axis deviation is computed at the lens center’s height from the plane formed by the four probing points on the mount face plan. For each optomechanical mount measurement, the probing is done through a programmed and automated pattern to ensure measurement consistency. 4.3.Optical Repeatability ExperimentA similar validation can be done optically by inserting and removing optical elements of a simple optical assembly one at the time. In this experiment, labeled Experiment 3, a fiber laser source is collimated through a 50-mm FL lens and sent through two folding mirrors to a 250-mm FL lens and then imaged on a pixel pitch camera, as shown in Figure 8. The imaging lens and camera combination can detect small lens and mirror movements (decenters and tilts) by measuring the beam centroid position in pixels. For a given initial beam position on the camera, each optomechanical mount is removed and reassembled using the reference balls. The beam centroid position is logged each time. The lens optical repeatability test is divided by type of optomechanical mounts (lens mount, mirror mount, and lens tubes) and by interfaces (reference spheres, and edge centering) to measure the individual and combined effect of these interfaces on the position repeatability: Lens mount 1 (L1):
Mirror mount 1 (M1):
Mirror mount 2 (M2):
Lens mount 2 (L2):
In addition to the lens self-centering functions already discussed in Sec. 4, the lens tubes are also designed to be self-centered when inserted in other mounts of the family, or in a tube to tube configuration. Tests on lens mount 2 are aimed to confirming the combined repeatability of lens and tube’s self-centering. These cases represent typical conditions in the laboratory where it is required to remove a mount or a component to access a hard to reach component nearby or to require inspection or cleaning. The centroid computation is done at 1/10’th of pixel in resolution and the system jitter was measured at . The beam centroid movement noted at the camera can be configured to different translation or angle scaling factors depending if it is a lens or a mirror and according to the focal lens ratio. Therefore, for each optical element, its specific movement can be related to beam centroid translation on the sensor: where
Lateral translations of the mirrors about the and axis (parallel to the mirror plane) do not affect the beam position on the sensor unless the displacement is wide enough to create beam clipping, which should not occur for small displacements. axis translations of the mirrors (normal to the mirror plane) create a translation of the optical axis but do not affect beam position on the sensor for small displacements and can also be neglected if no beam clipping occurs. Thus, for mirror mounts, only angular deviations will be noticeable in this experiment. Small angular deviations of the lens mounts, or of the lens in relation to its mount, will produce effects similar to the lens translation in the and axis (normal to the optical axis) and will be undistinguishable from the lens mount translations at the detector level. Lens mount translations about the axis (parallel to the optical axis) create defocus at the detector level, which would affect the spot size on the detector and should not affect the centroid position unless the spot shape on the detector is also altered. This is not expected to occur for small translations. For this reason, only translations are considered for the lens mounts in the experiment, but the measured translation can either be the result of a translation or an angular movement of the lens or a combination of both. The measured lens position deviation can be converted to an equivalent lens surface tilt () if needed, using Eq. (27): where the is or and is the optical surface radius in contact with the lens mount seat of lens 1 or 2. In this case, the radius of doublet lens 1 (surface 1) is 34.53 mm and the radius of lens 2 is 228.73 mm.The Eqs. (20)–(26) can be simplified to extract a fixed conversion factor for each optical element as shown in Table 3. It can be noted that mirror horizontal and vertical angular motions have different scaling factors. This is related to the mirror mounts being placed at 45 deg with respect to the incoming beam in one axis and at 90 deg in the other direction. The mechanical angle deviation of the mount is doubled at the camera along the sensor horizontal axis but is multiplied by in the sensor vertical axis. It should also be noted that an angular motion of M1 or M2 mirror along their axis parallel to the breadboard horizontal plane produces a coupled deviation at the camera in and . An optical modeled representing the experiment bench (Fig. 9) was generated using OpticStudio software13 and utilized to calculate this effect. As shown in Fig. 10, an angular deviation of about M2 axis will cause a beam motion at the sensor of in (vertical) but only in (horizontal). Hence, the coupling effect is small and is neglected in the analysis. 5.Experiment 4: Environmental StabilityTo extend the usefulness of breadboard optical assemblies, in addition to the position accuracy and repeatability improvements, the mechanical stability under changing environmental conditions is also an important aspect that was considered in the optomechanical mount design. It should be worth that such high accuracy mounts may withstand shipping standards. A vibration and thermal test campaign were performed with the breadboard optical assembly to verify its capacity to survive severe environmental conditions. In these experiments, an optical assembly comparable to that of the optical repeatability test is used. However, in this case, the collimated beam between the two lenses is folded five times to increase the sensitivity of the assembly to misalignment, as shown in Fig. 11. The lens combination used for the test is different to allow more space for the folding mirrors: the second lens is a shorter FL of 100 mm lens instead of the 250 mm FL of the experiment 3. The conversion factors based on Eqs 18–21 of the experiment are listed in Table 4: Table 3Experiment 3 conversion factors.
Table 4Experiment 4 conversion factors.
The breadboard assembly is cycled seven times from to and one time at for 24 h as shown in Fig. 12, without any shipping packaging, in accordance with MIL-STD-810H standard, using method 501.7 and 502.7 – Procedure I.9 The optical bench assembly was used without the shipping box for the thermal cycling. This is considered a worst-case scenario since packaging acts as a thermal insulator, which increases the time needed to reach thermal equilibrium and can possibly reducing the total excursion range viewed by the optical system in short duration exposition to extreme temperatures. For the vibration campaign a general random vibration minimum integrity exposure (Fig. 13) as per MIL-STD-810H method 514.89 of 7.7 Grms, 20 to 2000 Hz, 1 h per axis, was selected. For the purpose of the vibration test, a 1.6-mm-thick sheet metal plate was mounted on the five 12.5-mm lab posts shown in Fig. 11 to serve as an emulated top cover. The assembly was then wrapped with two layers of 12.7-mm-thick polyethylene air bubble sheets. The wrapped assembly was then placed centered in an evenly distributed 50-mm-thick layer of styrofoam nuggets inside cardboard box. The fibered laser source was disconnected from the lab setup for the packaging, and it was noted that it introduces a centroid jitter of about in the measurements. 6.Experimental ResultsThe results of the four experiments are summarized in Tables 5Table 6–7. It is important to note that the coordinate systems defined in the CMM probing experiments (experiment 1 and 2) are different than the ones defined in optical repeatability test experiments (experiment 3 and 4). Axes definition for the CMM experiments (1 and 2) do not share the same origin but do share similar axes orientations. However, experiment 3 and 4 share the same coordinate system philosophy: axis follows the optical path. Therefore, results from CMM probing and optical validations cannot be compared directly axis to axis. Table 5Experiment 1 and 2 CMM probing results.
Table 6Experiment 3 optical repeatability results.
Table 7Environmental stability results in experiment 4.
6.1.Results Experiment 1 and 2For the CMM probing experiments the, the coordinate system is fixed and aligned with the breadboard hole grid as defined in Figs. 6 and 7. The results of the Table 5—Experiment 1 and 2 CMM probing results displays the accuracy and repeatability measured in individual axis. From the results of experiment 1, it is possible to see that the position accuracy () for the reference sphere’s position is about at . From experiment 2, the results show that it is possible to achieve precise positioning of an optomechanical mount over the tested surface with values under and at () with respect to its theoretical position. The position repeatability measured is very low throughout the experiment at an average at , which is below the CMM absolute uncertainty. The CMM error envelope is within at over the measurement envelope. Therefore, the optomechanical mount repeatability cannot be ruled better than the CMM absolute error in these experiments. Although, even if it seems probable that the repeatability is better than the CMM’s uncertainty of , it will be assumed to be . It is assumed that the use of automated CMM probing is significant in the high repeatability monitored, by consistently probing the same regions of the optomechanical mounts therefore reducing the effect of surface irregularities. The angular accuracy measured in the vertical plane is (33 arc sec) at . This is slightly higher than the one measured in the horizontal plane of . This was expected since the distance between the points of contact of the reference balls on optomechanical mount in the horizontal axis is longer than the depth of the optomechanical mount in the perpendicular axis. A small deviation at the mount interface with the breadboard as a greater effect in the vertical axis than a similar deviation in the horizontal axis. 6.2.Results Experiment 3 Optical RepeatabilityThe experiment 3 results are displayed in Table 6. The axis definition of this experience the axis to be at the optical element as shown in Fig. 9 and the values should be interpreted as the optical element displacement or rotation. The magnitude of displacement measured in the optical repeatability test in the plane (perpendicular to the optical axis) is at for experiment (L2.1) and for experiment (L2.3). Considering the number of contact interfaces involved in each of this experiment sub steps, the results seems close to the repeatability per interface noted in experiment 2. It can also be noted that the two mirror mounts have slightly different behaviors, M1 at magnitude of appears to be more than two times more stable than M2 at . This is in accordance with the theory since M2 is an adjustable mount that is heavier and has more interfaces than M1, which is a fixed mount. However, it should be noted that throughout the experiment the deviations monitored were close to the centroid total jitter/uncertainty of the optical setup that was noted in the lab and no signal averaging was done. For this reason, the repeatability should not be considered better than , which would mean at least for the 50-mm lens, for the 250-mm lens, ( axis tilt), and ( axis tilt) for the mirrors. The sampling is five trials per subtest step for a total of 35 measurements Comparing to the standard lab post visual alignment case discussed in introduction, the results of experiment 1, 2, and 3 suggest that the combination of the edge centering technique with the breadboard’s conical reference features and spheres technique in this line of breadboards and optomechanical mounts have the potential to improve position accuracy of an optical element by a factor of 10. It could still be required to use adjustable mounts if the alignment is required to be lower than and to compensate for components that do not possess reference features, but in most cases, the number of adjustable mounts can be reduced thus possibly reducing total alignment time. 6.3.Results Experiment 4After the vibration campaign, the beam centroid was compared to the initial value and a total displacement amplitude of 4.2 pixels or of the centroid was observed as shown in Table 7 and no physical damage was noted. Based on conversions factors of Table 4, it could be assumed to be either a single mirror mount movement of in horizontal and in vertical or, more likely, a distributed movement over multiple mirrors for an average of and in each axis. Considering the small lateral play present around the 25.4-mm diameter mirrors used and the mirror clamping method, a small sliding of the mirror with respect to the optomechanical mount interface can produce a similar angular deviation due to surface roughness. In example, assuming the mirror mounting pads are 17.5 mm apart, a small surface irregularity of is sufficient to produce a mirror deviation. In this case, the movement is assumed to be related to the mirrors since the clamping method of mirrors may allow some sliding to occur at the mirror/mount interface whereas a lens/ring combination is less likely to produce large displacements. If the same movement is to be related to a lens decenter, then it would either be a displacement of of Lens #2 or for lens #1. However, this is assumed unlikely since the optical repeatability test results showed better repeatability values than in all cases. This would imply that a ring would have loosen, yet visual inspection of the test specimens made after the test did not show any loose component. Once again, it should be noted that the measured values are of the same amplitude than the uncertainty of the test setup. For many applications this would be considered small movements confirming that the technology is suitable to survive shipping conditions. 7.ConclusionsThis paper presented a method to passively align optomechanical assemblies by uniting edge contact mounting techniques with a new patent pending optomechanical mount referencing technique, consisting of inserting reference spheres in a laboratory breadboard configuration. The operation principle of the sphere referencing method mount was presented and some of the advantages of this positioning technique in regard of the position accuracy were presented with respect to the locating pin method along with a brief overview of the self-centering capabilities of the edge contact mounting technique. Optomechanical mounts position and angular accuracy aspects were discussed and some of the typical error sources were quantified. The line of optomechanical mounts design driving factors to improve mechanical robustness were discussed in regard of the environmental conditions expected to occur in shipping. The position accuracy, repeatability, and mechanical robustness were demonstrated by two direct CMM probing experiments and two indirect optical experiments. The position repeatability measured for the reference sphere’s positioning method, the edge contact mounting and with the optomechanical mount abutment on reference spheres were measured to be about per interface. The results show that it is possible to achieve position accuracies under than at in two dimensions, or under and at in 3D (), at the optomechanical mount level for small transportable optomechanical assemblies. In comparison, to the laboratory post visual alignment case, the results suggest that the presented line of optomechanical mount and breadboards can improve by a factor of 10 the initial positioning of optical elements. The mechanical robustness of a typical breadboard level optical system was also demonstrated for temperature range from down to and at vibration ranges typical of that what should be encountered for worldwide shipping. 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BiographyMartin Grenier is a senior optomechanical engineer with over 20 years of experience, holding a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from Laval University. He has participated in the development of complex optical systems for military, security, industrial, astronomy, medical, and aerospace applications in his career. He worked extensively in the design and qualification of laser systems (IR to DUV), telescopes, and zooms used in harsh environmental conditions. Nichola Desnoyers holds a master’s degree in optomechanical engineering and a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from Laval University. He participated in the development of more than sixty optical systems for astronomy, military, security, medical, aerospace, industrial, telecommunication, and environmental applications at INO. He is a senior optomechanical engineer with over 25 years of experience more specifically in dimensional stability, thermal management, athermal structures, and optomechanical CFRP structures. Frederic Lamontagne is a senior optomechanical engineer with over 19 years of professional experience. He has been involved in the development of complex optical systems for astronomy, space, military, medical, scientific, and industrial applications. He has authored a chapter and co-authored two chapters on optomechanical tolerance analysis and lens mounting in the second edition of the Handbook of Optomechanical Engineering. He has also authored 15 technical papers and has six awarded and five pending patents. Bruno Leduc holds a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in mechanical engineering from Laval University. He cumulated 10 years of professional experience in mechanical design, R&D, and FEA consulting. In the past five years, his work was dedicated to optomechanical design at INO, where he contributed to the development of optical systems for astronomy, military, medical, industrial, robotics, and airborne applications. His fields of expertise are optomechanical STOP analyses, dimensional stability, thermal management, and CFRP structures and adhesives. Mathieu Legros is an optomechanical engineer holding a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from Laval University. He developed expertise related to precise optical assemblies, thermal management, tolerance analysis, and athermal structures with over 13 years of professional experience related to optomechanics. He performed the design and the numerical simulations (FEA) of several types of complex optical systems for aerospace, military, astronomy, medical, security, and industrial applications. Simon Paradis received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in mechanical engineering from Laval University. His main expertise is in the field of numerical simulation (FEA & CFD analysis) and product development. He is currently working in the field of optomechanical engineering with a focus on disruptive technologies. |