Principle and Applications of Microlens Arrays

I. Fundamental Principles

Microlens arrays (MLAs) are optical components comprising numerous miniature lenses arranged in specific patterns (e.g., hexagonal close packing or rectangular grid) on substrates. Their core functionality relies on individual lenslet's light manipulation:

 

Beam Splitting Principle:

Each microlens acts as an independent optical channel, dividing incident beam into sub-beams that form corresponding spot arrays at the focal plane. Key parameters include:

 

Focal length (f)

 

Aperture diameter (D)

 

Fill factor (>90% for high performance)

 

Wavefront Modulation:

Precise control of lenslet profiles (spherical/aspheric) enables phase modulation, which is fundamental for Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensors.

 

Light Field Sampling:

In plenoptic imaging, MLAs spatially sample angular light information to enable digital refocusing and 3D reconstruction.

 

II. Key Specifications

Pitch size: 10μm-1mm typical

 

Surface accuracy: <λ/4@632.8nm

 

Focal length uniformity: <±2% variation

 

Transmission: >95% with AR coatings

 

III. Major Applications

Advanced Imaging

 

Light field cameras (e.g., Lytro)

 

Confocal microscopy (sub-μm resolution)

 

Computational imaging techniques

 

Optoelectronic Displays

 

Laser projection (speckle reduction)

 

AR/VR near-eye displays (eyebox expansion)

 

Integral imaging (true 3D displays)

 

Laser Engineering

 

Beam homogenization (diode laser coupling)

 

Multi-focus parallel processing

 

Free-space optical communications

 

Emerging Fields

 

Quantum optics (single-photon detection)

 

Biochips (high-throughput screening)

 

ToF sensor optimization

 

IV. Fabrication Methods

Photoresist reflow process

 

Gray-scale lithography

 

Nanoimprint lithography

 

Laser direct writing

 

V. Development Trends

Freeform array configurations

 

Multi-level hybrid structures

 

Tunable MLAs (MEMS/liquid crystal)

 

Metalens-based MLAs (subwavelength features)



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