The performance of as-built optical instruments strongly depends on thermal and structural loads, since these boundary conditions can affect the geometry of optical surfaces. Variations of temperature influence the volume, and the shape, of the structure proportionally to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the material, while mechanical loads, like gravity, may induce deformations on the optical elements according to the set of applied constraints. Those effects can introduce aberrations that degrade the performance of the optical system. Since software for optical and thermo-structural analysis are usually different, a coupling methodology between these two fields of physics is needed. This is a step-by-step procedure through many platforms. In this work, the procedure devised and used by the authors will be presented. At first, a thermo-mechanical analysis (depending on the loads involved) has to be performed, in order to obtain the final deformed geometry of the optical structure; COMSOL Multiphysics is the finite element solver (FEM) used for these analyses. Then an output data file, containing the coordinates of points belonging to the optical surface, can be generated. The output data are elaborated by a MATLAB routine that allows to convert the set of points into an n-th polynomial expression that best fits the surface data. The fitted polynomial surface is hence imported in ZEMAX ray-tracing software to study the optical performances of the system and the effects of thermo-mechanical loads.

Methodology for the analysis of a thermo-mechanically deformed optical system

Nordera S.;Chioetto P.;Zuppella P.;Da Deppo V.
2021

Abstract

The performance of as-built optical instruments strongly depends on thermal and structural loads, since these boundary conditions can affect the geometry of optical surfaces. Variations of temperature influence the volume, and the shape, of the structure proportionally to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the material, while mechanical loads, like gravity, may induce deformations on the optical elements according to the set of applied constraints. Those effects can introduce aberrations that degrade the performance of the optical system. Since software for optical and thermo-structural analysis are usually different, a coupling methodology between these two fields of physics is needed. This is a step-by-step procedure through many platforms. In this work, the procedure devised and used by the authors will be presented. At first, a thermo-mechanical analysis (depending on the loads involved) has to be performed, in order to obtain the final deformed geometry of the optical structure; COMSOL Multiphysics is the finite element solver (FEM) used for these analyses. Then an output data file, containing the coordinates of points belonging to the optical surface, can be generated. The output data are elaborated by a MATLAB routine that allows to convert the set of points into an n-th polynomial expression that best fits the surface data. The fitted polynomial surface is hence imported in ZEMAX ray-tracing software to study the optical performances of the system and the effects of thermo-mechanical loads.
2021
Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
9781510645486
9781510645493
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3405559
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