Printing, characterizing, and assessing transparent 3D printed lenses for optical imaging

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Abstract

High-quality lens production has involved subtractive manufacturing methods for centuries. These methods demand specialist equipment and expertise that often render custom high-grade glass optics inaccessible. A low-cost, accessible, and reproducible method is developed to manufacture high-quality three dimensional (3D) printed lenses using consumer-grade technology. Various planoconvex lenses are produced using a consumer-grade 3D printer and low-cost spin coating setup, and printed lenses are compared to commercial glass counterparts. A range of mechanical and optical methods are introduced to determine the surface quality and curvature of 3D printed lenses. Amongst others, high-resolution interference reflection microscopy methods are used to reconstruct the convex surface of printed lenses and quantify their radius of curvature. The optical throughput and performance of 3D printed lenses are assessed using optical transmissivity measurements and classical beam characterization methods. It is determined that 3D printed lenses have comparable curvature and performance to commercial glass lenses. Finally, the application of 3D printed lenses is demonstrated for brightfield transmission microscopy, resolving sub-cellular structures over a 2.3 mm field-of-view. The high reproducibility and comparable performance of 3D printed lenses present great opportunities for additive manufacturing of bespoke optics for low-cost rapid prototyping and improved accessibility to high-quality optics in low-resource settings.
Original languageEnglish
Article number2400043
Number of pages14
JournalAdvanced Materials Technologies
Volume9
Issue number15
Early online date7 May 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 7 Aug 2024

Funding

The Authors would like to thank Dr. Ross Scrimgeour (Institute for Cancer Research, UK) for his helpful comments on the IRM analysis code, Mr. Rian MacDonnchadha (University of Glasgow, UK) for his insights on 3D printing instrumentation, and Miss Kay Polland for her assistance with figure preparation. The schematics and workflow presented in Figures 1 and 5 were prepared using BioRender.com (Licence Number: SR25JKZ3PC). L.M.R., S.F., and W.B.A. were funded by the Leverhulme Trust. J.C. and R.B. were funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (grant EP/S032606/1, studentship EP/T517938/1) and the UK Royal Academy of Engineering (Engineering for Development Fellowship scheme RF1516/15/8). B.W. was funded by a Royal Microscopical Society Summer Studentship. L.C. and L.D.W. were funded by an EPSRC iCASE studentship (EP/Y528833/1). G.M. was funded by The Medical Research Council, MR/K015583/1, and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, BB/P02565X/1 and BB/T011602/1.

Keywords

  • open microscopy
  • additive manufacturing
  • optics

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