Abstract
The Fresnel lens is an optical system consisting of a series of concentric diamond grooves. One surface of the lens is smooth, while the other is engraved with concentric circles of increasing size. Optical interference, diffraction, and sensitivity to the angle of incidence are used to design the microstructure on the lens surface. The imaging of the optical surface depends on its curvature. By reducing the thickness of the lens, light can still be focused at the same focal point as with a thicker lens. Previously, lenses, including Fresnel lenses, were made of glass due to material limitations. However, the traditional grinding and polishing methods for making Fresnel lenses were not only time-consuming, but also labour-intensive. As a result, costs were high. Later, a thermal pressing process using metal moulds was invented. However, the high surface tension of glass caused some detailed parts to be deformed during the pressing process, resulting in unsatisfactory Fresnel lens performance. In addition, the complex manufacturing process and unstable processing accuracy hindered mass production. This resulted in high prices and limited applications for Fresnel lenses. These factors prevented the widespread use of early Fresnel lenses. In contrast, polymer materials offer advantages, such as low density, light weight, high strength-to-weight ratios, and corrosion resistance. They are also cost effective and available in a wide range of grades. Polymer materials have gradually replaced optical glass and other materials in the manufacture of micro-optical lenses and other miniaturised devices. Therefore, this study focuses on investigating the manufacturing parameters of Fresnel lenses in the injection moulding process. We compare the quality of products obtained by two-stage injection moulding, injection compression moulding, and IMD (in-mould decoration) techniques. The results show that the optimal method is IMD, which reduces the nodal displacement on the Fresnel lens surface and improves the transmission performance. To achieve this, we first establish a Kriging model to correlate the process parameters with optimisation objectives, mapping the design parameters and optimisation objectives. Based on the Kriging model, we integrate the NSGA-II algorithm with the predictive model to obtain the Pareto optimal solutions. By analysing the Pareto frontier, we identify the best process parameters. Finally, it is determined that the average nodal displacement on the Fresnel surface is 0.393 mm, at a holding pressure of 320.35 MPa and a melt temperature of 251.40 °C. Combined with IMD technology, product testing shows a transmittance of 95.43% and an optimisation rate of 59.64%.
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