Abstract

Irregular lenses are commonly employed in various beam shaping, imaging, and other optical applications. They require secondary processing to meet specific design and assembly criteria. Bessel beam lasers have gained popularity for their ability to efficiently separate hard-brittle materials owing to their high processing quality and speed. However, the complex surface of irregular lenses creates challenges such as refraction and scattering, which impede the laser beam’s ability to form a laser center lobe inside the material. This paper proposes an innovative technique called immersion laser separation (ILS), where an irregular lens is immersed in a refractive index matching medium to create a compound with a uniform refractive index. This approach mitigates the impact of surface complexity on the optical path of the Bessel beam. The separation of a fast axis collimator (FAC) by ILS is used as an example to test the proposed technique. The distribution characteristics of the Bessel beam light field inside the lens material under different refractive index were investigated to find that the laser consistently forms a laser center lobe inside the material during cutting when the matching deviation is small. This results in a modified area that covers the entire surface. The maximum cutting speed can reach 50 mm/s, the cutting surface roughness is less than 700 nm, and the technique produces no chips or micro-cracks, ensuring uniformly high-quality separation. Experimental and simulation results are in close agreement, suggesting that the proposed technique is effective for the efficient, high-quality cutting of irregular lenses.

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