Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9699582 | Optics and Lasers in Engineering | 2005 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
Replication technology is playing an increasingly important role in the production of optical microsystems and micro-optical elements. Hot embossing, injection moulding and UV-embossing all can produce high-quality optical elements in very cost-effective processes. New sol-gel materials allow the combination of replication with lithography to leave selected areas material-free for sawing and bonding. The development of wafer-scale replication technology using UV-curable sol-gel and polymer materials enables refractive and diffractive micro-optical elements as well as micro-mechanical alignment features to be replicated directly onto glass substrates or onto semiconductor device wafers. Grating nanostructures with linewidths less than 100Â nm have been replicated into polymer and sol-gel materials for the cost-effective fabrication of large area subwavelength structures for applications such as polarisers and buried grating security features.
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Authors
Michael T. Gale, Christiane Gimkiewicz, Samuel Obi, Marc Schnieper, Jürgen Söchtig, Hans Thiele, Susanne Westenhöfer,