Skip to sections.
MLA (microlens array)
One of these components is the microlens array, or MLA.
An array of tiny lenses (usually convex), only several dozen to several hundred μm in diameter, are formed on the surface of an optical element to create an MLA. Applications for these elements as key components in optical fiber systems for parallel processing of optical signals are growing rapidly.
Nikon fabricates each of these individual microlenses precisely to an aspherical shape.
DOE (diffractive optical element)
Another important precision optical element is the DOE (diffractive optical element).
Standard lenses change the direction of light through refraction, but DOE changes the light path through diffraction.
Today, blazed gratings, a type of DOE, are attracting considerable interest for a special characteristic: they concentrate all incident light toward a specific direction (a specific diffractive order).
Surface of DOE
The surfaces of micro blazed gratings manufactured by Nikon have extremely small lines, with a sawtooth-shaped cross-section, ruled on them. The rules are only between several dozen and several hundred micrometers crosswise, which demands extremely fine microfabrication technology.
These devices are expected to play a vital role in the continuing development of information and communications, especially in the fast-growing realm of optical fiber communications.
Renewed April 2007