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An optical homogenizer is an optical component that makes the intensity profile of a light beam more uniform. This means that local intensity variations in the beam profile are eliminated, and the overall envelope of the beam becomes smooth.
Homogenization is done by means of diffusing the light at controlled angles, scrambling the phase and creating a controlled divergence. Each point on the wavefront of the beam thus becomes a source with diverging angles, and the overlapping of these points at the far field creates a more uniform intensity pattern.
This does not mean there cannot be speckle, or high frequency noise, inside the beam profile- for highly temporally coherent sources, overlapping the beams results in dips in the intensity due to interference effect. For less coherent sources, such as high M2 lasers or LEDS, the overlapping does not result in strong interreference, and the intensity shape achieved by the optical homogenizer becomes smooth. The precise shape of the intensity envelope is determined by the homogenizer definition – As a rule, there are several types.
There are in general two groups of homogenizers, the random scattering type vs. the controlled scattering type.
A laser beam homogenizer is almost always of a controlled scattering type, as the gaussian output of random diffusers is not optimal for most laser processes and applications.
As stated, there are three main groups of diffusers used for laser homogenization.
It is important to keep in mind the homogenizer definition is system related – a component that acts as a dot array generator (diffractive multi-spot or micro lens array) can work as a homogenizer, by using defocus or reducing beam size.
The optical homogenizer definition is as follows: a homogenizer is an optical component that makes the beam propagated through it more uniform at the far field.
A homogenizer works by scrambling the phase of the beam passing through it, scattering the beam hitting it so that each point on the beam front is scattered over many angles and overlaps the scattering from other points. This overlapping of creates a uniform intensity profile.
In the lower end, there are random scattering diffusers such as ground glass and opal glass diffusers. These make only gaussian profiles and are mostly used in illumination. In the high-end are beam shaping diffusers, that can generate flat- top distributions and any desired shapes.
Design and Manufacture of Diffractive Optical Elements for high power lasers
DESIGN & MANUFACTURE OF DIFFRACTIVE OPTICAL ELEMENTS
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