Achromatic Cascade Optical System with Hybrid Lenses for
Distortion-compensated Multifocusing of Ultrashort Pulse Beams
Jun Amako and Hidetoshi Nakano
Faculty of Science and Engineering, Toyo University, 2100 Kujirai, Kawagoe, Saitama 350-8585, Japan
Keywords: Ultrafast Optics, Diffractive Optics, Hybrid Lens, Systems Design.
Abstract: We report an achromatic cascade optical system for multifocusing ultrashort pulse beams in its application
in high-precision materials processing. The challenge is to eliminate the beam-radius-dependent pulse
broadening or pulse front distortion from the arrayed pulses. We propose the inclusion of a pair of hybrid
refractive-diffractive lenses for chromatic aberration correction and dispersion management in the system.
From numerical analysis, we have realized that the hybridized system has enormous potential to improve
not only the spatial resolution but also the temporal resolution to their respective limits in generating
arrayed pulse beams. This pulse delivery system enables high-throughput material processing using
ultrashort-pulsed lasers.
1 INTRODUCTION
There has been growing interest in ultrashort-pulsed
laser for precision manufacturing. The deterministic
and reproducible nature of ultrashort pulses in light-
matter interaction is indispensable for micro and
nano-machining without thermal damages (Lenzner
et al, 1999; Chimier et al, 2011). On the other hand,
a material can be processed at multiple points
simultaneously with arrayed pulse beams to obtain a
high throughput. For arrayed irradiation, diffractive
beam splitters (DBSs) are extensively used with
nanosecond-pulsed lasers for a variety of laser-based
processes (Amako and Fujii, 2016).
A diffracted ultrashort pulse suffers chromatic
aberrations, however, due to its broad spectrum,
resulting in spatial and temporal pulse lengthening.
Such pulse broadening can be ignored by diffracting
and focusing the pulses near the optical axis but the
severely limited work areas remain challenging
(Kuroiwa et al, 2004; Hayasaki et al, 2005; Kelemen
et al, 2007; Sakakura et al, 2009; Jesacher and Booth,
2010). Although several efforts have been made to
fix the pulse distortions, temporal broadening
remains unfixed (Amako et al, 2002; Li et al, 2005;
Hasegawa and Hayasaki, 2014). Minguez-Vega et al.
proposed a diffractive-refractive lens triplet for
simultaneous compensation of spatio-temporal pulse
distortions (Minguez-Vega et al, 2006).
Multifocusing performance of the triplet was
evaluated in optical experiments (Martinez-Cuenca
et al, 2012; Torres-Peiro et al, 2013). According to
their report, it was the temporal distortion rather than
the spatial distortion restricting the outer-most angle
of pulse diffraction or the length of the beam array,
which determines the process throughput.
These prior studies motivated us to explore a
simple and practical method to design a pulse
delivery system for multifocusing ultrashort pulse
beams. We conceptualized a novel achromatic
cascade system, designed a prototype, and proved its
operation principle with 20-fs-pulses (Amako and
Nakano, 2018). Yet beam-diameter-dependent pulse
broadening or pulse front distortion was detected in
the transmitted pulses. These temporal distortions
can be minimized by narrowing the beam diameter,
but sacrificing the spatial resolution. Such parabolic
distortions are present due to the group-velocity
dispersions in the refractive lenses used in the
system and cannot be compensated by the action of
refractive lenses alone. Instead of refractive lenses,
hybrid lenses composed of a refractive and
diffractive surface can be employed for chromatic
aberration correction and dispersion management
(Stone and George, 1988; Piestun and Miller, 2001).
We here report on hybridization of the cascade
system for distortion-free multifocusing ultrashort
pulses.
Amako, J. and Nakano, H.
Achromatic Cascade Optical System with Hybrid Lenses for Distortion-compensated Multifocusing of Ultrashort Pulse Beams.
DOI: 10.5220/0007470202410247
In Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Photonics, Optics and Laser Technology (PHOTOPTICS 2019), pages 241-247
ISBN: 978-989-758-364-3
Copyright
c
2019 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
241
2 PROTOTYPE CONCEPT
Figure 1 shows the schematic of the prototype
cascade optical system. The diffractive subsystem
consists of a diffractive beam splitter (DBS) and a
diffractive lens (DL) of positive focal length. The
refractive subsystem, which is afocal, has a pair of
refractive lenses L
1
and L
2
with positive focal
lengths. These two subsystems are cascaded and a
phase plate (PP) is placed between them. Upon
entering the system, an ultrashort pulse beam is
divided by the DBS, producing a large angular
dispersion. This dispersion is the origin of chromatic
aberrations, which distorts the beam spot and
stretches the pulse.
Figure 1: Schematic configuration of the prototype
cascade system: DBS; diffractive beam splitter, DL;
diffractive lens, PP; phase plate, L
1
, L
2
; refractive lenses.
P
1
, P
2
are the intermediate plane and exit plane,
respectively.
Achromaticity of the system is the key to
simultaneous compensation of the spatio-temporal
pulse distortions. The diffractive subsystem is
designed to correct the lateral chromatic aberrations;
it forms an array of spatially identical pulse beams at
the intermediate plane, P
1
. The phase plate (PP)
eliminates the angular dispersions of the diffracted
pulse beams. The refractive subsystem is designed to
correct the longitudinal chromatic aberrations; it
generates an array of spatio-temporally identical
pulse beams at the exit plane P
2
, which is the work
area. Group delay dispersions primarily caused by
the refractive subsystem can be compensated for by
prechirping the input pulse and therefore, the
focused pulse at P
2
can be compressed back to the
initial pulse duration.
3 REMAINING ISSUE
For proof-of-principle, we designed a prototype
system and evaluated it with 20-fs-pulses by
characterizing the transmitted pulses at P
2
. In this
prototype, two lenses in the afocal subsystem were
made from E-FDS3 (HOYA), which was highly
dispersive with ν
d
= 17: ν
d
is the Abbe number
(HOYAs Official Website). Figure 2 shows the
focused beam widths plotted against detection
positions for the diffraction angles of 0.0º, 1.7º and
2.9º. The solid line in the figure represents the
theoretically predicted beam widths for a Gaussian
beam with no aberrations (M
2
= 1). The pulse beams
on-axis and off-axis were tightly focused to a
diffraction limit, 20 μm, at the focal point. From
these results, we state that the cascade system is able
to correct chromatic aberrations introduced in the
diffracted 20-fs-pulse beams.
Figure 2: Focused beam widths vs. detection position.
Solid line represents a theoretical prediction and plots are
the measured data.
Another crucial issue in the prototype system can
be identified in the time domain. Figure 3 shows the
autocorrelation signals obtained from (a) the input
pulse, (b) the focused pulse at P
2
in the prototype
with two E-FDS3 refractive lenses, and (c) the
transmitted pulse through an 8.0-mm-thick parallel
plate of E-FDS3. The signal in Fig. 3(c) was
obtained by focusing the pulse with a parabolic
mirror. The plate thickness was set equal to the total
thickness of two refractive lenses. On comparing
these signals, we observed some distinctions: The
input pulse width was 22 fs, the pulse width at the
exit of the system was 35 fs, and the pulse width
after the parallel plate was 24 fs. In addition, ripple
structures were seen on the pedestal in Fig. 3(b).
Through this observation, we understand that the
temporal distortions in Fig. 3(b) were due to the
group-velocity dispersions in the lenses, which
introduced beam-radius-dependent pulse broadening
or pulse front distortion.
Pulse front distortion, which is in proportion to
the square of the beam radius, is given by
PHOTOPTICS 2019 - 7th International Conference on Photonics, Optics and Laser Technology
242
Figure 3: Auto-correlation signals obtained (a) from the
input pulse, (b) from transmitted pulse at P
2
in the cascade
system with the E-FDS3 refractive lenses, and (c) from the
transmitted pulse after the E-FDS3 parallel plate.

 





where λ
0
is the center wavelength, ∆λ is the
wavelength bandwidth, n(λ) is the refractive index of
the lens glass, f
0
is the lens focal length at λ
0
, R is the
beam radius in the afocal system, and c is the speed
of light in vacuum. For a transform-limited pulse,
λτ
0
= 0.441λ
0
2
/c, where τ
0
is the full width at half
maximum (FWHM) of the pulse (Diels and Rudolph,
2006). As illustrated by Eq. (1), the distortion τ is
inversely proportional to τ
0
. Computed distortions
are plotted against the beam radius in Fig. 4. The
estimated distortion from the signal in Fig. 3(b) is 27
fs, as plotted in Fig. 4, where λ
0
= 780 nm, λ = ±23
nm, n
0
= 2.066 at λ
0
, f
0
= 278 mm at λ
0
, d/λ(dn/dλ) =
0.4885 μm
-2
at λ
0
, and R = 11.7 mm. Given temporal
distortions, the pulse width at P
2
can be estimated as
 
. Distortions may be negligible for a
100-fs pulse but need to be addressed for a 20-fs
pulse.
In order to eliminate such beam-radius-
dependent temporal distortions, the dispersion
management in the afocal subsystem is
indispensable. For that purpose, we have considered
a hybrid lens, which consists of a refractive lens and
a diffractive lens. As is well known, a combination
Figure 4: Computed pulse front distortions as a function of
beam radius in the afocal subsystem.
of two types of lenses can correct longitudinal
chromatic aberrations at the focus because the
aberrations presented by the two lenses are opposite
in sign. Likewise, two types of lenses, with
appropriate physical parameters, can get the phase
front and pulse front to coincide and further remove
the parabolic temporal distortions. There is a
temporal delay in the pulse front from the phase
front after passing through the refractive lens,
whereas the pulse front advances the phase front
after passing through the diffractive lens.
Although the wavelength dependence of
diffraction efficiency slightly narrows the spectral
profile of a pulse, for a 20-fs-pulse the pulse width is
scarcely affected.
4 SYSTEMS DESIGN
In design of the cascade system, the following two
conditions need to be satisfied at P
2
. Equation (1)
needs to be accepted to correct longitudinal
achromatic aberrations and Eq. (2) should be
honored to compensate for pulse front dispersions.
The two equations have some terms in common
through which space and time are entangled:
 

 


 
(2)


 


 








where f
d
is the focal length of the diffractive lens and
F is the focal length of the hybrid lens. Equation (1)
Achromatic Cascade Optical System with Hybrid Lenses for Distortion-compensated Multifocusing of Ultrashort Pulse Beams
243
was derived by using the ray matrix (Yariv and Yeh,
2003) of the cascade system and Eq. (2) was derived
by applying an analytical model of pulse
propagation time (Bor, 1988; 1989) to the system.
Formula derivation was performed in a paraxial
regime. Equations (2) and (3) hold for the off-axis
beams as well as the on-axis beam, under first-order
approximation.
Figure 5: (a) Computed chromatic aberration and (b)
computed pulse front distortion plotted against f
10
, the
refractive focal length of the hybrid lens to be designed.
For a focal length F to satisfy the above
conditions,  needs to be a positive constant
and  needs to be zero across the spectral
band of the pulse. Provided that the focal lengths of
the refractive and diffractive lenses are f
1
(λ) and f
2
(λ),
respectively, F(λ) can be expressed as F = f
1
f
2
/(f
1
+
f
2
), where the two lenses are assumed to be
sufficiently thin. f
1
(λ) and f
2
(λ) are defined by






, where the
subscript 0 represents the focal length at λ
0
. If the
focal length f
10
is picked as the design variable, the
aberration can be zero at one focal length and the
pulse front distortion can be zero at another focal
length, as shown in Fig. 5. These two focal lengths
should match; this condition can be attained by
selecting a type of glass with a low dispersion degree
or a high Abbe number.
Figure 6: Dispersion properties of a designed hybrid lens.
(a) Focal length F, (b) first derivative of F, and (c) second
derivative of F plotted against wavelength, respectively.
5 RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS
Assuming a pulse width of τ
0
= 20 fs with λ
0
= 780
nm and ∆λ = ±23 nm, we searched for a focal length
F, which satisfies both the conditions (1) and (2), by
scanning the focal length f
10
.
Other set conditions
were the incident beam width of 5.0 mm (2R = 15
mm), f
d0
= 50 mm, and F
0
= 150 mm. As an example,
when fused silica
(ν
d
= 69) is selected as lens
material, we found f
10
= 133 mm and f
20
= 1144 mm
for z = 0.0 mm using Eq. (2); we computed τ =
PHOTOPTICS 2019 - 7th International Conference on Photonics, Optics and Laser Technology
244
0.87 fs and then τ = 20 fs from Eq. (3). The effective
Abbe number (Harm et al, 2014) of this hybrid lens
was calculated as 18. Figure 6 shows the dispersion
properties of the designed hybrid lens. F, ,
and  are plotted as a function of
wavelength in Fig. 6 (a), (b), and (c), respectively.
As illustrated by Fig. 6 (b),  has a minimum
in the spectral range of the pulse. Accordingly,
 comes close to zero around the center
wavelength of the pulse, thus nearly eliminating the
pulse front distortions for  = 0, as is seen from Eq.
(3).
In the prototype, a pair of refractive lenses made
from E-FDS3 (ν
d
= 17) were employed, for which
we found F
0
= f
10
= 278 mm (f
20
= ) for z = 0.0
mm using Eq. (2) and we obtained ∆τ = 39 fs with
2R = 28 mm and thus τ = 44 fs using Eq. (3).
In this example design, there was a small gap
between the two f
10
values: one for zero aberration
and the other for zero distortion. That gap was filled
by selecting a type of glass that was much less
dispersive than fused silica, for example, FCD100
with ν
d
= 95, further reducing the temporal distortion
∆τ. However, we preferred to use fused silica
because of its compatibility with dry-etching
processes that we would rely on in fabrication of the
diffractive surface of a hybrid lens.
To verify the effects of the designed hybrid lens,
we conducted numerical analysis to study the
behaviors of the transmitted pulse. Computed focal
position deviations or longitudinal chromatic
aberrations at P
2
are plotted against the wavelength
in Fig. 7. The aberrations were computed by
applying the ray matrix of the cascade system. The
designed hybrid lens with 150-mm-focal length
allowed the transmitted pulse to focus at P
2
with a
deviation of 40 μm across the wavelength range of
780 nm ± 23 nm (solid line). In contrast, a refractive
singlet made from fused silica presented a lot of
longitudinal aberrations with a deviation of ±1.2 mm
across the wavelength range of interest (broken line).
Further, computed pulse front distortions are
plotted against the beam radius in Fig. 8. Distortions
were computed using Eq. (3). Employing a pair of
the designed hybrids kept the distortions sufficiently
small with increasing beam radius (solid line),
whereas employing a pair of the refractive lenses
made using E-FDS3 increased the distortions with
increasing beam radius (broken line).
From these results, we conclude that the hybrid
lens is able to compensate for spatio-temporal distor-
tions introduced by splitting and focusing ultrashort
pulse beams. In addition, a large diffractive dispersion
inherent in a hybrid, lens offers a small footprint of
Figure 7: Computed chromatic aberrations at P
2
(in Fig. 1)
against the wavelength. Solid line is for the cascade
system with the designed hybrid lenses and broken line is
for the cascade system with the fused silica refractive
lenses.
Figure 8: Computed pulse front distortions at P
2
(in Fig. 1)
against the beam radius in the afocal subsystem. Solid line
is for the cascade system with the designed hybrid lenses
and broken line is for the cascade system with the E-FDS3
refractive lenses.
the cascade system. The expected length of the
hybridized system is 700 mm, whereas the current
system is 1212 mm long. Small footprint may reduce
constraints on machine layouts of the cascaded
configuration.
To construct the hybrid lens, a plano-convex lens
and a diffractive lens can be produced independently
and then can be combined by optical contact
technique. This kind of binding method, which uses
no adhesive, avoids affecting the quality of
transmitted pulses. There is no particularly stringent
requirement in fabrication of the hybrid lens, except
for the focal length of its refractive surface, f
10
. The
error tolerance of f
10
is expected to be < 1% for
Achromatic Cascade Optical System with Hybrid Lenses for Distortion-compensated Multifocusing of Ultrashort Pulse Beams
245
sufficiently small chromatic aberrations. Stock
lenses usually have focal length errors of 1-2%. The
focal length f
10
should be fixed by prioritizing the
chromatic aberration over the pulse front distortion,
because the latter is much less sensitive to the focal
length error.
The proposed pulse delivery system will be in
operation with both temperature and humidity
controlled for a stable pulse generation. The optical
elements used in the system are made from
thermally stable glasses, such as fused silica, which
should be transparent over the wavelength range of
780 nm ± 23 nm for 20-fs-pulses.
6 CONCLUSIONS
We have proposed the use of hybrid lenses, instead
of refractive lenses, in an achromatic cascade optical
system that we developed for multifocusing
ultrashort pulse beams. We have realized through
numerical analysis that by constructing the afocal
subsystem with a pair of hybrid lenses, each
composed of a refractive lens and a diffractive lens,
spatial and temporal distortions can be compensated
for a 20-fs-pulse beam. Using this hybridized
cascade system, an ultrashort pulse beam can be
multifocused in significantly large array dimensions,
say, 5.0 mm across, while high resolutions are
accomplished in both space and time. The future
work is to fabricate a hybrid lens and validate its
effectiveness through experiments with 20-fs-pulses.
This pulse delivery system enables high-throughput
material-processing using ultrashort-pulsed lasers.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by the Amada Foundation
under grant AF-2017215.
REFERENCES
Lenzner, M., Kruger, J., Kautek, W., and Krausz, F.,
“Precision laser ablation of dielectrics in the 10-fs
regime,” Appl. Phys. A 68, 369371 (1999).
Chimier, B., Uteza, O., Sanner, N., Sentis, M., Itina, T.,
Lassonde, P., Legare, F., Vidal, F., and Kieffer, J. C.,
“Damage and ablation threshold of fused-silica in
femtosecond regime,” Phys. Rev. B 84, 094104
0941049 (2011).
Amako, J. and Fujii, E., “Beam delivery system with a
non-digitized diffractive beam splitter for laser drilling
of silicon,” Optics and Lasers in Eng. 77, 17 (2016)
and the references cited therein.
Kuroiwa, Y., Takeshima, N., Narita, Y., Tanaka, S., and
Hirao, K., “Arbitrary micropatterning method in
femtosecond laser microprocessing using diffractive
optical elements,” Opt. Express 12, 19081915 (2004).
Hayasaki, Y., Sugimoto, T., Takita, A., and Nishida, N.,
Variable holographic femtosecond laser processing
by use of a spatial light modulator,” Appl. Phys. Lett.
87, 031101031103 (2005).
Kelemen, L., Valkai, S., and Ormos, P., “Parallel
photopolymerisation with complex light patterns
generated by diffractive optical elements,” Opt.
Express 15, 1448814497 (2007).
Sakakura, M., Sawano, T., Shimotsuma, Y., Miura, K.,
and Hirao, K., Parallel drawing of multiple bent
optical waveguides by using a spatial light modulator,
Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 48, 126507126511 (2009).
Jesacher, A. and Booth, M. J., “Parallel direct laser
writing in three dimensions with spatially dependent
aberration correction,” Opt. Express 18, 2109021099
(2010).
Amako, J., Nagasaka, K., and Kazuhiro, N., “Chromatic-
distortion compensation in splitting and focusing of
femtosecond pulses by use of a pair of diffractive
optical elements,” Opt. Lett. 27, 969971 (2002).
Li, G., Zhou, C., and Dai, E., “Splitting of femtosecond
laser pulses by using a Dammann grating and
compensating grating,” J. Opt. Soc. Am. A 22, 767
772 (2005).
Hasegawa, S. and Hayasaki, Y., “Dynamic control of
spatial wavelength dispersion in holographic
femtosecond laser processing,” Opt. Lett. 39, 478481
(2014).
Minguez-Vega, G., Lancis, J., Caraquitena, J., Torres-
Company, V., and Andres, P., “High spatiotemporal
resolution in multifocal processing with femtosecond
laser pulses,” Opt. Lett. 31, 26312633 (2006).
Martinez-Cuenca, R., Mendoza-Yero, O., Alonso, B., Sola,
I. J., Minguez-Vega, G., and Lancis, J., “Multibeam
second-harmonic generation by spatiotemporal
shaping of femtosecond pulses,” Opt. Lett. 7, 957959
(2012).
Torres-Peiro, S., Gonzalez-Ausejo, J., Mendoza-Yero, O.,
Minguez-Vega, G., Angres, P., and Lancis, J.,
“Parallel laser micromachining based on diffractive
optical elements with dispersion compensated
femtosecond pulses,” Opt. Express 21, 3183031835
(2013).
Amako, J. and Nakano, H., Distortion-compensated
multifocusing of ultrashort pulse beams using cascade
optical system, Appl. Opt. 57, 3341 (2018).
Stone, T. and George, N., Hybrid diffractive-refractive
lenses and achromats, Appl. Opt. 27, 29602971
(1988).
Piestun, R., and Miller, D. A. B., Spatiotemporal control
of ultrashort optical pulses by refractive-diffractive-
dispersive structured optical elements, Opt. Lett. 26,
13731375 (2001).
PHOTOPTICS 2019 - 7th International Conference on Photonics, Optics and Laser Technology
246
Hoya’s Official Website, http://www.hoya-
opticalworld.com/english/datadownload/index.html.
Diels, J.C.and Rudolph, W., Ultrashort Laser Pulse
Phenomena, 2nd ed. (Elsevier, 2006), p.10.
Yariv, Y. and Yeh, P., Optical Waves in Crystals (John
Wiley & Sons, 2003), p.34.
Bor, Z., Distortion of femtosecond laser pulses in lenses
and lens systems, J. Mod. Opt. 35, 19071918 (1988).
Bor, Z., Distortion of femtosecond laser pulses in lenses,
Opt. Lett. 14, 119121 (1989).
Harm, W., Roider, C., jesacher, A., Bernet, S., and Ritsch-
Marte, M., Dispersion tuning with a varifocal
diffractive-refractive hybrid lens, Opt. Express 22,
5260-5269 (2014).
Achromatic Cascade Optical System with Hybrid Lenses for Distortion-compensated Multifocusing of Ultrashort Pulse Beams
247