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Conical Groove Plano-Concave (PCV) Fresnel Lenses

Aspherically Contoured Fresnel Lenses

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  • Negative Focal Length
  • Acrylic Substrate
  • Square and Rectangular Options

A Fresnel lens replaces the curved surface of a conventional lens with a series of concentric grooves, molded into the surface of a thin, lightweight plastic sheet. The grooves act as individual refracting surfaces, like tiny prisms when viewed in cross section, bending parallel rays in a very close approximation to a common focal length. Because the lens is thin, very little light is lost by absorption. Fresnel lenses are a compromise between efficiency and image quality. High groove density allows higher quality images, while low groove density yields better efficiency (as needed in light gathering applications). In infinite conjugate systems, the grooved side of the lens should face the longer conjugate.

Fresnel lenses are most often used in light gathering applications, such as condenser systems or emitter/detector setups. Fresnel lenses can also be used as magnifiers or projection lenses; however, due to the high level of distortion, this is not recommended.

Common Specifications

Dimensional Tolerance (inches):
±0.05
Thickness Tolerance (%):
±40
Substrate:
Acrylic
Coating:
Uncoated
Wavelength Range (nm):
400 - 1100
Index of Refraction (nd):
1.49
Transmission (%):
85 (Typical)
Operating Temperature (°C):
≤80

Products

 Dimensions (inches)  Dia. (mm) EFL (inches) CT (inches)  Groove Density (grooves/inch)   Compare  Stock Number  Price Buy
- 463.55 -18.00 0.11 143.00
6.7 x 6.7 - -3.00 0.06 100.00
2.0 x 2.0 - -0.85 0.06 200.00

Technical Information

Resources

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Fresnel Lens Review

Fresnel lenses are composed of a series of concentric grooves etched into one side of a sheet of plastic. Fresnel lenses are unlike typical spherical or aspherical optical lenses.

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Fresnel lens

How to Determine Magnification of an Optical Lens Setup

When doing basic imaging, how do you determine the magnification an optical lens will provide?

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How to Form an Image with an Optical Lens Setup

Although a common misconception, individual optical lenses do not always form an image when the object plane is placed a focal length away from the lens.

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