Chromatic Dispersion Compensation in a Fresnel Lens by Means of a Diffraction Grating

Date Published
08/1989
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Author
LBL Report Number
LBL-27950
Abstract

A Fresnel lens imaging performance can be seriously impaired by chromatic dispersion which typically doubles the diameter of the focused sun image in a solar concentrator. This problem can be alleviated by means of a molded diffraction grating whose diffraction-induced dispersion offsets and substantially cancels the lens intrinsic refractive index dispersion. The grating lines would comprise a second tier of small-scale, Fresnel-type facets superimposed on the lens facets, with a typical grating facet height of about 40 micro-inches and a facet width ranging from about 1 milli-inch at the edge of the lens to around 5 or 10 milli-inches near the center. In its primary intended application the grating would function in a core daylighting system to improve the optical performance of a collector which focuses direct sunlight into fiber optic couplers. For this application chromatic dispersion would be reduced by an order of magnitude with only a 2% loss in optical efficiency.

Proceedings Title
SPIE Optical Materials Technology for Energy Efficiency and Solar Conversion Conf. XIII
Conference Name
SPIE Optical Materials Technology for Energy Efficiency and Solar Conversion Conf. XIII
Year of Publication
1989
Conference Location
San Diego, CA
Custom 1
<p>Windows and Daylighting Group</p>
Organizations
Research Areas
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