Greetings, from what I have read the purpose of a collimated lens is to organize light waves into a parallel fashion. Do these lenses also focus light waves into a finite point smaller than the lens itself given varying distances from the diode? If so I am curious to hear anyone's experience with this lens: aixiz.com StoreFront. From what I understand other sites such as this one: Laser Diode Mounting Kits, Heatsink and Collimating Lens Holder - Optima provide information regarding the focused beam size given a specific diode in test. Unfortunately there is a $100 min order and the lenses are designed for 780 nm wavelengths. I am looking for a high quality lens for use with a 1 watt 808 nm diode that can create a focused beam less than or equal to 100 microns (.1 mm). Sorry for all the text, I would be very appreciative of any guidance.
The top lens is considerably cheaper and is threaded which might be pretty handy if I can find a module with the same threads. I plan on giving their tech guys a call on Monday.
Anyone else out there with a different suggestion?
I think I may have found the answer to my first question, from Thor Labs:
"Single spherical elements are typically not capable of achieving such a small spot size. Spherical aberration is the limiting factor rather than the diffraction limit. Because the aspheric lenses are corrected to eliminate the spherical aberration, only diffraction limits the size of the focal spot."