4.7 Article

Electrohydrodynamic printing of a dielectric elastomer actuator and its application in tunable lenses

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.compositesa.2021.106461

Keywords

Smart materials; Polymer-matrix composites (PMCs); Elasticity; Optical properties/techniques

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51703108]
  2. Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation, China [ZR2017BEM042]
  3. Shandong Provincial Key Research and Development Program, China [2019GGX102071]
  4. Shandong Taishan Youth Scholar Program

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Inspired by the architecture of the human eye, a tunable optical lens with a fully 3D printed inhomogeneous structure was successfully fabricated, exhibiting a 29% change in focal length under dynamic driving voltage control. The lens displayed excellent stability when the focal length was tuned for 200 cycles, mimicking the auto adjusting principle of the human eye and showing potential applications in various fields such as imaging and bifocal technology.
Optical lenses driven by dielectric elastomer (DE) actuators with tunable focal lengths are presented here. They are inspired by the architecture of the crystalline lens and the ciliary muscle of the human eye and have prompted a growing interest. The most commonly used DEs in tunable lenses have often required highly transparent films and also the need to encapsulate clear liquid silicone to act as the lens. There is a restriction on the properties of the tunable lens imposed by materials limitations. Here, the fabrication of a fully 3D printed tunable lens with an inhomogeneous structure is described. It exhibited a 29% change in focal length from 33.6 mm to 26.1 mm under a dynamic driving voltage signal control. Furthermore, it displayed excellent stability when the focal length was tuned from far to near (30.1 mm to 25.3 mm) for 200 cycles. The tunable lens obtained mimics the working principle of the human eye in auto adjusting the focal length and has evident potential applications in imaging, information storage, beam steering and bifocal technology.

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