Title of Invention

A OPHTHALMIC LENS COMPRISING A SPHERICAL POWER.

Abstract An ophthalmic lens, comprising a spherical power F, a diffractive element comprising a first spherical power FD and a refractive element comprising a second spherical power Fr wherein the diffractive element comprises a material having an Abbe number of about 30 to about 60, wherein: and wherein Vr is the Abbe number of the refractive element of the lens and VD is an effective Abbe number of the diffractive element of the lens.
Full Text OPHTHALMIC LENSES WITH REDUCED CHROMATIC ABERRATION
Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to ophthalmic lenses. In particular, the
invention is directed to spectacle lenses in which chromatic aberration is reduced.
Background of the Invention
The use of ophthalmic lenses for the correction of ametropia is well known.
In the manufacture of spectacle lenses, it is desirable to use high refractive index
materials, or materials with a refractive index greater than 1.50, in order to provide
acceptable edge and center thicknesses, especially in higher power lenses. However,
increasing the refractive index using conventional materials such as polycarbonate
or inorganic glass results in an increase in chromatic aberration or color dispersion.
Longitudinal and transverse chromatic aberration is caused by the
displacement of images formed by light of different wavelengths. The magnitude of
the aberration depends on the power of the lens and the physical properties of the
lens material. Persons wearing spectacle lenses made of conventional materials will
experience chromatic aberration to varying degrees, especially in the periphery of
their visual fields.
For a refractive single element lens, typical for a spectacle lens, the lens'
transverse chromatic aberration ("TCA") in diopters depends upon the Abbe
number (V), the lens power(F) in diopters, and the gaze height on the lens from the
lens center (y) in millimeters as shown in Equation I.
The following table shows the TCA for various lens powers and Abbe values at a
gaze height of 15 mm.

The TCA becomes problematic to many wearers if it is greater than 0.25 diopters.
Typical conventional high refractive index materials have Abbe numbers
from 30 to 45, which will cause problems for some wearers. Some low refractive
index materials that are considered low dispersion will have Abbe numbers greater
than 55, which gives acceptable chromatic performance to the vast majority of
wearers. However, high refractive index materials are desirable for spectacle lenses
because they permit production of thinner and lighter weight lenses. Therefore, a
need exists for a high refractive index material for spectacle lens use that can
provide chromatic performance equivalent to low refractive index lenses with large
Abbe numbers.

Brief Description of the Drawings
Figure 1 is a graphical representation of the ideal refractive and diffractive
powers for minimum chromatic aberration.
Figure 2 is a graphical representation of the range of diffractive powers that
will give at least a 50% reduction in chromatic aberration for spherical lens powers
from -9 to 9 diopters.
Figure 3 depicts a cross-section through the lens of the RMS spot size
produced by a conventional refractive single vision lens analyzed from the
perspective of the eye.
Figure 4 depicts a cross-section through the lens of the RMS spot size
produced by a lens of the invention analyzed from the perspective of the eye.
Figure 5 is a cross-section through a conventional lens at various vertical
positions of the RMS spot size.
Figure 6 is a cross-section through a lens of the invention at various vertical
positions of the RMS spot size.
Figure 7 is a cross-section through a conventional lens at various vertical
positions showing unwanted cylinder.
Figure 8 is a cross-section through a lens of the invention at various
horizontal positions showing unwanted cylinder.
Description of the Invention and its Preferred Embodiments
The present invention provides single vision and multifocal lenses, as well as
methods for their production, in which both diffractive and refractive elements are
used. This composite lens reduces, by about 10 to 100 %, transverse chromatic
aberration enabling provision of a high refractive index lens that has an effective
Abbe number of about 50 to 120. By combining refractive and diffractive powers in
a specified balance, a lens may be provided with performance equivalent to a
refractive lens with a higher Abbe number.
In one embodiment, the invention provides an ophthalmic lens comprising,
consisting essentially of, and consisting of spherical power F, a diffractive element
comprising a first spherical power Fd and a refractive element comprising a second
spherical power Fr wherein F = FD + Fr. By "ophthalmic lens" is meant a lens
suitable to correct visual acuity including, without limitation spectacle, contact,
intraocular, onlay lenses and the like.
For a single vision lens, F may be the average spherical power throughout
the lens, the local spherical power at the optical center, or the local spherocylindrical
power at the optical center. One ordinarily skilled in the art will recognize that the
value of FD will depend upon the spherical power selected and the desired level of
correction of TCA. For a multifocal lens, Fmay be the spherical or
spherocylindrical power at the optical center or fitting, the power at the center of the
near vision region of the lens, or the local power varying throughout the optic in
which case Fd will vary throughout the lens.
The diffractive element may be any suitable element including, without
limitation, a diffractive grating, a hologram, a kinoform, and the like. The power
provided by the diffractive element may be positive or negative power.
The ideal TCA correction may be achieved by requiring that:

wherein Vr is the Abbe number of the lens material and Vd is the effective Abbe
number of the diffractive element of the lens. Typically, the lens material Abbe
number will be about 30 to about 60.
The Abbe number of the diflractive element may be defined as:

where ?mid is the wavelength of the midpoint of the range of interest For visible
systems a value of 587 nm is typically used. The short wavelength of the range of
interest is ?Short and for visible systems a value of 486 nm is typically used. The
long wavelength of the range of interest is ?long- For visible systems 656 nm is
typically used. Using these wavelength values, Vd is -3.45.
The diffractive power required for the lens may be obtained by solving
Equation IV resulting in:

Preferably, the diffractive element adds about 0.10 to about 1.50 diopters of
spherical power.
The diffractive element may cover substantially the entire, or a portion of,
the back, or concave surface, front, or convex surface, or a surface intermediate the
front or back surface of the lens. The diffractive element may be of any shape
including, without limitation, annular, circular, elliptical, and the like. Preferably,
the diffractive element covers the back surface for purposes of ease of manufacture
and for cosmetic durability. In the embodiment in which the diffractive element is
intermediate to the front and back surfaces, the change in refractive index across the
intermediate layer must be such that it enables the diffractive element to function.
Typically, the change in refractive index must be between 0 and 0.25 units per
micron.
Figure 1 is a graph depicting the preferred combination of refractive
and diffractive spherical power for total lens powers of polycarbonate lenses of from
-9.00 to +9.00 diopters assuming that Vr is 30. One of ordinary skill in the art will
realize that for materials with a larger Vr, less diffractive power will be required. A
reduction in chromatic aberration may be realized with diffractive powers meeting
the following criteria:

In this equation, Fd is defined as the optimum value of the diffractive power for a
refractive power Fr and its value may be from about 0 to about 2Fd. If the value is
0, there is no correction of chromatic aberration. If the value is 2Fd, then the
chromatic aberration if equal to that of the lens but in the opposite direction.

Figure 2 depicts the Fd using Equation II and plotted along the positive and
negative tolerance limits as given by the Equation VII. If the diffractive power is
within the limits provided by Equation VII, then the transverse chromatic aberration
is reduced by at least 50 %. Although it may be desirable for optimum TCA
correction to require the diffractive power to satisfy Equation II, the relaxed
constraint provided by Equation VII allows the chromatic performance to be
improved to be equivalent to or better than that provided for with low index, high
Abbe number glasses without requiring a unique diffractive element for every
spherical power.
Equation V may be cast in an alternate form so that the diffractive power is
defined in terms of the maximum allowable TCA. In this form, for low lens
spherical powers that inherently have small amounts of transverse chromatic
aberration, the solution allows for only refractive power. In this form, the constraint
on the diffractive power is:

The lenses of the invention may be fabricated by any convenient means and
constructed of any known material suitable for production of ophthalmic lenses.
Suitable materials include, without limitation, polycarbonate, allyl diglycol,
polymethacrylate, and the like. Such materials are either commercially available or
methods for their production are known. Further, the lenses may be produced by
any conventional lens fabrication technique including, without limitation grinding,
whole lens casting, molding, thermoforming, laminating, surface casting, or
combinations thereof. Casting may be carried out by any means, but preferably is
performed by surface casting including, without limitation, as disclosed in United
States Patent Nos. 5,147,585, 5,178,800, 5,219,497, 5,316,702, 5,358,672,
5,480,600, 5,512,371, 5,531,940, 5,702,819, and 5,793,465 incorporated herein in
their entireties by reference.
The diffractive element may be provided through a molding process using
optical tools incorporating the required diffiactive elements. Such tools include,
without limitation, metal inserts suitable for injection or compression molding of
plastic optical parts, glass or metal molds for casting of optical parts, snd metal or
ceramic stamping tools. Alternatively, the diffractive element may be provided by
diamond turning. The finished element may be coated with a suitable coating that
conforms to the element and preserves the function of the diffractive element.
Alternatively, a non-conforming coating may be used to effectively bury the
diffractive element under the coating. In this embodiment, the width and depth of
the individual grating elements will have to take into account the difference on
refractive index between the coating and the substrate. Suitable coatings are
commercially available or methods for their making are known.
Because the magnitude of the diffractive power is dependent on the total
spherical power of the lens, computation of the diffractive power for each lens is
dependent on the prescription for the individual who use the lens. Thus, the
diffractive element is provided on a made-to-order basis. In one method for
providing such made-to-order elements, an individual's corrective prescription is
determined and a semi-finished blank with the suitable front surface geometry is
selected. The front surface of the semi-finished blank may be provided with any
suitable coating as, for example, a hard coating, antireflective coating, tinted
coating, or the like. Subsequently, the blank is attached to a rotationally
symmetrical holding fixture on the front surface so that the fixture is aligned with an
optical reference point, such as the optical center. The blocked blank may then be
machined on a multi-axis, computer numerically controlled diamond turning
machine to form the desired surface, for example sphere, tone, progressive addition,
on the back surface that includes the diffractive element. Preferably, machining is
carried out by a single point diamond tool mounted on a computer controlled, two
axis, linear drive. The surface to be machined may be described by any convenient
method including, without limitation, by describing the surface in terms of x, y, and
z coordinates or by a set of polynomials each with a set of coefficients and boundary
conditions. The machined surface may subsequently be coated with any desired
coating.
Although the invention may find particular utility in the design of spectacle
lenses, the refractive and diffractive elements may be applied to any type of lens for
correction of visual acuity such as a spectacle lens, a contact lens, or an intraocular
lens, and the like. The invention will be clarified further by a consideration of the
following, non-limiting examples.
Examples
Example 1
A single vision lens with -4.00 diopters of spherical power is made from
polycarbonate with an Abbe number of 29. As a baseline for comparison purposes,
a conventional refractive lens is first analyzed, which lens has a front radius of 200
mm and back radius of 79 mm. The lens is analyzed by computing the RMS spot
size at the focal plane of an 18 mm focal length lens placed at the eye rotation point
27 mm from the lens. The RMS spot size is computed for input angles from -40 to
+40 degrees and is shown in Figure 3.
A diffractive element with a power, of-0.37 diopters is placed on the back,
concave, surface of the lens. To maintain the spherical power, the radius of the back
surface is changed to 89 mm. The RMS spot size for this difiractive/refractive lens
is shown in graphical form in Fig. 4. The image quality at x = 0, y = 0 improved as
measured by the decrease in spot size from approximately 0.004 mm to
0.001 mm. This is due primarily to an improvement in the axial, or longitudinal,
aberration. The improvement in image quality is more pronounced for off-axis
angles of incidence. For example, at x = 0, y = -20 degrees the RMS spot size is
0.017 mm for the conventional refractive lens, but 0.003 mm for the lens with the
diffractive element.
Example 2
A polycarbonate, non-toric, progressive addition lens is provided with a
distance power of-4.00 diopters and an add power of 1.30 diopters. In Figure 5 is
depicted the RMS spot size for the lens. In Fig. 4 is depicted the unwanted
astigmatism in the lens. In both of these figures is shown cross-sectional analysis
through horizontal cuts through the lens at various angles. The 10-degree cross-
section is a horizontal cut through the far vision region of the lens. In this particular
lens, the near vision region is at —40 degrees. A series of cuts is made from the far
vision region through the intermediate vision region and to the near vision region.
A diffractive grating with a -0.35 diopters of power is added on the concave
surface of the lens. The overall sphere power remains -4.00 diopters, but the
refractive portion of the sphere power was reduced to -3.65 diopters. The Abbe
number of the diffractive portion of the lens was approximately-3.5 and that of the
refractive portion 29. As shown in Fig. 6, the image quality improved most
dramatically along the central meridian, or center of the channel, of the lens. The
improvement is obtained without any increase in unwanted astigmatism in the lens
as illustrated in Fig. 8.
Example 3
The diffractive power for a family of designs can be chosen so that a unique
diffractive is not required for each sphere power. The total spherical power for a
lens is the sum of the refractive power of the front surface plus the refractive power
of the back surface plus the diffiractive power of the diffractive element, whether it is
applied to the front, back, or to an intermediate surface.
Table 2 shows the front refractive, back refractive, and diffractive powers for
a family of designs for single vision lenses made from polycarbonate that will
provide improved chromatic performance because of the diffractive power provided
on five of six unique front curves (9, 8,6,4,2, and 1 Diopters). For each sphere
power there is a unique back curve. The transverse chromatic aberration at a height
of 15 mm on the lens is also shown. The diffractive power was chosen for each of
the six unique front curves to give the minimum TCA over the range of sphere
powers covered by that case. For the case with a 4 diopter front surface refractive
power, the diffractive power chosen was 0 diopters because this still satisfied the
constraint given by Equation VII.
WE CLAIM:
1. An ophthalmic lens, comprising a spherical power F, a diffractive element
comprising a first spherical power Fd and a refractive element comprising
a second spherical power Fr wherein the diffractive element comprises a
material having an Abbe number of about 30 to about 60, wherein:

and wherein Vr is the Abbe number of the refractive element of the lens and Vd
is an effective Abbe number of the diffractive element of the lens.
2. The lens as claimed in claim 1, wherein the diffractive element comprises
a diffractive power of:

3. The lens as claimed in claim 1, wherein the diffractive element comprises
a diffractive power of:

4. The lens as claimed in claim 1, wherein the diffractive power of the
diffractive element comprises:

5. The lens as claimed in claim 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5, wherein the diffractive element
comprises substantially the entire back surface of the lens.
6. The lens as claimed in claim 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5, wherein the diffractive element
comprises substantially the entire front surface of the lens.
7. The lens as claimed in claim 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5, wherein the diffractive element
comprises a surface intermediate a front and a back surface of the lens.
8. The lens as claimed in claim 6, wherein the lens comprises a single vision
lens.
9. The lens as claimed in claim 7, wherein the lens comprises a single vision
lens.
10.The lens as claimed in claim 8, wherein the lens comprises a single vision
lens.
11.The lens as claimed in claim 6, wherein the lens comprises a multifocal
lens.
12. The lens as claimed in claim 7, wherein the lens comprises a multifocal
lens.
13.The lens as claimed in claim 8, wherein the lens comprises a multifocal
lens.
14.A method for producing a customized lens comprising the step of
providing a lens comprising a spherical power F, a diffractive element
comprising a first spherical power Fd and a refractive element comprising
a second spherical power Fr wherein the diffractive element comprises a
material having an Abbe number of about 30 to about 60, wherein:

and wherein VR is the Abbe number of the refractive element of the lens
and VD is an effective Abbe number of the diffractive element of the lens.
15. The method as claimed in claim 15, wherein the lens is a single vision
lens.
16. The method as claimed in claim 15, wherein the lens is a multifocal lens.
An ophthalmic lens, comprising a spherical power F, a diffractive element
comprising a first spherical power FD and a refractive element comprising a
second spherical power Fr wherein the diffractive element comprises a material
having an Abbe number of about 30 to about 60, wherein:

and wherein Vr is the Abbe number of the refractive element of the lens and VD
is an effective Abbe number of the diffractive element of the lens.

Documents:

951-kolnp-2005-granted-abstract.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-assignment.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-claims.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-correspondence.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-description (complete).pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-drawings.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-examination report.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-form 1.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-form 18.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-form 2.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-form 26.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-form 3.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-form 5.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-form 6.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-gpa.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-letter patent.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-reply to examination report.pdf

951-kolnp-2005-granted-specification.pdf


Patent Number 222933
Indian Patent Application Number 951/KOLNP/2005
PG Journal Number 35/2008
Publication Date 29-Aug-2008
Grant Date 27-Aug-2008
Date of Filing 24-May-2005
Name of Patentee ESSILOR INTERNATIONAL (COMPAGNIE GENERALE D'OPTIQUE).
Applicant Address 147 RUE DE PARIS, F-94220 CHARENTON-LE PONT,
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 ISRAEL GROSSINGER 19 YAKOB STREET, 76262 REHOVOT,
2 C. BENJAMIN WOOLEY 5115 ELK HILL DRIVE, ROANOKE, VIRGINIA 24014
3 AMITAVA GUPTA 5322 FOX DEN ROAD, ROANOKE, VIRGINIA 24014
PCT International Classification Number G02C 7/02
PCT International Application Number PCT/US2003/033180
PCT International Filing date 2003-10-17
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 10/279,619 2002-10-24 U.S.A.