“There are several different technologies in development for these next-generation smart glasses,” says Dr. Steffen Runkel, Director of Business Unit Optics at Bühler Leybold Optics. “But they all contain a few basic components. First, you have the microdisplay, or light engine, which creates the image. That is a tiny component concealed within the frame of the glasses. Then you have the optical engine, which uses a combination of lenses and waveguides to project the image onto the glasses, correcting it to suit the needs of wearer’s eyesight. Finally, you have the ophthalmic components: the main lenses on the glasses, which must perform a dual role, as optical lens and display screen.”
Bühler is working with manufacturers and institutes on the development of the required optical coating solutions for all these systems for smart glasses. “Our work in this sector spans our business in semiconductors, precision optics, and ophthalmics,” explains Runkel.
The Bühler contribution to the smart glasses revolution is focused on the specialized coatings and surface treatments needed to deliver crisp images in a tiny format. Those coatings are used to filter light at specific wavelengths, for example, or to increase the transmission of light within the optical engine. Microscopic etching into lenses or lens surface coatings is used to create grids of “pixels” that will reflect light to the wearer’s eye.
Individual components within the system may require a stack of multiple coatings to achieve the desired combination of properties. “Even the lenses of conventional glasses may have six or eight coating layers, designed to prevent unwanted reflections, absorb certain light wavelengths, shed dirt, resist fingerprints, and protect the lens from scratches,” explains Klaus Herbig, Head of Market Segment Precision Optics at Bühler Leybold Optics. “In smart glasses, there may be 12 layers or more.”