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3D-printed System of Optomechanical Components (Working Title)
For our own needs of laser optics experiments (right now, mainly interferometry), we are developing a system of 3d-printable optomechanical components.
More documentation to follow as the project progresses. In the mean time, find some lab notes of ongoing progress with optics at FAFO here: Lab Notes for Optics Experiments
Assembly drawing for a kinematic mirror mount (older version):
Design
Some information about the design:
- Designed to stay compatible with commonly used (metric) optomechanical components. We chose to use the same M6 25×25mm breadboards that are present in most optics labs.
- Using M3x0.5 adjusters for pitch and yaw correction as M3 screws are very cheap and readily available. Commercial mounts use M6x0.25 adjusters so we have about half the finesse.
- The 3d-printed mounts are of course notably less stable. We are going to characterize the mechanical performance to give a lower bound on what experiments can be done with them.
- We tried using integrated flexures to avoid needing metal springs. Unfortunately, this does not work due to excessive creepage effects.


