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April 2001
The Laboratory
in the News
Commentary by
Bert Weinstein
A New Kind
of Biological
Research
The World's Most
Accurate Lathe
Leading the
Attack on Cancer
THE wood lathe in a home workshop is remarkably similar to Livermore's Large Optics
Electronic Memory Diamond Turning Machine. Both spin a workpiece while a cutting tool cuts the revolving
Goes High Rise surface. But their end products bear little resemblance. Built to form large, irregularly shaped
mirrors for experimental lasers, the LODTM (pronounced "load 'em") leaves behind a gleaming
Patents reflective surface that often needs no further finishing. It is the most accurate large machine tool
in the world.
Awards Diamond turning is routinely used today to manufacture contact lenses and parts for
videocassette recorders. Defense contractors also use diamond turning to make lenses for
heat-seeking missiles and other weapons. All of these products are transmissive optics,
meaning that light passes through them. They are also relatively small with a regular, curved
shape. Says engineer Jeff Klingmann, leader of the Precision Systems and Manufacturing
Group, "That type of diamond turning is a whole different animal from the large, reflective optics
we do. Reflective optics—mirrors—are often ground and polished. But that doesn't work for
mirrors with aspheric shapes. When the Department of Defense needed large, aspherical metal
mirrors back in the early 1980s, Livermore built LODTM. Producing aspherical shapes is no
problem. We just program the shape in, and the diamond tool goes to work."
LODTM can handle a workpiece with a diameter of up to 1.65 meters, a height up to 0.5
meters, and a weight of as much as 1,360 kilograms. A diamond the size and quality of a half-
carat engagement ring is secured to a steel shank and carried on the end of a vertically moving
tool bar. The workpiece rotates about 50 times a minute on the horizontal face plate while the
diamond tool cuts gossamer threads of aluminum, copper, silicon, gold, or nickel with
unprecedented precision. The LODTM can produce parts with tolerances to 28 nanometers
(about a millionth of an inch), accuracy more than 1,000 times greater than that of a
conventional machine tool.
Birth of an Ultraprecision
An
Machine
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LODTM in Action
LODTM continues to produce one-of-a-
kind, prototype optical devices for possible
future space-based defense systems. The
ultimate client is the U.S. Air Force, with
Livermore's technical requirements
coming from TRW Inc. These conical
mirrors are made of silicon for a simple,
light, uncooled laser system.
Previously, Livermore used LODTM to
produce three secondary mirrors for the
Keck telescopes on Mauna Kea on the Big
Island of Hawaii. The Keck telescopes, the
largest and most powerful in the world,
gather infrared light rather than visible
light. For infrared astronomy, diamond
turning was the only viable process
because the mirrors had to be accurate
right to the edge of the reflective surface.
Processes such as grinding and polishing
round off or taper the edge of the critical
surface.
Livermore used two precision
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LODTM Today
The next big project for LODTM may be
for NASA scientists who are planning a
new space-based telescope. LODTM has
the capability to machine some or the
mirrors for this next-generation version of
the Hubble telescope.
A staff of seven operates and maintains
LODTM, about half the number required
when the machine first came on line. Over
the years, many original, custom-made
parts have been replaced by commercial
ones. The result is a more efficient and
reliable machine that is easier to operate
and maintain.
But LODTM is nevertheless a unique
machine, and it must machine parts to (a) National Aeronautical and Space
Administration engineer Holly Cagle examines
extremely tight tolerances. Says Steve
SPARCLE's primary mirrors on the Large Optics
Bretz, head machinist on LODTM, "We
spend about 80 percent of our time Diamond Turning Machine (LODTM) spindle. (b) A
keeping the machine running properly. close up of a mirror and the diamond tool on
Before I came to Livermore, I was a LODTM.
machinist in a regular machine shop.
Working on LODTM is entirely different. Here we have to work very closely with engineers and
experts in computers, electronics, and control systems to eliminate deviations and maintain the
required tolerances."
They must be doing something right. Eighteen years after LODTM's first operations,
measuring devices are still not sophisticated enough to confirm the machine's accuracy.
—Katie Walter
Key Words: Keck telescopes, Large Optics Diamond Turning Machine (LODTM), National
Aeronautical and Space Administration (NASA), precision engineering, Strategic Defense
Initiative.
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S&TR | April 2001 Page 4 of 4
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