Shalom EO is a leading supplier of Optical Components, Infrared Lenses, Laser Crystals and Components, Optical Filters, Infrared Optics, Wafers and Substrates, and Scintillators
Shock-Resistant SWIR Lenses for Mobile Inspection Platforms

Shock-Resistant SWIR Lenses for Mobile Inspection Platforms

Short-Wave Infrared (SWIR) imaging is rapidly expanding from controlled labs into mobile industrial inspection platforms—mounted on vans, drones, robotic crawlers, and trailer-based monitoring rigs. These platforms unlock new capabilities for moisture detection, coating inspection, semiconductor imaging, and insulation failure diagnostics, but they also introduce a harsh reality:

Optics that work in the factory often fail in the field.

Mobile platforms experience vibration, mechanical shock, rapid temperature swings, dust, and occasional impacts. Without purpose-built lens systems, SWIR cameras suffer from de-focus, element misalignment, coating micro-fractures, ghosting, or even catastrophic lens failure.

This is why shock-resistant SWIR lenses are becoming a foundational enabler for reliable mobile inspection.

1. The Shock & Vibration Challenge in Mobile SWIR Imaging

Mobile inspection vehicles and field robots encounter shock loads from:

  • Road bumps and sudden braking
  • Off-road or uneven surfaces
  • Robotic arm movement or payload shifts
  • Drone landing impacts
  • Resonant vibration from engines or generators

Even low-amplitude vibration can gradually degrade imaging performance by causing:

  1. Lens group decentering
  2. Air-gap variation between elements
  3. Focus drift at 1–3 µm wavelengths
  4. Loosening of threaded or adhesive mounts

Because SWIR optics often rely on multi-element designs with high transmission coatings, even micrometer-level shifts can reduce MTF (resolution) or introduce stray reflections.

2. Engineering a Shock-Resistant SWIR Lens

To survive in motion, a field-grade SWIR lens typically incorporates the following design principles:

(1) Ruggedized Lens Mount Architecture

  • Flexure-compensated or kinematic mounting
  • Vibration-locking thread designs
  • Elastomer or damping-buffer isolation where appropriate

(2) High-Transmission, Low-Stress Lens Elements

  • Material choices like chalcogenide glass, fused silica, CaF₂, Infrasil, or IR-grade aspherics
  • Reduced element count via aspheric or hybrid refractive designs (better shock tolerance)

(3) Durable Coating Systems

  • Ion-assisted or magnetron sputtered AR coatings for better adhesion
  • DLC or hard carbon overcoat for abrasion + micro-crack resistance
  • Coating stress optimization to prevent film delamination under impact

(4) Athermalized & Mechanically Stable Optical Groups

  • Passive or mechanical athermalization to prevent focus loss from temperature change
  • Epoxy and adhesive systems tuned for high-G shock without shrinkage creep
  • Minimized air-gap dependency (common failure point under vibration)

(5) Low-SWaP (Size, Weight, Power) Design

  • Compact lens groups reduce moment-arm forces during shock
  • Lightweight barrels lower inertial stress on optical assemblies

3. Real-World Benefits for Mobile Inspection Platforms

  1. Faster field deployment
  2. Lower maintenance costs
  3. Consistent defect detection even while moving
  4. Higher uptime for mobile inspection fleets

Given your interest in industrial defect detection (e.g., pipeline insulation, LNG tank monitoring, and mobile LED inspection concepts), shock-resistant SWIR lenses directly support reliable in-motion thermal and moisture diagnostics on mobile platforms.

4. Application Examples

Shock-resistant SWIR lenses are ideal for:

  • Van-mounted insulation health inspection systems
  • Drone platforms scanning for moisture under coatings
  • Robotic arms performing glass or polymer heating diagnostics
  • Trailer-mounted wide-area industrial screening
  • Emergency response inspection optics

Each scenario demands optics that maintain alignment at 10–50+ G shock levels (depending on platform) while preserving >85–95% transmission across 1–1.7 µm or extended 2.2 µm bands.

5. Future Direction

SWIR lens durability is evolving toward:

  1. Monolithic and hybrid aspheric groups (fewer elements = fewer shock failure points)
  2. Stronger coating adhesion stacks
  3. Integrated lens + sensor predictive analytics (optical health monitoring)
  4. Ultra-compact low-inertia barrels for mobile fleets
  5. Dual-band hybrid optics (SWIR + thermal IR) for full industrial observability