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HOW SPIRAL® WORKS

From Light to Tubular Focus

Traditional optics focus light at a single point. SPIRAL® changes that.

By re-engineering the very surface of a lens, we create a spiral diopter that bends light into a tubular focus, unlocking multiple focal zones and extended depth of field — all inside a single, compact optical element.

WHY IT MATTERS

SPIRAL™’s unique light-shaping capabilities make it ideal for :

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Imagery

SPIRAL™ lenses deliver sharper, deeper images by extending the depth of field and maintaining high resolution across multiple focal planes — ideal for cameras, sensors, and embedded optical systems.

Intraocular implant

By generating multiple focal zones in a single compact element, SPIRAL™ enables IOLs that restore near, intermediate, and distance vision without diffractive halos or stacked optics.

Contact lenses & Eyeglasses

SPIRAL™ brings true multifocal performance. Integrating spiralized optics into eyewear and contact lenses opens the door to adaptive, wide-depth vision correction.

Microscopy

The tubular focus created by SPIRAL™ extends the field of view and improves depth perception, enabling clearer imaging of three-dimensional structures without mechanical refocusing.

Laser

Spiralized optics reshape laser beams into vortex-like profiles that can encode depth, concentrate energy, and improve precision in applications such as machining, surgery, and photonics research.

Lighting

By redistributing light into a controlled tubular focus, SPIRAL™ optics enable more efficient and targeted illumination, enhancing performance in automotive lighting, projection systems, and advanced photonic devices.

THE PRINCIPLE

SPIRAL™ introduces a spiralized surface geometry — the spiral diopter — applied to freeform lenses. Inspired by natural spiral patterns, this surface redistributes optical power across the lens, creating a tubular focus instead of a single focal point.

This controlled redistribution enables:

  • Optical vortices that twist light to encode depth and improve image qualit
  • Multiple focal zones without stacked elements.
  • Extended depth of field (EDOF) with stable performance.

How we shape light differently

1

Spiral geometry applied

2

Redistribution of optical power

3

Formation of tubular focus

4

Optical vortices emerge

A breakthrough in optical behavior

Multiple focal zones

Up to four focus regions demonstrated in lab tests.

Consistent performance

Multifocality maintained even as aperture changes.

Sharper imaging

Improved modulation transfer function (MTF) compared to trifocal lenses.

Compact & wearable

Enables new generations of contact lenses, IOLs, and embedded optics.

WHY IT’S REVOLUTIONNARY

Limits of Traditional Optics

Single focal point

Standard lenses focus light on one plane, forcing trade-offs between near and far vision.

Sensitivity to pupil size

Performance shifts with aperture changes, reducing quality in real-world conditions.

Bulky designs

Achieving multifocality often means stacking elements or using diffractive rings — not ideal for contact lenses or embedded devices.

Want to know more ?

We are currently seeking for industrial partners.

Let’s work together towards the future of optics !