Not sure what you are looking to do, but I use one of these for my FAP lasers:
High Power 808nm 50W Coherent FAP Laser Diode Collimator Lens SMA | eBay
The lens is meant to produce a close in focal point for cutting..... (
Edit: I was wrong, recently found this lens does not focus to a fine point, instead just collimates the output), ...but beyond the focal point the beam spread isn't too bad, considering. I measured a 4 inch spot on the wall about 25 feet away (using a camera) and tried to figure the divergence, if I remember right, it was somewhere below 20 mRad but I'm not sure this applies when the focal point is so close in and the beam has not been focused to infinity.
This has been something I have wanted the answer to for a long time and the reason I joined this forum trying to find an answer to whether I can reduce the divergence from my 808nm FAP laser down to under 1 mRad through optics or not. Since the beam is obviously expanding, couldn't I put a simple PCX lens in front of the beam to reduce the divergence that way, like a regular beam expander and the further out the lens is placed, the greater the amount of expansion to reduce the divergence?
I gave up on trying to find the answer and an appropriate lens set up to do that for while, became more interested in beam expanders for visible light instead, although I'm hoping to figure this out at some point and apply it to my IR laser. Perhaps I have enough understanding now, that all I need is to place a large enough PCX lens at the appropriate distance and bam, divergence reduced.
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Edit 11/08/2015. IR lasers collimate and act exactly the same way visible lasers do, I don't know why I thought working with IR was such a difficult thing except I needed a modified CCD camera with the IR filter removed to see for myself. See the pix here
http://laserpointerforums.com/f49/coherent-fap800-expanded-808nm-beam-shot-95501.html#post1387366