Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAdele Lynn Chambers Modified over 9 years ago
1
Paper and Progress Report Artoni Kevin R. Ang July 1, 2009
2
Progress Report Changed substrate holder Added a new pair of electrodes and boat holder
8
Progress Report Coated Cr-Cu-Cr mirror (4 designs) Measured transmission of the Cr-Cu-Cr coatings using the Ocean Optics Spectrophotometer
9
Slide 1 Exp (nm)Theo (nm)Error (%) Air Cr7.2544 Cu1992000.5 Cr8560 Glass Slide
10
Slide 1
12
Slide 2 Exp (nm)Theo (nm)Error (%) Air Cr6.8536 Cu981002 Cr7.1542 Glass Slide
13
Slide 2
15
Slide 4 Exp (nm)Theo (nm)Error (%) Air Cr6.1522 Cu144.71503.533333 Cr5.6512 Glass Slide
16
Slide 4
18
Slide 5 Exp (nm)Theo (nm)Error (%) Air Cr6.8536 Cu50.5501 Cr6.3526 Glass Slide
19
Slide 5
21
Things to do: Get micrograph of Cr-Cu-Cr mirrors Schedule FTIR analysis for mirrors Perform adhesion tests on Cr-Cu-Cr mirrors Finalize anti-reflection design Modify evaporation set-up to allow evaporation of new film materials.
22
Paper Report Multilayer antireflection coatings for the visible and near-infrared regions –H. Ganesha Shanbhogue, C. L. Nagendra, M. N. Annapurna, S. Ajith Kumar, and G. K. M. Thutupalli –1 September 1997 Vol. 36, No. 25 APPLIED OPTICS
23
Introduction Current research involves improving: –optical performance over a wider spectral range –transmission efficiency –spectral coverage –angle-of-incidence stability –durability –efficiency (residual reflection loss)
24
Introduction Problems: –AR coatings on a variety of glass substrates Different indices, chemical compositions, hardness, environmental stability, etc. –Different uses Residual reflection loss, transmission efficiency, angle of incidence stablity, etc.
25
Optical material combinations MgF 2 and medium or high index materials MgF 2 and ZrTi0 4 and Zr0 2 (sub2) MgF 2 and Si0 2, Al 2 O 3, oxides of tantalum, titanium zirconium, and niobium Sub1 and Ta2O 5 +SiO2,TiO2+Ta2O5 and SiO 2 +TiO 2
26
Optical Material Preparation and Characterization Sub2 –E-beam evaporation –Base pressure: 10 -5 mbar –Added high purity dry oxygen: 10 -4 mbar
27
Optical Material Preparation and Characterization Hitachi double-beam spectrophotometer, Model U 3400
28
Optical Material Preparation and Characterization
29
MgF 2 –Same fabrication set-up –Substrate temperature: 200°C –2x10 -5 mbar
30
Optical Material Preparation and Characterization T peak : transmission peak A: Cauchy dispersion constant
31
Optical Material Preparation and Characterization MgF 2 index of 1.35±0.01 Literature value of 1.38-1.37
32
Design optimization Seven layer system of MgF 2 and Sub2 coatings in alternate layers –Wideband (WB) AR coatings –Limited band (LB) AR coatings OPTOSOFT- software to optimize design
33
Design optimization
35
Experimental investigation Leybold Hereaus vacuum evaporation plant Model 560L –Optically polished and cleaned glass substrates –Substrate temperature: 200 ±5° –Rate: 0.3-0.5 nm/s for MgF 2 and 0.05-0.1 nm/s for Sub2
36
Experimental investigation Optical transmittance and reflectance Durability tests –High-temp. humidity –Thermal shock/ cycling –hot-cold soak.
37
Experimental investigation
41
Conclusions 1.IRL R*, R av, ripple R max are interlinked to spectral bandwidth. The higher the bandwidth, the higher R*/R av and the R max. 2.Higher-ripple designs can also have global optical properties (R*/R av and T av ) that are comparable with those of lower-ripple designs but they have higher spectral instability.
42
Conclusions 3. Sub2 high-index material in combination withMgF2 allows the production of efficient AR coatings with the electron-beam evaporation technique, in terms of both optical properties and durability of the coatings.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.