|
ONLINE CATALOG MSDS SEARCH PROFILE PRODUCTS CUSTOM MANUFACTURING TECHNICAL PUBLICATIONS REQUEST INFORMATION WHAT'S NEW INTERNATIONAL SALES SITE SEARCH Contents What Properties Are Required in an Evaporation Material? Table 1. Comparison of Properties of Four IR Fluoride Materials. CERAC
Pre-Melted TiO2 Material Lives up to Expectations Achieving
Low Mechanical Stress in Thin Film Layers |
Material Properties This issue of CMN is focused on materials properties. It begins by outlining the primary properties that are desirable in a typical optical coating material. A preliminary report on CERAC's latest material improvement - pre-melted titanium dioxide -- is presented. These topics are followed by discussions on achieving mechanical and optical stability in selected coating materials, and on the theory of thin film growth. What Properties Are Required in an Evaporation Material? For
a material to be suitable for evaporation and use in depositing thin films
for optical applications, whether by resistance-heating or electron
beam-heating, it must possess specific properties.
As an illustration we have constructed a relative comparison listing
of the properties of three fluoride-based low-index materials that are
popular for IR coatings: ThF4, IRXTM and YF3.
These materials exhibit high transparency that extends from UV to IR
wavelengths, and are used in multilayer AR and high reflectors requiring
high damage thresholds to laser irradiation, and in edge filters, bandpass
filters, and polarizers. Articles
discussing IRXTM in greater depth can be found is past issues:
CMN V3, Issue 3 (1994) and V4(5), Issue 1 (1994). The properties considered include the vaporization and condensation behaviors of the starting material, and the optical, chemical and mechanical durability of the deposited film. Some coating applications require survivability with retention of their physical properties when exposed to severe mechanical stresses such as high-speed rain drop impact, sand erosion, and salt fog tolerance. Other coatings must perform after continual exposure to weather and experience variable humidity and temperature conditions and perhaps mild abrasion in everyday use. Coatings for IR laser applications, particularly the CO2 10.6 mm line, require high laser damage thresholds to irradiation. The fluorides chosen to illustrate material properties (Table 1) are used in laser applications and in wide-band AR coatings operating to 11+ mm.
Table 1. Comparison of Properties of Four IR Fluoride Materials.
|