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Anti Reflective Coating

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Anti-reflective coating



 
 
Anti-reflective or antireflection (AR) coatings are a type of optical coating
Optical coating

An optical coating is a thin-film optics of material deposited on an optical component such as a lens or mirror, which alters the way in which the optic Reflection and transmission light....
 applied to the surface of lens
Lens (optics)

A lens is an optics device with perfect or approximate axial symmetry which transmittance and refraction light, converging or diverging the beam....
es and other optical devices to reduce reflection
Reflection (physics)

Reflection is the change in direction of a wavefront at an wiktionary:interface between two differentmedium so that the wavefront returns into the medium from which it originated....
. This improves the efficiency of the system since less light is lost.






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Anti Reflective Coating Comparison
Anti-reflective or antireflection (AR) coatings are a type of optical coating
Optical coating

An optical coating is a thin-film optics of material deposited on an optical component such as a lens or mirror, which alters the way in which the optic Reflection and transmission light....
 applied to the surface of lens
Lens (optics)

A lens is an optics device with perfect or approximate axial symmetry which transmittance and refraction light, converging or diverging the beam....
es and other optical devices to reduce reflection
Reflection (physics)

Reflection is the change in direction of a wavefront at an wiktionary:interface between two differentmedium so that the wavefront returns into the medium from which it originated....
. This improves the efficiency of the system since less light is lost. In complex systems such as a telescope
Telescope

A telescope is an instrument designed for the observation of remote objects by the collection of electromagnetic radiation. The first known practically functioning telescopes were invented in the Netherlands at the beginning of the 17th century....
, the reduction in reflections also improves the contrast
Contrast (vision)

Contrast is the difference in visual properties that makes an object distinguishable from other objects and the background. In visual perception of the real world, contrast is determined by the difference in the color and brightness of the object and other objects within the same field of view....
 of the image by elimination of stray light. This is especially important in planetary astronomy. In other applications, the primary benefit is the elimination of the reflection itself, such as a coating on eyeglass
Glasses

Glasses or specs, more formally known as eyeglasses or spectacles, are frames bearing lens worn in front of the eyes, normally for Corrective lens, eye protection, or for UV Coating....
 lenses that makes the eyes of the wearer more visible, or a coating to reduce the glint from a covert viewer's binoculars
Binoculars

Binocular telescopes, or binoculars , are two identical or mirror-symmetry optical telescopes mounted side-by-side and aligned to point accurately in the same direction, allowing the viewer to use both eyes when viewing distant objects....
 or telescopic sight
Telescopic sight

A telescopic sight, commonly called a scope, is a device used to give additional accuracy using a point of aim for firearms, airguns and crossbows....
.

Many coatings consist of transparent thin film
Thin-film optics

Thin-film optics is the branch of optics that deals with very thin structured layers of different materials. In order to exhibit thin-film optics, the thickness of the layers of material must be on the order of the wavelengths of visible light ....
 structures with alternating layers of contrasting refractive index
Refractive index

The refractive index of a medium is a measure for how much the speed of light is reduced inside the medium. For example, typical soda-lime glass has a refractive index of 1.5, which means that in glass, light travels at times the speed of light in a vacuum....
. Layer thicknesses are chosen to produce destructive interference
Interference

In physics, interference is the addition of two or more waves that result in a new wave pattern.Interference usually refers to the interaction of waves which are correlated or Coherence with each other, either because they come from the same source or because they have the same or nearly the same frequency....
 in the beams reflected from the interfaces, and constructive interference in the corresponding transmitted beams. This makes the structure's performance change with wavelength and incident angle, so that color effects often appear at oblique angles. A wavelength range must be specified when designing or ordering such coatings, but good performance can often be achieved for a relatively wide range of frequencies: usually a choice of IR
Infrared

Infrared radiation is electromagnetic radiation whose wavelength is longer than that of visible light , but shorter than that of terahertz radiation and microwaves ....
, visible, or UV
Ultraviolet

Ultraviolet light is electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength shorter than that of visible light, but longer than x-rays, in the range 400 nanometer to 10 nm, and energies from 3 Electron volt to 124 eV....
 is offered.

Interference-based coatings were invented in November 1935 by Alexander Smakula
Alexander Smakula

Alexander Smakula was a physicist of Ukrainians ethnicity best known for the discovery of anti-reflective coating of lenses.Biography ...
, who was working for the Carl Zeiss
Zeiss

The Carl Zeiss company is a Germany manufacturer of optics, industrial measurements and medical devices originally founded in Jena in 1846 by Carl Zeiss, Ernst Abbe, and Otto Schott....
 optics company. Anti-reflection coatings were a German military secret until the early stages of World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
. Katharine Burr Blodgett and Irving Langmuir
Irving Langmuir

Irving Langmuir was an United States chemistry and physics. His most noted publication was the famous 1919 article "The Arrangement of Electrons in Atoms and Molecules" in which, building on Gilbert N....
 developed organic antireflection coatings in the late 1930s.

Ophthalmic use

Optician
Optician

An optician is an eye care professional who provides corrective lenses based on a Eyeglass prescription for the correction of a refractive error....
s dispense "antireflection lenses" because the decreased reflection makes them look better, and they produce less glare
Light pollution

Light pollution, also known as photopollution or luminous pollution, is excessive or obtrusive artificial light. The International Dark-Sky Association , "The Light Pollution Authority," defines light pollution as: It obscures the stars in the night sky for city dwellers, interferes with astronomy observatory, and, like an...
, which is particularly noticeable when driving at night or working in front of a computer monitor. The decreased glare means that wearers often find their eyes are less tired, particularly at the end of the day. Allowing more light to pass through the lens also increases contrast
Contrast (vision)

Contrast is the difference in visual properties that makes an object distinguishable from other objects and the background. In visual perception of the real world, contrast is determined by the difference in the color and brightness of the object and other objects within the same field of view....
 and therefore increases visual acuity.

Antireflective ophthalmic lenses should not be confused with polarized lenses
Polarizer

A polarizer is a device that converts an polarization or mixed-polarization beam of electromagnetic waves into a beam with a single polarization state ....
, which decrease (by absorption) the visible glare of sun reflected off of surfaces such as sand, water, and roads. The term "anti-reflective" relates to the reflection from the surface of the lens itself, not the origin of the light that reaches the lens.

Many anti-reflection lenses include an additional coating that repels water
Water

Water is a common chemical substance that is essential for the survival of all known forms of life. In typical usage, water refers only to its liquid form or States of matter, but the substance also has a solid state, ice, and a gaseous state, water vapor or steam....
 and grease
Fat

Fats consist of a wide group of compounds that are generally soluble in organic solvents and largely insoluble in water. Chemistry, fats are generally ester of glycerol and fatty acids....
, making them easier to keep clean. Anti-reflection coatings are particularly suited to high-index
Refractive index

The refractive index of a medium is a measure for how much the speed of light is reduced inside the medium. For example, typical soda-lime glass has a refractive index of 1.5, which means that in glass, light travels at times the speed of light in a vacuum....
 lenses, as these reflect more light without the coating than a lower-index lens (a consequence of the Fresnel equations
Fresnel equations

The Fresnel equations, deduced by Augustin-Jean Fresnel , describe the behaviour of light when moving between medium of differing refractive index....
). It is also generally easier and cheaper to coat high index glasses.

Types

The simplest form of antireflection coating was discovered by Lord Rayleigh in 1886. The optical glass available at the time tended to develop a tarnish on its surface with age, due to chemical reactions with the environment. Rayleigh tested some old, slightly tarnished pieces of glass, and found to his surprise that they transmitted more light than new, clean pieces. The tarnish replaces the air-glass interface with two interfaces: an air-tarnish interface and a tarnish-glass interface. Because the tarnish has an index of refraction between that of glass and that of air, each of these interfaces exhibits less reflection than the air-glass interface did, and in fact the total of the two reflections is less than that of the "naked" air-glass interface.

Single-layer interference coatings

The simplest interference AR coating consists of a single quarter-wave layer of transparent
Transparency (optics)

In optics, transparency is the material property of allowing light to pass through. In mineralogy, another term for this property is diaphaneity....
 material whose refractive index is the square root
Square root

In mathematics, a square root of a number x is a number r such that r2 = x, or, in other words, a number r whose square is x....
 of the substrate's refractive index. This theoretically gives zero reflectance at the center wavelength and decreased reflectance for wavelengths in a broad band around the center.

The most common type of optical glass is crown glass
Crown glass (optics)

Crown glass is type of optical glass used in lens and other optical components.Crown glass is produced from alkali-lime silicates containing approximately 10% potassium oxide....
, which has an index of refraction of about 1.52. An optimum single layer coating would have to be made of a material with an index equal to about 1.23. Unfortunately, there is no material with such an index that has good physical properties for an optical coating. The closest 'good' materials available are magnesium fluoride
Magnesium fluoride

Magnesium fluoride is a white crystalline salt composed of one magnesium ion and two fluoride ions, and is used in the electrolysis of aluminium ore and anti-reflective coatings....
, MgF2 (with an index of 1.38), and fluoropolymer
Fluoropolymer

A fluoropolymer is a fluorocarbon based polymer with multiple strong carbon?fluorine bonds. It is characterized by a high resistance to solvents, acids, and bases....
s (which can have indices as low as 1.30, but are more difficult to apply). On a crown glass surface, MgF2 gives a reflectance of about 1%, four times less than the 4% reflection from bare glass. MgF2 coatings perform much better on higher-index glasses, especially those with index of refraction close to 1.9. MgF2 coatings are commonly used because they are cheap, and when they are designed for a wavelength in the middle of the visible band they give reasonably good antireflection over the entire band.

Multi-layer coatings (multicoating)

By using alternating layers of a low-index material like silica and a higher-index material it is possible to obtain reflectivities as low as 0.1% at a single wavelength. Coatings that give very low reflectivity over a broad band can also be made, although these are complex and relatively expensive. Optical coating
Optical coating

An optical coating is a thin-film optics of material deposited on an optical component such as a lens or mirror, which alters the way in which the optic Reflection and transmission light....
s can also be made with special characteristics, such as near-zero reflectance at multiple wavelengths, or optimum performance at angles of incidence
Angle of incidence

Angle of incidence is a measure of deviation of something from "straight on", for example:* in the approach of a ray to a surface, or* the angle at which the wing or Stabilizer of an airplane is installed on the fuselage, measured relative to the axis of the fuselage....
 other than 0°.

Absorbing AR coatings

An additional category of antireflection coatings is the so-called "absorbing AR". These coatings are useful in situations where high transmission through a surface is unimportant or undesirable, but low reflectivity is required. They can produce very low reflectance with few layers, and can often be produced more cheaply, or at greater scale, than standard non-absorbing AR coatings. (See, for example, US Patent 5,091,244.) Absorbing ARs often make use of unusual optical properties exhibited in compound thin films produced by sputter deposition
Sputter deposition

Sputter deposition is a physical vapor deposition method of thin film deposition thin films by sputtering, i.e. ejecting, material from a "target," i.e., source, which then deposits onto a "substrate," e.g., a silicon wafer....
. For example, titanium nitride
Titanium nitride

Titanium nitride is an extremely hard ceramic material, often used as a coating on titanium alloy, steel, carbide, and aluminium components to improve the substrate's surface properties....
 and niobium nitride
Niobium nitride

Niobium nitride is a compound of niobium and nitrogen with the chemical formula NbN. At low temperatures, niobium nitride becomes a superconductor, and is used in detectors for infrared light....
 are used in absorbing ARs. These can be useful in applications requiring contrast
Contrast (vision)

Contrast is the difference in visual properties that makes an object distinguishable from other objects and the background. In visual perception of the real world, contrast is determined by the difference in the color and brightness of the object and other objects within the same field of view....
 enhancement or as a replacement for tinted glass (for example, in a CRT display
Cathode ray tube

The cathode ray tube is a vacuum tube containing an electron gun and a fluorescent screen, with internal or external means to accelerate and deflect the electron beam, used to create images in the form of light emitted from the fluorescent screen....
).

Moth eye

Moth
Moth

A moth is an insect closely related to the butterfly, both being of the Order Lepidoptera. The differences between butterflies and moths are more than just taxonomy....
s' eyes have an unusual property: their surfaces are covered with a natural nanostructure
Nanostructure

A nanostructure is an object of intermediate size between molecular and microscopic structures.In describing nanostructures it is necessary to differentiate between the number of dimensions on the nanoscale....
d film which eliminates reflections. This allows the moth to see well in the dark, without reflections to give its location away to predators. The structure consists of a hexagonal pattern of bumps, each roughly 200 nm high and spaced on 300 nm centers. This kind of antireflective coating works because the bumps are smaller than the wavelength of visible light, so the light sees the surface as having a continuous refractive index gradient between the air and the medium, which decreases reflection by effectively removing the air-lens interface. Engineers have succeeded in making practical antireflection films using this effect. This is a form of biomimicry
Biomimicry

Biomimicry is a relatively new science that studies nature, its models, systems, processes and elements and then imitates or takes creative inspiration from them to solve human problems sustainability ....
.

Theory

There are two separate causes of optical effects due to coatings, often called thick film and thin film effects. Thick film effects arise because of the difference in the index of refraction between the layers above and below the coating (or film); in the simplest case, these three layers are the air, the coating, and the glass. Thick film coatings do not depend on how thick the coating is, so long as the coating is much thicker than a wavelength of light. Thin film effects arise when the thickness of the coating is approximately the same as a quarter or a half a wavelength of light. In this case, the reflections of a steady source of light can be made to add destructively, and hence reduce reflections by a separate mechanism. In addition to depending very much on the thickness of the film, and the wavelength of light, thin film coatings depend on the angle at which the light strikes the coated surface.

Reflection

Whenever a ray
Ray (optics)

In optics, a ray is an idealized narrow beam of light. Rays are used to model the propagation of light through an optical system, by dividing the real light field up into discrete rays that can be computationally propagated through the system by the techniques of Ray tracing ....
 of light moves from one medium
Medium (optics)

An optical medium is material through which electromagnetic waves propagate. It is a form of transmission medium. The permittivity and Permeability of the medium define how electromagnetic waves propagate in it....
 to another (for example, when light enters a sheet of glass
Glass

Glass generally refers to a Hardness, brittle, transparency amorphous solid, such as that used for windows, many Glass Bottles, or eyewear, including, but not limited to, soda-lime glass, borosilicate glass, acrylic glass, sugar glass, Muscovite , or aluminium oxynitride....
 after travelling through air
AIR

Air is the part of Earth's atmosphere that humans breath and as such Air .Air may also refer to:...
), some portion of the light is reflected from the surface (known as the interface) between the two media. This can be observed when looking through a window
Window

File:OldShipWindows.jpgA window is an opening in a wall that allows the passage of light and, if not closed or sealed, air and sound. Windows are usually glazed or covered in some other transparency or translucent material....
, for instance, where a (weak) reflection from the front and back surfaces of the window glass can be seen. The strength of the reflection depends on the refractive indices
Refractive index

The refractive index of a medium is a measure for how much the speed of light is reduced inside the medium. For example, typical soda-lime glass has a refractive index of 1.5, which means that in glass, light travels at times the speed of light in a vacuum....
 of the two media as well as the angle of the surface to the beam of light. The exact value can be calculated using the Fresnel equations
Fresnel equations

The Fresnel equations, deduced by Augustin-Jean Fresnel , describe the behaviour of light when moving between medium of differing refractive index....
.

When the light meets the interface at normal incidence (perpendicularly to the surface), the intensity of light reflected is given by the reflection coefficient or reflectance, R: , where n0 and nS are the refractive indices of the first and second media, respectively. The value of R varies from 0.0 (no reflection) to 1.0 (all light reflected) and is usually quoted as a percentage
Percentage

In mathematics, a percentage is a way of expressing a number as a fraction of 100 . It is often denoted using the percent sign, "%". For example, 45% is equal to 45 / 100, or 0.45....
. Complementary to R is the transmission coefficient or transmittance, T. If absorption
Absorption (electromagnetic radiation)

In physics, absorption of electromagnetic radiation is the way by which the energy of a photon is taken up by matter, typically the electrons of an atom....
 and scattering
Scattering

Scattering is a general physical process where some forms of radiation, such as light, sound, or moving particles,are forced to deviate from a straight trajectory by one or more localized non-uniformities in the medium through which they pass....
 are neglected, then the value T is always 1–R. Thus if a beam of light with intensity I is incident on the surface, a beam of intensity RI is reflected, and a beam with intensity TI is transmitted into the medium.

Optical Coating 1
For the simplified scenario of visible light travelling from air (n0˜1.0) into common glass (nS˜1.5), value of R is 0.04, or 4% on a single reflection. So at most 96% of the light (T=1–R=0.96) actually enters the glass, and the rest is reflected from the surface. The amount of light reflected is known as the reflection loss.

In the more complicated scenario of multiple reflections, say with light travelling through a window, light is reflected both when going from air to glass and at the other side of the window when going from glass back to air. The size of the loss is the same in both cases. Light also may bounce from one surface to another multiple times, being partially reflected and partially transmitted each time it does so. In all, the combined reflection coefficient is given by 2R/(1+R). For glass in air, this is about 7.7%.)

Rayleigh's film

As observed by Lord Rayleigh, a thin film (such as tarnish) on the surface of glass can reduce the reflectivity. This effect can be explained by envisioning a thin layer of material with refractive index n1 between the air (index n0) and the glass (index nS). The light ray now reflects twice: once from the surface between air and the thin layer, and once from the layer-to-glass interface.

From the equation above, and the known refractive indices, reflectivities for both interfaces can be calculated, and denoted R01 and R1S, respectively. The transmission at each interface is therefore T01 = 1-R01 and T1S = 1-R1S. The total transmitance into the glass is thus T1ST01. Calculating this value for various values of n1, it can be found that at one particular value of optimum refractive index of the layer, the transmittance of both interfaces is equal, and this corresponds to the maximum total transmittance into the glass.

This optimum value is given by the geometric mean
Geometric mean

The geometric mean, in mathematics, is a type of mean or average, which indicates the central tendency or typical value of a set of numbers. It is similar to the arithmetic mean, which is what most people think of with the word "average," except that instead of adding the set of numbers and then dividing the sum by the count of numbers in the...
 of the two surrounding indices:

.

For the example of glass (nS˜1.5) in air (n0˜1.0), this optimum refractive index is n1˜1.225, the optimum refractive indices for a multi-layer coating can be computed by the procedure given in . The optimum refractive indices for a multi-layer coating at angles of incidence other than 0° is given by Moreno et al.

The reflection loss of each interface is approximately 1.0% (with a combined loss of 2.0%), and an overall transmission T1ST01 of approximately 98%. Therefore an intermediate coating between the air and glass can halve the reflection loss.

Interference coatings

The use of an intermediate layer to form an antireflection coating can be thought of as analoguous to the technique of impedance matching
Impedance matching

Impedance matching is the electronics design practice of setting the input impedance of an electrical load equal to the fixed output impedance of the signal source to which it is ultimately connected, usually in order to Maximum power theorem and minimize Signal reflection from the load....
 of electrical signals. (A similar method is used in fibre optic
Optical fiber

An optical fiber is a glass or plastic fiber that carries light along its length. Fiber optics is the overlap of applied science and engineering concerned with the design and application of optical fibers....
 research where an index matching oil is sometimes used to temporarily defeat total internal reflection
Total internal reflection

Total internal reflection is an optical phenomenon that occurs when a ray of light strikes a medium boundary at an angle larger than the critical angle with respect to the normal to the surface....
 so that light may be coupled into or out of a fiber.) Further reduced reflection could in theory be made by extending the process to several layers of material, gradually blending the refractive index of each layer between the index of the air and the index of the substrate.

Practical antireflection coatings, however, rely on an intermediate layer not only for its direct reduction of reflection coefficient, but also use the interference
Interference

In physics, interference is the addition of two or more waves that result in a new wave pattern.Interference usually refers to the interaction of waves which are correlated or Coherence with each other, either because they come from the same source or because they have the same or nearly the same frequency....
 effect of a thin layer. Assume the layer thickness is controlled precisely, such that it is exactly one quarter of the light's wavelength thick (?/4). The layer is then called a quarter-wave coating. For this type of coating the incident beam I, when reflected from the second interface, will travel exactly half its own wavelength further than the beam reflected from the first surface. If the intensities of the two beams R1 and R2 are exactly equal, they will destructively interfere and cancel each other since they are exactly out of phase
Phase (waves)

The phase of an oscillation or wave is the fraction of a complete cycle corresponding to an offset in the displacement from a specified reference point at time t = 0....
. Therefore, there is no reflection from the surface, and all the energy of the beam must be in the transmitted ray, T. In the calculation of the reflection from a stack of layers, the transfer-matrix method
Transfer-matrix method (optics)

The transfer-matrix method is a method used in optics and acoustics to analyze the propagation of electromagnetic wave or acoustic waves through a stratification medium....
 can be used.

Optical Coating 2
Real coatings do not reach perfect performance, though they are capable of reducing a surface's reflection coefficient to less than 0.1%. Practical details include correct calculation of the layer thickness; since the wavelength of the light is reduced inside a medium, this thickness will be ?0 / 4n1, where ?0 is the vacuum wavelength. Also, the layer will be the ideal thickness for only one distinct wavelength of light. Other difficulties include finding suitable materials for use on ordinary glass, since few useful substances have the required refractive index (n˜1.23) which will make both reflected rays exactly equal in intensity. Magnesium fluoride
Magnesium fluoride

Magnesium fluoride is a white crystalline salt composed of one magnesium ion and two fluoride ions, and is used in the electrolysis of aluminium ore and anti-reflective coatings....
 (MgF2) is often used, since this is hard-wearing and can be easily applied to substrates using physical vapour deposition
Physical vapor deposition

Physical vapor deposition is a variety of vacuum deposition and is a general term used to describe any of a variety of methods to deposit thin films by the condensation of a vaporized form of the material onto various surfaces ....
, even though its index is higher than desirable (n=1.38).

Further reduction is possible by using multiple coating layers, designed such that reflections from the surfaces undergo maximum destructive interference. One way to do this is to add a second quarter-wave thick higher-index layer between the low-index layer and the substrate. The reflection from all three interfaces produces destructive interference and antireflection. Other techniques use varying thicknesses of the coatings. By using two or more layers, each of a material chosen to give the best possible match of the desired refractive index and dispersion
Dispersion (optics)

In optics, dispersion is the phenomenon in which the phase velocity of a wave depends on its frequency.Media having such a property are termed dispersive media....
, broadband antireflection coatings which cover the visible range (400-700 nm) with maximum reflectivities of less than 0.5% are commonly achievable.

The exact nature of the coating determines the appearance of the coated optic; common AR coatings on eyeglasses and photographic lenses often look somewhat bluish (since they reflect slightly more blue light than other visible wavelengths), though green and pink-tinged coatings are also used.

If the coated optic is used at non-normal incidence (that is, with light rays not perpendicular to the surface), the antireflection capabilities are degraded somewhat. This occurs because the phase accumulated in the layer relative to the phase of the light immediately reflected decreases as the angle increases from normal. This is counterintuitive, since the ray experiences a greater total phase shift in the layer than for normal incidence. This paradox is resolved by noting that the ray will exit the layer spatially offset from where it entered, and will interfere with reflections from incoming rays that had to travel further (thus accumulating more phase of their own) to arrive at the inteface. The net effect is that the relative phase is actually reduced, shifting the coating, such that the anti-reflection band of the coating tends to move to shorter wavelengths as the optic is tilted. Non-normal incidence angles also usually cause the reflection to be polarization
Polarization

Polarization is a property of waves that describes the orientation of their oscillations. For transverse waves such as many electromagnetic waves, it describes the orientation of the oscillations in the plane perpendicular to the wave's direction of travel....
 dependent.

See also

  • Optical coating
    Optical coating

    An optical coating is a thin-film optics of material deposited on an optical component such as a lens or mirror, which alters the way in which the optic Reflection and transmission light....
  • Lens flare
    Lens flare

    Lens flare is the light scattered in lens systems through generally unwanted image formation mechanisms, such as internal reflection and scattering from material inhomogeneities in the lens....
    , which AR coating helps to reduce.


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