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Spectrogon US - Optical Filters 2024 LB

The Pros and Cons of Protected and Surface Coatings for High-Phase-Thickness Applications

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Manufacturers have long realized that there is no magic coating bullet that can provide the optimal solution for every application, instrument, experiment and environment. Each filter has a useful place in the toolbox of solutions.

Robert L. Johnson, Jr. and Chris Hardee

Metal salt compounds, or dielectrics, produce thin-film coatings with precise spectral control. Because they are soft and require glass coverslips laminated to the coating substrate to protect them from damage, they are called protected coatings. Refractory metal-oxide materials, although hard and not in need of a protective glass layer, produce coatings that can demonstrate spectral shift over time, called durable surface coatings. A jig with coated substrates is measured on an automated spectroscopy table. When examining the pros and cons of coating technology, it becomes obvious that...Read full article

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    Published: July 2005
    CoatingsdielectricsFeaturesindustrialMetal salt compoundsthin-film coatings

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