
Lyman-β narrowband coatings with strong Lyman-α rejection
Author(s) -
Luis Rodríguez-de Marcos,
Juan I. Larruquert,
Jose A. Méndez,
Manuela Vidal-Dasilva,
Sergio García-Cortés,
Nuria Gutiérrez-Luna,
Lucía Espinosa-Yáñez,
Carlos Honrado-Benítez,
José Chavero-Royán
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
optics express
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.394
H-Index - 271
ISSN - 1094-4087
DOI - 10.1364/oe.26.025166
Subject(s) - optics , materials science , narrowband , wavelength , optical coating , sputtering , line (geometry) , coating , optoelectronics , thin film , physics , nanotechnology , geometry , mathematics
Novel narrowband multilayer coatings efficient at a wavelength as short as 100 mn are presented, which pushes shortwards the existing limit of reported narrowband multilayers. Such limit had been established at ~120 nm, close to the MgF 2 cutoff wavelength. The new multilayers combine layers of Al, LiF, and SiC, in an Al/LiF/SiC/LiF multilayer design (four layers, starting with the innermost layer). Among these materials, Al and LiF are deposited by evaporation and SiC by ion-beam-sputtering. In addition to a high, narrow peak close to H Lyman β (102.6 nm), these multilayers simultaneously provide a very small reflectance at H Lyman α (121.6 nm). This combined performance is demanded in space instrumentation for astrophysics and solar physics observations among others, where imaging the sky at the important diagnostic spectral line of Lyman β line requires rejecting the frequently much more intense background at Lyman α line. Such is the case for solar corona observations at Lyman β, which is masked by the strong Lyman α line. The multilayer peak is placed close to another important diagnostic tool: the OVI doublet at 103.2 and 103.8 nm. The target of small reflectance at 121.6 nm was seen to be the most critical. The best strategy in multilayer preparation was to prepare it with such minimum reflectance at slightly shorter wavelengths so that the coating evolved to shift it longwards over time. Multilayers kept a remarkable 102.6 nm/121.6 nm reflectance ratio over time in spite of some performance degradation. Hence, a multilayer coating aged of 4 years kept a reflectance of 43% at 102.6 nm and 0.2% at 121.6 nm.