Calcium Fluoride Windows
- Uncoated Windows for 180 nm to 8 µm
- AR-Coated Windows for 1.65 µm to 3 µm
- Ø1/2" and Ø1" Sizes Available
- Uncoated Windows Suitable for Excimer Laser Applications
WG51050
Ø1" Uncoated
WG50530
Ø1/2" Uncoated
WG51050-D
Ø1" D-Coated
1.65 - 3.0 µm
Please Wait
Flat Window Selection Guide | |
---|---|
Wavelength Range | Substrate Material |
180 nm - 8.0 μm | Calcium Fluoride (CaF2) |
185 nm - 2.1 μm | UV Fused Silica |
200 nm - 5.0 μm | Sapphire |
200 nm - 6.0 μm | Magnesium Fluoride (MgF2) |
220 nm to >50 µm | CVD Diamond Windows |
230 nm - 1.1 µm | UV Fused Silica, Textured Antireflective Surface |
250 nm - 1.6 µm | UV Fused Silica, for 45° AOI |
250 nm - 26 µm | Potassium Bromide (KBr) |
300 nm - 3 µm | Infrasil® |
350 nm - 2.0 μm | N-BK7 |
600 nm - 16 µm | Zinc Selenide (ZnSe) |
1 - 1.7 µm | Infrasil®, Textured Antireflective Surface |
1.2 - 8.0 μm | Silicon (Si) |
1.9 - 16 μm | Germanium (Ge) |
2 - 5 μm | Barium Fluoride (BaF2) |
V-Coated Laser Windows |
Features
- Ø1/2" and Ø1" Versions Available
- Uncoated CaF2 Wavelength Range: UV to IR (180 nm - 8 μm)
- Available AR Coated for 1.65 - 3.0 µm (Ravg < 1.0%)
Thorlabs offers calcium fluoride (CaF2) High-Precision Windows either uncoated or with a broadband anti-reflective coating. The uncoated windows provide high transmission from the ultraviolet (180 nm) to the infrared (8 μm). The AR-coated windows feature an antireflection coating on both sides that provides increased transmission within the 1.65 - 3.0 µm specified wavelength range. Given its low absorption coefficient and high damage threshold, uncoated calcium fluoride crystal is a popular choice for use with excimer lasers. CaF2 windows are also commonly used in cryogenically cooled thermal imaging systems.
Calcium fluoride has a low absorption coefficient and high damage threshold, making these windows a good choice for use with free-space lasers. Optical calcium fluoride offers low dispersion (with an Abbe Number of 95) and low fluorescence, as well as excellent water, chemical, and heat resistance. In dry environments, CaF2 can be used up to 1000 °C, but in the presence of moisture, degradation will occur for temperatures exceeding 600 °C. Each window has a randomly oriented crystal axis.
Thorlabs offers High-Precision Windows fabricated from various substrate materials for use in a large variety of laser and industrial applications; see the selection guide to the right for windows manufactured using other substrates. We also offer laser windows, which have wavelength-specific AR coatings centered around commonly used laser wavelengths, and Brewster windows, which are used to eliminate p-polarization reflectance.
Click to Enlarge
Click for Raw Data
This graph shows the measured transmission of an uncoated calcium fluoride window at normal incidence.
Click to Enlarge
Click for Raw Data
This graph shows the measured transmission of an AR-coated calcium fluoride window at normal incidence. The shaded region denotes the AR coating range, over which Ravg < 1%. Performance outside of the specified range is not guaranteed and varies from lot to lot.
Click to Enlarge
Click for Raw Data
This plot gives the measured reflectance (per surface) at normal incidence of our AR-coated calcium fluoride window. The average reflectance is <1.0% per surface within the shaded wavelength range of 1.65 µm - 3.0 µm.
Damage Threshold Specifications | |
---|---|
Coating Designation (Item # Prefix) |
Damage Threshold |
-D | 2 J/cm2 (2.05 µm, 10 ns, 10 Hz, Ø186 µm) 2.00 J/cm2 (2.05 µm, 10 ns, 62.5 Hz, Ø350 µm) |
Damage Threshold Data for Thorlabs' D-Coated CaF2 Windows
The specifications to the right are measured data for Thorlabs' D-coated CaF2 windows. Damage threshold specifications are constant for all D-coated CaF2 windows, regardless of the size of the window.
Laser Induced Damage Threshold Tutorial
The following is a general overview of how laser induced damage thresholds are measured and how the values may be utilized in determining the appropriateness of an optic for a given application. When choosing optics, it is important to understand the Laser Induced Damage Threshold (LIDT) of the optics being used. The LIDT for an optic greatly depends on the type of laser you are using. Continuous wave (CW) lasers typically cause damage from thermal effects (absorption either in the coating or in the substrate). Pulsed lasers, on the other hand, often strip electrons from the lattice structure of an optic before causing thermal damage. Note that the guideline presented here assumes room temperature operation and optics in new condition (i.e., within scratch-dig spec, surface free of contamination, etc.). Because dust or other particles on the surface of an optic can cause damage at lower thresholds, we recommend keeping surfaces clean and free of debris. For more information on cleaning optics, please see our Optics Cleaning tutorial.
Testing Method
Thorlabs' LIDT testing is done in compliance with ISO/DIS 11254 and ISO 21254 specifications.
First, a low-power/energy beam is directed to the optic under test. The optic is exposed in 10 locations to this laser beam for 30 seconds (CW) or for a number of pulses (pulse repetition frequency specified). After exposure, the optic is examined by a microscope (~100X magnification) for any visible damage. The number of locations that are damaged at a particular power/energy level is recorded. Next, the power/energy is either increased or decreased and the optic is exposed at 10 new locations. This process is repeated until damage is observed. The damage threshold is then assigned to be the highest power/energy that the optic can withstand without causing damage. A histogram such as that below represents the testing of one BB1-E02 mirror.
The photograph above is a protected aluminum-coated mirror after LIDT testing. In this particular test, it handled 0.43 J/cm2 (1064 nm, 10 ns pulse, 10 Hz, Ø1.000 mm) before damage.
Example Test Data | |||
---|---|---|---|
Fluence | # of Tested Locations | Locations with Damage | Locations Without Damage |
1.50 J/cm2 | 10 | 0 | 10 |
1.75 J/cm2 | 10 | 0 | 10 |
2.00 J/cm2 | 10 | 0 | 10 |
2.25 J/cm2 | 10 | 1 | 9 |
3.00 J/cm2 | 10 | 1 | 9 |
5.00 J/cm2 | 10 | 9 | 1 |
According to the test, the damage threshold of the mirror was 2.00 J/cm2 (532 nm, 10 ns pulse, 10 Hz, Ø0.803 mm). Please keep in mind that these tests are performed on clean optics, as dirt and contamination can significantly lower the damage threshold of a component. While the test results are only representative of one coating run, Thorlabs specifies damage threshold values that account for coating variances.
Continuous Wave and Long-Pulse Lasers
When an optic is damaged by a continuous wave (CW) laser, it is usually due to the melting of the surface as a result of absorbing the laser's energy or damage to the optical coating (antireflection) [1]. Pulsed lasers with pulse lengths longer than 1 µs can be treated as CW lasers for LIDT discussions.
When pulse lengths are between 1 ns and 1 µs, laser-induced damage can occur either because of absorption or a dielectric breakdown (therefore, a user must check both CW and pulsed LIDT). Absorption is either due to an intrinsic property of the optic or due to surface irregularities; thus LIDT values are only valid for optics meeting or exceeding the surface quality specifications given by a manufacturer. While many optics can handle high power CW lasers, cemented (e.g., achromatic doublets) or highly absorptive (e.g., ND filters) optics tend to have lower CW damage thresholds. These lower thresholds are due to absorption or scattering in the cement or metal coating.
Pulsed lasers with high pulse repetition frequencies (PRF) may behave similarly to CW beams. Unfortunately, this is highly dependent on factors such as absorption and thermal diffusivity, so there is no reliable method for determining when a high PRF laser will damage an optic due to thermal effects. For beams with a high PRF both the average and peak powers must be compared to the equivalent CW power. Additionally, for highly transparent materials, there is little to no drop in the LIDT with increasing PRF.
In order to use the specified CW damage threshold of an optic, it is necessary to know the following:
- Wavelength of your laser
- Beam diameter of your beam (1/e2)
- Approximate intensity profile of your beam (e.g., Gaussian)
- Linear power density of your beam (total power divided by 1/e2 beam diameter)
Thorlabs expresses LIDT for CW lasers as a linear power density measured in W/cm. In this regime, the LIDT given as a linear power density can be applied to any beam diameter; one does not need to compute an adjusted LIDT to adjust for changes in spot size, as demonstrated by the graph to the right. Average linear power density can be calculated using the equation below.
The calculation above assumes a uniform beam intensity profile. You must now consider hotspots in the beam or other non-uniform intensity profiles and roughly calculate a maximum power density. For reference, a Gaussian beam typically has a maximum power density that is twice that of the uniform beam (see lower right).
Now compare the maximum power density to that which is specified as the LIDT for the optic. If the optic was tested at a wavelength other than your operating wavelength, the damage threshold must be scaled appropriately. A good rule of thumb is that the damage threshold has a linear relationship with wavelength such that as you move to shorter wavelengths, the damage threshold decreases (i.e., a LIDT of 10 W/cm at 1310 nm scales to 5 W/cm at 655 nm):
While this rule of thumb provides a general trend, it is not a quantitative analysis of LIDT vs wavelength. In CW applications, for instance, damage scales more strongly with absorption in the coating and substrate, which does not necessarily scale well with wavelength. While the above procedure provides a good rule of thumb for LIDT values, please contact Tech Support if your wavelength is different from the specified LIDT wavelength. If your power density is less than the adjusted LIDT of the optic, then the optic should work for your application.
Please note that we have a buffer built in between the specified damage thresholds online and the tests which we have done, which accommodates variation between batches. Upon request, we can provide individual test information and a testing certificate. The damage analysis will be carried out on a similar optic (customer's optic will not be damaged). Testing may result in additional costs or lead times. Contact Tech Support for more information.
Pulsed Lasers
As previously stated, pulsed lasers typically induce a different type of damage to the optic than CW lasers. Pulsed lasers often do not heat the optic enough to damage it; instead, pulsed lasers produce strong electric fields capable of inducing dielectric breakdown in the material. Unfortunately, it can be very difficult to compare the LIDT specification of an optic to your laser. There are multiple regimes in which a pulsed laser can damage an optic and this is based on the laser's pulse length. The highlighted columns in the table below outline the relevant pulse lengths for our specified LIDT values.
Pulses shorter than 10-9 s cannot be compared to our specified LIDT values with much reliability. In this ultra-short-pulse regime various mechanics, such as multiphoton-avalanche ionization, take over as the predominate damage mechanism [2]. In contrast, pulses between 10-7 s and 10-4 s may cause damage to an optic either because of dielectric breakdown or thermal effects. This means that both CW and pulsed damage thresholds must be compared to the laser beam to determine whether the optic is suitable for your application.
Pulse Duration | t < 10-9 s | 10-9 < t < 10-7 s | 10-7 < t < 10-4 s | t > 10-4 s |
---|---|---|---|---|
Damage Mechanism | Avalanche Ionization | Dielectric Breakdown | Dielectric Breakdown or Thermal | Thermal |
Relevant Damage Specification | No Comparison (See Above) | Pulsed | Pulsed and CW | CW |
When comparing an LIDT specified for a pulsed laser to your laser, it is essential to know the following:
- Wavelength of your laser
- Energy density of your beam (total energy divided by 1/e2 area)
- Pulse length of your laser
- Pulse repetition frequency (prf) of your laser
- Beam diameter of your laser (1/e2 )
- Approximate intensity profile of your beam (e.g., Gaussian)
The energy density of your beam should be calculated in terms of J/cm2. The graph to the right shows why expressing the LIDT as an energy density provides the best metric for short pulse sources. In this regime, the LIDT given as an energy density can be applied to any beam diameter; one does not need to compute an adjusted LIDT to adjust for changes in spot size. This calculation assumes a uniform beam intensity profile. You must now adjust this energy density to account for hotspots or other nonuniform intensity profiles and roughly calculate a maximum energy density. For reference a Gaussian beam typically has a maximum energy density that is twice that of the 1/e2 beam.
Now compare the maximum energy density to that which is specified as the LIDT for the optic. If the optic was tested at a wavelength other than your operating wavelength, the damage threshold must be scaled appropriately [3]. A good rule of thumb is that the damage threshold has an inverse square root relationship with wavelength such that as you move to shorter wavelengths, the damage threshold decreases (i.e., a LIDT of 1 J/cm2 at 1064 nm scales to 0.7 J/cm2 at 532 nm):
You now have a wavelength-adjusted energy density, which you will use in the following step.
Beam diameter is also important to know when comparing damage thresholds. While the LIDT, when expressed in units of J/cm², scales independently of spot size; large beam sizes are more likely to illuminate a larger number of defects which can lead to greater variances in the LIDT [4]. For data presented here, a <1 mm beam size was used to measure the LIDT. For beams sizes greater than 5 mm, the LIDT (J/cm2) will not scale independently of beam diameter due to the larger size beam exposing more defects.
The pulse length must now be compensated for. The longer the pulse duration, the more energy the optic can handle. For pulse widths between 1 - 100 ns, an approximation is as follows:
Use this formula to calculate the Adjusted LIDT for an optic based on your pulse length. If your maximum energy density is less than this adjusted LIDT maximum energy density, then the optic should be suitable for your application. Keep in mind that this calculation is only used for pulses between 10-9 s and 10-7 s. For pulses between 10-7 s and 10-4 s, the CW LIDT must also be checked before deeming the optic appropriate for your application.
Please note that we have a buffer built in between the specified damage thresholds online and the tests which we have done, which accommodates variation between batches. Upon request, we can provide individual test information and a testing certificate. Contact Tech Support for more information.
[1] R. M. Wood, Optics and Laser Tech. 29, 517 (1998).
[2] Roger M. Wood, Laser-Induced Damage of Optical Materials (Institute of Physics Publishing, Philadelphia, PA, 2003).
[3] C. W. Carr et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 91, 127402 (2003).
[4] N. Bloembergen, Appl. Opt. 12, 661 (1973).
In order to illustrate the process of determining whether a given laser system will damage an optic, a number of example calculations of laser induced damage threshold are given below. For assistance with performing similar calculations, we provide a spreadsheet calculator that can be downloaded by clicking the button to the right. To use the calculator, enter the specified LIDT value of the optic under consideration and the relevant parameters of your laser system in the green boxes. The spreadsheet will then calculate a linear power density for CW and pulsed systems, as well as an energy density value for pulsed systems. These values are used to calculate adjusted, scaled LIDT values for the optics based on accepted scaling laws. This calculator assumes a Gaussian beam profile, so a correction factor must be introduced for other beam shapes (uniform, etc.). The LIDT scaling laws are determined from empirical relationships; their accuracy is not guaranteed. Remember that absorption by optics or coatings can significantly reduce LIDT in some spectral regions. These LIDT values are not valid for ultrashort pulses less than one nanosecond in duration.
A Gaussian beam profile has about twice the maximum intensity of a uniform beam profile.
CW Laser Example
Suppose that a CW laser system at 1319 nm produces a 0.5 W Gaussian beam that has a 1/e2 diameter of 10 mm. A naive calculation of the average linear power density of this beam would yield a value of 0.5 W/cm, given by the total power divided by the beam diameter:
However, the maximum power density of a Gaussian beam is about twice the maximum power density of a uniform beam, as shown in the graph to the right. Therefore, a more accurate determination of the maximum linear power density of the system is 1 W/cm.
An AC127-030-C achromatic doublet lens has a specified CW LIDT of 350 W/cm, as tested at 1550 nm. CW damage threshold values typically scale directly with the wavelength of the laser source, so this yields an adjusted LIDT value:
The adjusted LIDT value of 350 W/cm x (1319 nm / 1550 nm) = 298 W/cm is significantly higher than the calculated maximum linear power density of the laser system, so it would be safe to use this doublet lens for this application.
Pulsed Nanosecond Laser Example: Scaling for Different Pulse Durations
Suppose that a pulsed Nd:YAG laser system is frequency tripled to produce a 10 Hz output, consisting of 2 ns output pulses at 355 nm, each with 1 J of energy, in a Gaussian beam with a 1.9 cm beam diameter (1/e2). The average energy density of each pulse is found by dividing the pulse energy by the beam area:
As described above, the maximum energy density of a Gaussian beam is about twice the average energy density. So, the maximum energy density of this beam is ~0.7 J/cm2.
The energy density of the beam can be compared to the LIDT values of 1 J/cm2 and 3.5 J/cm2 for a BB1-E01 broadband dielectric mirror and an NB1-K08 Nd:YAG laser line mirror, respectively. Both of these LIDT values, while measured at 355 nm, were determined with a 10 ns pulsed laser at 10 Hz. Therefore, an adjustment must be applied for the shorter pulse duration of the system under consideration. As described on the previous tab, LIDT values in the nanosecond pulse regime scale with the square root of the laser pulse duration:
This adjustment factor results in LIDT values of 0.45 J/cm2 for the BB1-E01 broadband mirror and 1.6 J/cm2 for the Nd:YAG laser line mirror, which are to be compared with the 0.7 J/cm2 maximum energy density of the beam. While the broadband mirror would likely be damaged by the laser, the more specialized laser line mirror is appropriate for use with this system.
Pulsed Nanosecond Laser Example: Scaling for Different Wavelengths
Suppose that a pulsed laser system emits 10 ns pulses at 2.5 Hz, each with 100 mJ of energy at 1064 nm in a 16 mm diameter beam (1/e2) that must be attenuated with a neutral density filter. For a Gaussian output, these specifications result in a maximum energy density of 0.1 J/cm2. The damage threshold of an NDUV10A Ø25 mm, OD 1.0, reflective neutral density filter is 0.05 J/cm2 for 10 ns pulses at 355 nm, while the damage threshold of the similar NE10A absorptive filter is 10 J/cm2 for 10 ns pulses at 532 nm. As described on the previous tab, the LIDT value of an optic scales with the square root of the wavelength in the nanosecond pulse regime:
This scaling gives adjusted LIDT values of 0.08 J/cm2 for the reflective filter and 14 J/cm2 for the absorptive filter. In this case, the absorptive filter is the best choice in order to avoid optical damage.
Pulsed Microsecond Laser Example
Consider a laser system that produces 1 µs pulses, each containing 150 µJ of energy at a repetition rate of 50 kHz, resulting in a relatively high duty cycle of 5%. This system falls somewhere between the regimes of CW and pulsed laser induced damage, and could potentially damage an optic by mechanisms associated with either regime. As a result, both CW and pulsed LIDT values must be compared to the properties of the laser system to ensure safe operation.
If this relatively long-pulse laser emits a Gaussian 12.7 mm diameter beam (1/e2) at 980 nm, then the resulting output has a linear power density of 5.9 W/cm and an energy density of 1.2 x 10-4 J/cm2 per pulse. This can be compared to the LIDT values for a WPQ10E-980 polymer zero-order quarter-wave plate, which are 5 W/cm for CW radiation at 810 nm and 5 J/cm2 for a 10 ns pulse at 810 nm. As before, the CW LIDT of the optic scales linearly with the laser wavelength, resulting in an adjusted CW value of 6 W/cm at 980 nm. On the other hand, the pulsed LIDT scales with the square root of the laser wavelength and the square root of the pulse duration, resulting in an adjusted value of 55 J/cm2 for a 1 µs pulse at 980 nm. The pulsed LIDT of the optic is significantly greater than the energy density of the laser pulse, so individual pulses will not damage the wave plate. However, the large average linear power density of the laser system may cause thermal damage to the optic, much like a high-power CW beam.
Posted Comments: | |
BAI RUHAI
 (posted 2023-05-16 13:42:40.88) random crystal orientation means
the molecules are randomly oriented so the crystal in total has no axis
or
the cystal has a specific axis but not sure the relationship between the axis and the surface?
i'm little confused...
i thought it should has a specific axis, but just un-marked, right?
thanks ksosnowski
 (posted 2023-05-16 06:09:49.0) Hello Bai, thanks for reaching out to Thorlabs. Our CaF2 windows are single-crystal with 111-cleavage, however you are correct that this is just un-marked on the window. The substrates do not come with a "flat" like silicon wafers and we do not further test the orientation or mark this on each window during production. user
 (posted 2023-05-12 19:42:44.557) May I know whether our strong unbalanced strength can cause birefringent for these CaF2 windows? Thank you ksosnowski
 (posted 2023-05-15 04:11:41.0) Thanks for reaching out to Thorlabs. It is possible to induce birefringence in optics via mounting stresses, however our CaF2 windows have a random crystal axis orientation. Unfortunately we have not measured this effect directly in our CaF2 windows so it is hard to predict what magnitude of effects one may expect if they are stressing the optic. I have reached out directly to discuss this further. Ajinkya Punjal
 (posted 2023-05-04 15:24:20.657) We are looking for VUV or UV grade CaF2 windows of any size but a thickness of 100 um. 10 quantities of it. Can we get these custom windows? jdelia
 (posted 2023-05-04 10:59:16.0) Thank you for contacting Thorlabs. I have reached out to you directly to discuss the feasibility of your custom item request. user
 (posted 2019-10-29 18:51:26.947) Hello,
Can you please provide uncertainty on the transmission curve for this CaF2 window? YLohia
 (posted 2019-11-05 08:54:38.0) Hello, thank you for contacting Thorlabs. What wavelength are you working at? We are curious if you’re working at a wavelength where potential absorption would be a concern (UV or farther in the IR towards CaF2’s absorption edge). Or is this just a general question on the accuracy of the measurement depicted? Please note that the measurement shown is typical. There will be variations from lot to lot, which are not easy to characterize in advance due to variations in production. We reached out to you directly to discuss your needs further. anatoliy
 (posted 2017-05-18 20:01:29.27) Good time of day,
What is the crystal orientation of your CaF2 windows? I look for {100} CaF2 windows or prisms of any shape.
Best regards,
Anatoliy. nbayconich
 (posted 2017-05-22 05:35:41.0) Thank you for contacting Thorlabs. Our Calcium Fluoride windows have a random crystal orientation. A Techsupport representative will reach out to you directly. denis.balic
 (posted 2016-11-15 11:52:14.84) Hello,
Do you have an uncoated CaF2 disc that's 1" OD x 1/16" thick?
Thanks tfrisch
 (posted 2016-11-17 07:20:00.0) Hello, thank you for contacting Thorlabs. I'll reach out to you directly about the other specs you would need for this custom. calvin.brett
 (posted 2016-07-11 12:44:37.663) Hello, we are looking for 1.5" CaF2 uncoated windows, thickness 4mm. We need up to 5 windows. Please let me know if this is possible. dgu
 (posted 2015-06-08 16:49:14.457) CaF2 windows: Standard Specifications
Material CaF2: IR grade (intrinsic absorption <0.5% between 3-5 microns)
Dimensions 18 mm x 22 mm ± 0.3mm
Thickness 1.0 mm ± 0.2 mm
Surfaces 60/40
Edges Fine Ground
Flatness ≤5 Fringes
One surface is AR-coated for MWIR region (3-5 microns), the other surface is blank
Please provide cost info for 10 windows besembeson
 (posted 2015-09-03 12:25:15.0) Response from Bweh at Thorlabs USA: We will be contacting you by email for a quotation. user
 (posted 2015-05-26 03:52:57.78) Hello, I am looking for a CaF2 crystal for white light continuum generation. Can you recommend me which of your products will work bets? Thank you! besembeson
 (posted 2015-07-22 05:58:42.0) Response from Bweh at Thorlabs USA: Our CaF2 windows have randomly oriented crystal axis so it will not be suitable for white light continuum generation which requires the surface to be perpendicular to the [001] axis. jlow
 (posted 2012-12-20 10:08:00.0) Response from Jeremy at Thorlabs: Ø40mm CaF2 window is not something that we have stock. However, we should be able to make this as a custom for you. We will contact you directly with regard to this custom window. alexander.goldgirsh
 (posted 2012-12-10 14:34:07.323) Do you have CaF2 windowth 5 -6 mm thick with D=40 mm.
What is price? tcohen
 (posted 2012-04-10 10:55:00.0) Response from Tim at Thorlabs: Thank you for your feedback. This is manufactured with 20-10 Scratch-Dig and Surface Flatness (@633 nm) of ?/8 over the Clear Aperture. Because CaF2 is relatively soft and has a high thermal expansion coefficient, it is likely to have a worse surface roughness than some of our other standard glasses(such as N-BK7 or UVFS). Unfortunately, we are unable to provide rms surface roughness data for these windows. We would like to discuss your end goal so that we may provide information that you may have been looking to derive from the surface roughness, however, we do not have your contact information. If you would like to discuss this further, please email us at techsupport@thorlabs.com where an Applications Engineer would be happy to provide more information on these windows. user
 (posted 2012-04-05 17:02:05.0) What is the (approx) rms surface roughness of the CaF2 windows? |
Window Selection Guide (Table Sorted by Wavelength) | |||||
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Substrate and Window Type | Wavelength Range | Available AR Coatings | Reflectance over AR Coating Rangea | Transmission Data | Reflectance Data |
Calcium Fluoride (CaF2): Flat or Wedged |
180 nm - 8.0 μm | Uncoated | - | Raw Data |
- |
-D Coating, 1.65 - 3.0 µm | Ravg < 1.0%; Rabs < 2.0% at 0° AOI | Raw Data |
Raw Data |
||
UV Fused Silica: Flat, Wedged, V-Coated Flat, or V-Coated Wedged |
185 nm - 2.1 μm | Uncoated (Flat or Wedged) |
- | Raw Data |
- |
-UV Coating, 245 - 400 nm (Flat or Wedged) |
Ravg < 0.5% at 0° AOI | - | Raw Data |
||
-C3 Coating, 261 - 266 nm (V-Coated) |
Ravg < 0.5% at 0° AOI | - | Raw Data |
||
-C6 Coating, 350 - 450 nm (V-Coated) |
Ravg < 0.5% at 0° AOI | - | Raw Data |
||
-A Coating, 350 - 700 nm (Flat or Wedged) |
Ravg < 0.5% at 0° AOI | - | Raw Data |
||
-B Coating, 650 - 1050 nm (Flat or Wedged) |
Ravg < 0.5% at 0° AOI | - | Raw Data |
||
-C Coating, 1050 - 1700 nm (Flat or Wedged) |
Ravg < 0.5% at 0° AOI | - | Raw Data |
||
Sapphire: Flat or Wedged |
200 nm - 5.0 μm | Uncoated | - | Raw Data |
- |
-D Coating, 1.65 - 3.0 µm | Ravg < 1.0% at 0° AOI | Raw Data |
Raw Data |
||
-E1 Coating, 2.0 - 5.0 µm | Ravg < 1.50%, Rabs < 3.0% (per Surface, 2.0 - 5.0 µm); Ravg < 1.75% (per Surface, 2.0 - 4.0 µm) at 0° AOI |
Raw Data |
Raw Data |
||
Magnesium Fluoride (MgF2): Flat or Wedged |
200 nm - 6.0 μm | Uncoated | - | Raw Data |
- |
Barium Fluoride (BaF2): Flat or Wedged |
200 nm - 11 µm | Uncoated (Wedged Only) |
- | Raw Data |
- |
-E1 Coating, 2 - 5 µm | Ravg < 1.25%; Rabs < 2.5% at 0° AOI | Raw Data |
Raw Data |
||
UV Fused Silica, for 45° AOI: Flat or Wedged |
250 nm - 1.6 µm | Coating for 250 nm - 450 nm |
Ravg < 1.0% at 45° AOI | Raw Data |
|
Coating for 350 nm - 1100 nm |
Ravg < 2.0% at 45° AOI | Raw Data |
|||
Coating for 400 nm - 700 nm |
Ravg < 1.0% at 45° AOI | Raw Data |
|||
Coating for 600 nm - 1700 nm |
Ravg < 1.5% at 45° AOI | Raw Data |
|||
Coating for 700 nm - 1100 nm |
Ravg < 1.0% at 45° AOI | Raw Data |
|||
Coating for 1200 nm - 1600 nm |
Ravg < 1.0% at 45° AOI | Raw Data |
|||
Potassium Bromide (KBr): Flat |
250 nm - 26 µm | Uncoated | - | - | |
Infrasil®: Flat |
300 nm - 3 µm | Uncoated | - | Raw Data |
- |
N-BK7: Flat, Wedged, V-Coated Flat, or V-Coated Wedged |
350 nm - 2.0 μm | Uncoated (Flat or Wedged) |
- | Raw Data |
- |
-A Coating, 350 - 700 nm (Flat or Wedged) |
Ravg < 0.5% at 0° AOI | - | Raw Data |
||
-C7 Coating, 400 - 700 nm (V-Coated) |
Ravg < 0.5% at 0° AOI | - | Raw Data |
||
-C10 Coating, 523 - 532 nm (V-Coated) |
Ravg < 0.5% at 0° AOI | - | Raw Data |
||
-C11 Coating, 610 - 860 nm (V-Coated) |
Ravg < 0.5% at 0° AOI | - | Raw Data |
||
-B Coating, 650 - 1050 nm (Flat or Wedged) |
Ravg < 0.5% at 0° AOI | - | Raw Data |
||
-C13 Coating, 700 - 1100 nm (V-Coated) |
Ravg < 0.5% at 0° AOI | - | Raw Data |
||
C14 Coating, 1047 - 1064 nm (V-Coated) |
Ravg < 0.5% at 0° AOI | - | Raw Data |
||
-C15 Coating, 523 - 532 nm & 1047 - 1064 nm (V-Coated) |
Ravg < 0.5% at 0° AOI | - | Raw Data |
||
-C Coating, 1050 - 1700 nm (Flat or Wedged) |
Ravg < 0.5% at 0° AOI | - | Raw Data |
||
Zinc Selenide (ZnSe): Flat or Wedged |
600 nm - 16 µm | Uncoated | - | Raw Data |
- |
-D Coating, 1.65 - 3.0 µm | Ravg < 1.0%; Rabs < 2.0% at 0° AOI | Raw Data |
Raw Data |
||
-E4 Coating, 2 - 13 µm (Only Flat) |
Ravg < 3.5%; Rabs < 6% at 0° AOI | Raw Data |
Raw Data |
||
-E2 Coating, 4.5 - 7.5 µm (Only Flat) |
Ravg < 1.0%; Rabs < 2.0% at 0° AOI | Raw Data |
Raw Data |
||
-E3 Coating, 7 - 12 µm (Only Wedged) |
Ravg < 1.0%; Rabs < 2.0% at 0° AOI | Raw Data |
Raw Data |
||
-G Coating, 7 - 12 µm (Only Flat) |
Ravg < 1% at 0° AOI | Raw Data |
Raw Data |
||
Silicon (Si): Flat or Wedged |
1.2 - 8.0 μm | Uncoated | - | Raw Data |
- |
-E1 Coating, 2 - 5 µm (Only Wedged) |
Ravg < 1.25%; Rabs < 2.5% at 0° AOI | Raw Data |
Raw Data |
||
-E Coating, 3 - 5 µm (Only Flat) |
Ravg < 2% at 0° AOI | Raw Data |
Raw Data |
||
Germanium (Ge): Flat or Wedged |
1.9 - 16 μm | Uncoated, 2.0 - 16 μm | - | Raw Data |
- |
-C9 Coating, 1.9 - 6 µm (Only Flat) |
Ravg < 2% at 0° AOI | Raw Data |
Raw Data |
||
-E3 Coating, 7 - 12 µm | Ravg < 1.0%; Rabs < 2.0% at 0° AOI | Raw Data |
Raw Data |
Item # | WG50530 | WG51050 | |
---|---|---|---|
Diameter | 1/2" (12.7 mm) | 1" (25.4 mm) | |
Diameter Tolerance | +0.0 / -0.2 mm | ||
Thickness | 3.0 mm | 5.0 mm | |
Thickness Tolerance | ±0.3 mm | ||
Clear Aperture | ≥Ø11.43 mm | ≥Ø22.86 mm | |
Parallelism | ≤10 arcsec | ||
Transmitted Wavefront Errora | ≤λ/8 Over Central 5 mm ≤λ/4 Full Clear Aperture |
≤λ/8 Over Central 10 mm ≤λ/4 Full Clear Aperture |
|
Surface Quality | 40-20 Scratch-Dig | ||
Wavelength Range | 180 nm - 8.0 μm (Uncoated) | ||
Substrate | Calcium Fluorideb | ||
Transmission Data | Raw Data |
Item # | WG50530-D | WG51050-D | |
---|---|---|---|
Diameter | 1/2" (12.7 mm) | 1" (25.4 mm) | |
Diameter Tolerance | +0.0 / -0.2 mm | ||
Thickness | 3.0 mm | 5.0 mm | |
Thickness Tolerance | ±0.3 mm | ||
Clear Aperture | >Ø11.4 mm | >Ø22.9 mm | |
Parallelism | <10 arcsec | ||
Transmitted Wavefront Errora | ≤λ/8 Over Central 5 mm ≤λ/4 Over Full Clear Aperture |
≤λ/8 Over Central 10 mm ≤λ/4 Over Full Clear Aperture |
|
Surface Quality | 40-20 Scratch-Dig | ||
AR Coating Range | 1.65 - 3.0 µm (-D Coating) | ||
AR Coating Reflectanceb | Ravg < 1.0%c; Rabs < 2.0% (0° AOI) | ||
Reflectance Data | Raw Data |
||
Transmissiond | Tavg > 97%c; Tabs > 92% (0° AOI) | ||
Substrate | Calcium Fluoridee | ||
Transmission Data | Raw Data |
||
Damage Threshold | 2.00 J/cm2 (2050 nm, 62.5 Hz, 10 ns, Ø350 µm) |