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1.
Nanotechnology ; 35(30)2024 May 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38631308

ABSTRACT

We have experimentally demonstrated spatially selective absorption in Ag-SiO2-Ag based trilayer thin films by tuning the deposition angle of SiO2layer. These structures generate cavity resonance which can be tuned across the substrate locations due to spatially selective thickness and refractive index of silicon oxide (SiO2) film sandwiched between metallic silver (Ag) mirrors. Spatially selective property of SiO2film is obtained by oblique angle deposition technique using an electron beam evaporation system. The resonance wavelength of absorption in this trilayer structure shifts across the substrate locations along the direction of oblique deposition. The extent of shift in resonance increases with increase in angle of deposition of SiO2layer. 4.14 nm mm-1average shift of resonance wavelength is observed when SiO2is deposited at 40° whereas 4.76 nm mm-1average shift is observed when SiO2is deposited at 60°. We observed that the width of resonance increases with angle of deposition of the cavity layer and ultimately the resonant absorption disappears and becomes broadband when SiO2is deposited at glancing angle deposition (GLAD) configuration. Our study reveals that there is a suitable range of oblique angle of deposition from 40° to 60° for higher spatial tunability and resonant absorption whereas the absorption becomes broadband for glancing angle deposition.

2.
Appl Opt ; 55(22): 6108-14, 2016 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27505395

ABSTRACT

HfO2/SiO2 periodic multilayer high reflection mirrors have been prepared by a reactive electron-beam evaporation technique. The deposited mirrors were annealed in the temperature range from 300°C to 500°C. The effects of annealing on optical, microstructural, and laser-induced damage characteristics of the mirrors have been investigated. The high reflection band of the mirror shifts toward a shorter wavelength with increasing annealing temperature. As-deposited and annealed mirrors show polycrystalline structure with a monoclinic phase of HfO2. Crystalinity and grain size increase upon annealing. The laser-induced damage threshold (LIDT) has been assessed using a 532 nm pulsed laser at a pulse width of 7 ns. The LIDT value of the multilayer mirror increases from 44.1 J/cm2 to 77.6 J/cm2 with annealing up to 400°C. The improvement of LIDT with annealing is explained through oxygen vacancy defects as well as grain-size-dependent thermal conductivity. Finally, the observed laser damage morphology, such as circular scalds and ablated multilayer stacks with terrace structure, are analyzed.

3.
Appl Opt ; 53(5): 850-60, 2014 Feb 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24663263

ABSTRACT

HfO(2)-SiO(2) mixed composite thin films have been deposited on fused silica substrate by co-evaporation of HfO(2) and SiO(2) through the reactive electron-beam evaporation technique. The composition-dependent refractive index and the absorption coefficient have been analyzed using different effective medium approximation (EMA) models in order to evaluate the suitability of these models for such mixed composite thin films. The discrepancies between experimentally determined and EMA-computed values are explained through microstructural and morphological evolutions observed in these mixed composite films. Finally, the dependence of the laser damage threshold as a function of silica content has been investigated, and the improved laser-induced damage threshold for films having more than 80% silica content has been explained through the defect-assisted multiphoton ionization process.

4.
Appl Opt ; 52(10): 2102-15, 2013 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23545966

ABSTRACT

Post nondestructive analyses of an all-dielectric multilayer Fabry-Perot interference filter developed through a reactive electron beam deposition process have been carried out through numerical reverse engineering of transmission spectra, Rutherford backscattering spectroscopy and quartz crystal monitoring data to derive multilayer geometry, deposited layer thicknesses, densities, refractive indices, compositions, and stoichiometry. These techniques are collectively used to fulfill the missing links with complementary and some supplementary information to inverse synthesize the multilayer geometry. During this investigation it is distinctly understood that the factors associated with real-time deposition have significantly influenced the microscopic parameters, namely, the densities and refractive indices of TiO2 and SiO2 layers. This in turn influenced the layers' geometric (physical) thicknesses during automated quarter-wave optical layer monitoring and consequently affected the experimental spectral characteristics. The role of oxygen has been observed to be significant in controlling the mass densities of these refractory oxide layers. It is further noticed that the layer density values have been significantly perturbed whether the associated TiO2 or SiO2 oxide dielectric films are substoichiometric (oxygen-deficient), stoichiometric, or superstoichiometric (oxygen-enriched).

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