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threewingedfury
Apr22-07, 10:43 PM
A sheet of glass having an index of refraction of 1.32 is to be coated with a film of material having an index of refraction of 1.46 such that green light with a wavelength of 525 nm (in air) is preferentially transmitted via constructive interference.

(a) What is the minimum thickness of the film that will achieve the result in nm?


I was given the equation:
L=lamda/n2-n1

So 525x10^-9/.14 = 37500 nm

But this isn't right because:

With the numbers n2=1.55 and n1=1.40 the thickness is 169 nm

mezarashi
Apr22-07, 10:59 PM
It doesn't look like the equation you are using is accurate.

First of all, you must calculate the phase shifts involved.

1. Because the film has a higher index than air, the rays reflected by the film will experience a half-wavelength phase shift.

2. Rays will also be reflected off the glass-film interface. These go through a 2d phase-shift, where d is the film thickness. As the glass has a lower index than the film, no half-wavelength shift occurs here.

For constructive interference, the waves must be in-phase, so:

m \lambda_f = 2d - \frac{\lambda_f}{2}

threewingedfury
Apr23-07, 07:45 AM
so what would m be? do you add the two indecies together, or subtract them?