Minimum thickness of thin film constructive interference

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around determining the minimum thickness of a benzene thin film that results in constructive interference when illuminated with orange light at normal incidence. The refractive indices of benzene and glass are provided, along with the wavelength of light.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Conceptual clarification

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the appropriate equation for calculating the thickness of the thin film, questioning the relevance of the different refractive indices provided. There is uncertainty about which index to use in the context of constructive interference.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with the problem, attempting to clarify the correct approach and the implications of the refractive indices. Some guidance has been offered regarding the conditions for constructive versus destructive interference, but no consensus has been reached on the final solution.

Contextual Notes

There is confusion regarding the number of phase reversals in the problem and how they affect the choice of equations for constructive interference. Participants are also exploring how to interpret problem statements that do not explicitly mention interference types.

crazyog
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Homework Statement


What is the minimum (non-zero) thickness of a benzene (n = 1.501) thin film that will result in constructive interference when viewed at normal incidence and illuminated with orange light (lamba = 615 nm)? A glass slide (ng = 1.620) supports the thin film
answer= 204 nm

Homework Equations


I rearranged an equation to get
t= (m=.5)(lambda) / 2*n

but I'm thrown off by how they give me two n values?


The Attempt at a Solution


I tried using my equation plugging in each n, but did not get the answer.

please help, thanks in advance :)
 
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Hi crazyog,

crazyog said:

Homework Statement


What is the minimum (non-zero) thickness of a benzene (n = 1.501) thin film that will result in constructive interference when viewed at normal incidence and illuminated with orange light (lamba = 615 nm)? A glass slide (ng = 1.620) supports the thin film
answer= 204 nm

Homework Equations


I rearranged an equation to get
t= (m=.5)(lambda) / 2*n

I don't believe that is the correct formula to use for this case.

but I'm thrown off by how they give me two n values?

They are really giving you three n values because there are three materials: the thin film of benzene is between air and glass. The question is, which material does the n in the equation refer to?
 
well they are referring to the benzene so would it be the 1.501 for n.
would the equation be
t= (lambda)/4*n

hm...but I am still not getting the answer?
 
crazyog said:
well they are referring to the benzene so would it be the 1.501 for n.

Exactly; in the thin film constuctive/destructive condition equations, the thin film index of refraction is used.

would the equation be
t= (lambda)/4*n

hm...but I am still not getting the answer?

No, that's the same equation as in your original post. The equation in your original post would find the smallest thickness of destructive interference. (Remember that whether the think film equations are constructive or destructive depends on how many reflective phase shifts there are.)

So what equation give constructive interference for this case? (I think there should only be two alternatives.)
 
oh ok so (615*10^-9)/(2*1.501) = 2.04*10^-7

Got it! thanks!
so the key was that it is constructive interference, which they stated in the problem...
is there a way to tell if they don't state it?
like if they say they would the find the maximum or minimum, does that refer to constructive and deconstructive?
 
crazyog said:
oh ok so (615*10^-9)/(2*1.501) = 2.04*10^-7

Got it! thanks!

That's right; the important point was that there are two reflective phase reversals in this problem.

If instead, for example, the benzene was on top of water (with an index n=1.333), then the equation in your original post would have been the correct one for constructive interference, because that case would only have one phase reversal.


so the key was that it is constructive interference, which they stated in the problem...
is there a way to tell if they don't state it?
like if they say they would the find the maximum or minimum, does that refer to constructive and deconstructive?

They'll often use the words bright or dark, for constructive and destructive. Or perhaps they'll say they want to reduce reflection (off of an aircraft coated with a thin film, for example), which would be destructive interference.

I'm sure you've noticed by now in your studies that there are many non-standard way of wording physics problems, so no matter how many keywords you keep in mind, you'll still run across problems that are worded in a new way, and you just have to think about it to figure out what they want.
 

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