RESUMO
The design problems for the Optical Interference Coating (OIC) 2022 Topical Meeting include black box coatings to reverse engineer and a pair of white-balanced, multi-bandpass filters for three-dimensional cinema projection in cold and hot outdoor environments. There were 14 designers from China, France, Germany, Japan, Russia, and the United States, submitting 32 total designs for problems A and B. The design problems and the submitted solutions are described and evaluated.
RESUMO
A non-polarizing beam splitter and a light color-mixing challenge were the topics of the design contest held in conjunction with the 2019 Optical Interference Coatings topical meeting of the Optical Society of America. A total of 10 designers from China, France, Germany, Japan, and the United States submitted over 70 designs for problems A and B. The design problems and the submitted solutions are described and evaluated.
RESUMO
The thickness of optical thin films, such as dielectrics, can be determined by the use of a profilometer or by a spectrophotometer. Both of these standard methods have coated area size limitations. Converting a digital camera to a spectrophotometer eliminates these size limitations. This work reviews a simple method for determining the physical thickness of a dielectric film on a silicon wafer using two images from a digital camera.
RESUMO
A dispersive mirror and a coating uniformity challenge were the topics of the design contest held in conjunction with the 2016 Optical Interference Coatings topical meeting of The Optical Society (OSA). A total of 18 designers from China, France, Germany, Japan, and the United States submitted 38 total designs for problems A and B. Michael Trubetskov submitted the winning designs for all four design challenges. The design problems and the submitted solutions are described and evaluated.
RESUMO
Optically variable devices made from optical-interference coatings create chromatic color mirrors that have minimal polarization differences with increasing incidence angle. These metal-dielectric-metal designs produce narrowband, high reflectance in the visible wavelength region. Broader-band reflectance regions, similar to those created by multilayer dielectric stacks, can be replicated on a high-reflecting metal base such as aluminum, maintaining the same nonpolarizing effects of the narrowband designs. These designs are intended for reflective systems used for display where reduced angle sensitivity is paramount. However, these designs can also be adapted for large angular-dependent color shift, such as in effect pigments. Design examples and layer material suggestions are given depending on the application requirements.
RESUMO
Color modeling of translucent and opaque media commonly uses two-constant Kubelka-Munk (KM) turbid media theory. KM theory is designed for isotropic color systems that rely on absorption and scatter to produce an overall reflected color. KM theory has previously been considered inadequate to use with interference pigments (IPs) due to their specular reflected, angle-dependent color and anisotropic behavior. If, however, an IP's reflected color is considered to contribute to the background reflectance and not as a colorant in a mixture with a conventional colorant, KM theory can be used. KM theory was successfully implemented to predict the goniospectrophotometric, normalized spectral reflectance of conventional colorants and IP mixtures.
RESUMO
An angle-independent color mirror and an infrared dichroic beam splitter were the subjects of a design contest held in conjunction with the 2013 Optical Interference Coatings topical meeting of the Optical Society of America. A total of 17 designers submitted 63 designs, 22 for Problem A and 41 for Problem B. The submissions were created through a wide spectrum of design approaches and optimization strategies. Michael Trubetskov and Weidong Shen won the first contest by submitting color mirror designs with a zero color difference (ΔE00) between normal incidence and all other incidence angles up to 60° as well as the thinnest design. Michael Trubetskov also won the second contest by submitting beam-splitter designs that met the required transmission while having the lowest mechanical coating stress and thinnest design. Fabien Lemarchand received the second-place finish for the beam-splitter design. The submitted designs are described and evaluated.