RESUMO
We have developed improved cavity-finesse methods for characterizing the diffraction efficiencies of large gratings at the Littrow angle. These methods include measuring cavity length with optical techniques, using a Michelson interferometer to calibrate piezoelectric transducer nonlinearities and angle-tuning procedures to confirm optimal alignment. We used these methods to characterize two 20 cm scale dielectric gratings. The values taken from across their surfaces collectively had means and standard deviations of micro=99.293% and sigma=0.164% and micro=99.084% and sigma=0.079%. The greatest efficiency observed at a single point on a grating was (99.577+/-0.002)%, which is also the most accurate measurement of the diffraction efficiency in the literature of which we are aware. These results prove that a high diffraction efficiency with low variation is achievable across large apertures for gratings.
RESUMO
Future energy scaling of high-energy chirped-pulse amplification systems will benefit from the capability to coherently tile diffraction gratings into larger apertures. Design and operation of a novel, accurate alignment diagnostic for coherently tiled diffraction gratings is required for successful implementation of this technique. An invariant diffraction direction and phase for special moves of a diffraction grating is discussed, allowing simplification in the design of the coherently tiled grating diagnostic. An analytical proof of the existence of a unique diffraction grating eigenvector for translational and rotational motion that conserves the diffraction direction and diffracted wave phase is presented.