氟化锂
光学涂层
光学
材料科学
系外行星
原子层沉积
天体生物学
光电子学
纳米技术
物理
薄膜
天文
行星
核物理学
作者
Brian Fleming,Manuel A. Quijada,John Hennessy,Arika Egan,Javier Del Hoyo,Brian Hicks,James Wiley,Nicholas Kruczek,Nicholas Erickson,Kevin France
出处
期刊:Applied Optics
[Optica Publishing Group]
日期:2017-12-12
卷期号:56 (36): 9941-9941
被引量:64
摘要
Recent advances in the physical vapor deposition (PVD) of protective fluoride films have raised the far-ultraviolet (FUV: 912-1600 {\AA}) reflectivity of aluminum-based mirrors closer to the theoretical limit. The greatest gains, at more than 20%, have come for lithium fluoride-protected aluminum, which has the shortest wavelength cutoff of any conventional overcoat. Despite the success of the NASA FUSE mission, the use of lithium fluoride (LiF)-based optics is rare, as LiF is hygroscopic and requires handling procedures that can drive risk. With NASA now studying two large mission concepts for astronomy, Large UV-Optical-IR Surveyor (LUVOIR) and the Habitable Exoplanet Imaging Mission (HabEx), which mandate throughput down to 1000 {\AA}, the development of LiF-based coatings becomes crucial. This paper discusses steps that are being taken to qualify these new enhanced LiF-protected aluminum (eLiF) mirror coatings for flight. In addition to quantifying the hygroscopic degradation, we have developed a new method of protecting eLiF with an ultrathin (10-20 {\AA}) capping layer of a non-hygroscopic material to increase durability. We report on the performance of eLiF-based optics and assess the steps that need to be taken to qualify such coatings for LUVOIR, HabEx, and other FUV-sensitive space missions.
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