Abstract
Immersion gratings, diffraction gratings where the incident radiation strikes the grooves while immersed in a dielectric medium, offer significant compactness and performance advantages over front-surface gratings. These advantages become particularly large for high-resolution spectroscopy in the near-IR. The production and evaluation of immersion gratings produced by fabricating grooves in silicon substrates using photolithographic patterning and anisotropic etching is described. The gratings produced under this program accommodate beams up to in diameter (grating areas to ). Several devices are complete with appropriate reflective and antireflection coatings. All gratings were tested as front-surface devices as well as immersed gratings. The results of the testing show that the echelles behave according to the predictions of the scalar efficiency model and that tests done on front surfaces are in good agreement with tests done in immersion. The relative efficiencies range from 59% to 75% at . Tests of fully completed devices in immersion show that the gratings have reached the level where they compete with and, in some cases, exceed the performance of commercially available conventional diffraction gratings (relative efficiencies up to 71%). Several diffraction gratings on silicon substrates up to in diameter having been produced, the current state of the silicon grating technology is evaluated.
© 2007 Optical Society of America
Full Article | PDF ArticleMore Like This
Luke D. Keller, Daniel T. Jaffe, Oleg A. Ershov, Thomas Benedict, and Urs U. Graf
Appl. Opt. 39(7) 1094-1105 (2000)
U. U. Graf, D. T. Jaffe, E. J. Kim, J. H. Lacy, H. Ling, J. T. Moore, and G. Rebeiz
Appl. Opt. 33(1) 96-102 (1994)
Yuji Ikeda, Naoto Kobayashi, Yuki Sarugaku, Takashi Sukegawa, Shigeru Sugiyama, Sayumi Kaji, Kenshi Nakanishi, Sohei Kondo, Chikako Yasui, Hirokazu Kataza, Takao Nakagawa, and Hideyo Kawakita
Appl. Opt. 54(16) 5193-5202 (2015)