Transmission through thin layers. In Fig. 35-43, light is incident perpendicularly on a thin layer of material 2 that lies between (thicker) materials 1 and 3. (The rays are tilted only for clarity.) Part of the light ends up in material 3 as rayr3(the light does not reflect inside material 2) andr4(the light reflects twice inside material 2). The waves ofr3and r4interfere, and here we consider the type of interference to be either maximum (max) or minimum (min). For this situation, each problem in Table 35-3 refers to the indexes of refraction n1,n2and n3the type of interference, the thin-layer thickness Lin nanometers, and the wavelength λin nanometers of the light as measured in air. Whereλis missing, give the wavelength that is in the visible range. Where Lis missing, give the second least thickness or the third least thickness as indicated.

Short Answer

Expert verified

The thickness of the thin layer is 248nm.

Step by step solution

01

Given Data.

  • The refractive index of first medium isn1=1.40.
  • The refractive index of the thin film isn2=1.86.
  • The refractive index of the third medium is n3=1.75.
  • The maximum intensity occurs at λmax=482nm.
02

Interference of light through thin films:

Light that is incident normally on thin films is reflected from both the front and back surfaces, causing interference of the reflected light. When constructive interference happens, it produces bright reflected light, and when entirely destructive interference occurs, it produces a dark region.

03

Estimate the wavelength:

The interference of the transmitted rays is similar to the interference of the reflection of light. Here in this case, as n1<n2and n2<n3the two transmitted rays have 180phase angle difference. Therefore, the condition for constructive interference is

2L=m+12λmaxn2L=2m+1λmax4n2

The 2nd least thickness means order number m=1for which the thickness is

L=21+1482nm41.46=248nm

Hence, the thickness of the thin layer is 248nm.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

In Fig. 35-4, assume that two waves of light in air, of wavelength 400nm, are initially in phase. One travels through a glass layer of index of refraction n1=1.60and thickness L. The other travels through an equally thick plastic layer of index of refraction n2=1.50. (a) What is the smallest value Lshould have if the waves are to end up with a phase difference of 5.65 rad? (b) If the waves arrive at some common point with the same amplitude, is their interference fully constructive, fully destructive, intermediate but closer to fully constructive, or intermediate but closer to fully destructive?

Figure 35-28 shows four situations in which light reflects perpendicularly from a thin film of thickness L sandwiched between much thicker materials. The indexes of refraction are given. In which situations does Eq. 35-36 correspond to the reflections yielding maxima (that is, a bright film).

Figure 35-25 shows two sources s1 and s2 that emit radio waves of wavelengthλin all directions. The sources are exactly in phase and are separated by a distance equal to 1.5λ . The vertical broken line is the perpendicular bisector of the distance between the sources.

(a) If we start at the indicated start point and travel along path 1, does the interference produce a maximum all along the path, a minimum all along the path, or alternating maxima and minima? Repeat for

(b) path 2 (along an axis through the sources) and

(c) path 3 (along a perpendicular to that axis).

A thin film of acetone n=1.25coats a thick glass platen=1.50White light is incident normal to the film. In the reflections, fully destructive interference occurs at 600nmand fully constructive interference at700nm. Calculate the thickness of the acetone film.

Suppose that Young’s experiment is performed with blue-green light of wavelength 500 nm. The slits are 1.20 mm apart, and the viewing screen is 5.40 m from the slits. How far apart are the bright fringes near the center of the interference pattern?

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