Light scattered from interface imperfections carries valuable information about its origins. For single surfaces, light-scattering techniques have become a powerful tool for the characterization of surface roughness. For thin-film coatings, however, solving the inverse scattering problem seemed to be impossible because of the large number of parameters involved. A simplified model is presented that introduces two parameters: Parameter δ describes optical thickness deviations from the perfect design, and parameter β describes the roughness evolution inside the coating according to a power law. The new method is used to investigate structural and alteration effects of HR coatings for 193 nm, as well as laser-induced degradation effects in Rugate filters for 355 nm.
To the best of our knowledge, a combined sensitive technique employing both laser calorimetry and a surface thermal lens scheme for measuring absorption values of optical coatings is presented for the first time. Laser calorimetric and pulsed surface thermal lens signals are simultaneously obtained with a highly reflecting UV coating sample irradiated at 193 nm. The advantages and potential applications of the combined technique and the experimental factors limiting the measurement sensitivity are discussed.
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