Zerodur® Broadband Dielectric Mirrors
- Lower Coefficient of Thermal Expansion Than Fused Silica
- >99% Reflectance Over Specified Spectral Ranges
- Four Broadband Coatings Available
- Available in Ø1/2", Ø1", and Ø2" Sizes
BB0511-E02
Ø1/2" Mirror
BB111-E03
Ø1" Mirror
BB211-E04
Ø2" Mirror
BB111-E01
Ø1" Mirror
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Features
- Extremely Low Coefficient of Thermal Expansion
- Four Broadband Coatings Available:
- 350 - 400 nm
- 400 - 750 nm
- 750 - 1100 nm
- 1280 - 1600 nm
- Ravg > 99% for S- and P-Polarizations for Angles of Incidence from 0 to 45°
- Available in Ø1/2", Ø1", and Ø2" Sizes
- Designed for CW and Nanosecond Lasers
Zerodur®'s* coefficient of thermal expansion is 0 ± 0.100 x 10-6 /°C, which is significantly smaller than the value for fused silica, 0.55 x 10-6 /°C. This property makes these mirrors ideal for high-power systems like industrial machining lasers, as well as other applications that are sensitive to thermally induced beam drift. These Zerodur mirrors are available with one of four broadband coatings which offer excellent reflectance over the 350 - 400 nm, 400 - 750 nm, 750 - 1100 nm or 1280 - 1600 nm wavelength ranges (see the plot below for a comparison at 8° AOI). Due to run-to-run coating variations, please note that the specified range listed for each coating is smaller than the actual spectral region over which the mirror is highly reflective. The plots shown under the Reflectance Plots tab show the performance characteristics of a typical mirror near the edges of its effective spectral range.
As seen in the photo to the right, the back of each mirror is engraved with its item number.
For applications which require broader reflective ranges and limited thermal expansion, Thorlabs also offers a line of metallic Zerodur mirrors. Customers can also purchase Zerodur® mirror blanks that do not have a mirror coating. For applications in which thermal expansion is not a concern, we also offer a line of standard broadband dielectric mirrors, metallic mirrors and other mirrors suitable for a wide variety of applications.
*Zerodur® is a registered trademark of Schott.
Mirror Specifications | ||
---|---|---|
Substratea | Zerodur® | |
Surface Flatness | λ/10 @ 632.8 nm (Peak to Valley) | |
Surface Quality | 10-5 Scratch-Dig | |
Back Surface | Fine Ground | |
Clear Aperture | >85% of Diameter | |
Parallelism | ≤3 arcmin | |
Thickness | Ø1/2" Optics | 6.0 mm (0.24") |
Ø1" Optics | 6.0 mm (0.24") | |
Ø2" Optics | 12.0 mm (0.47") | |
Thickness Tolerance | ±0.2 mm | |
Diameter Tolerance | +0.0 mm / -0.1 mm |
Coating Specifications | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Item # Suffix | -E01 | -E02 | -E03 | -E04 | |
Wavelength Range | 350 - 400 nm | 400 - 750 nm | 750 - 1100 nm | 1280 - 1600 nm | |
Reflectancea (Click for Graph) |
Rsand Rp >99% | Rsand Rp >99% | Rsand Rp >99% | Rs and Rp >99% |
These plots show the reflectance of each of our dielectric coatings offered with Zerodur for a typical coating run. The shaded region in each graph denotes the spectral range over which the coating is highly reflective. Due to variations in each run, this recommended spectral range is narrower than the actual range over which the optic will be highly reflective. If you have any concerns about the interpretation of this data, please contact Tech Support. For temperature-sensitive applications that require a mirror that bridges the spectral range between two dielectric coatings, please consider a Zerodur metallic mirror.
-E01 Coating (350 - 400 nm)
-E02 Coating (400 - 750 nm)
-E03 Coating (750 - 1100 nm)
-E04 Coating (1280 - 1600 nm)
Posted Comments: | |
Van Rudd
 (posted 2020-04-27 19:38:15.137) What are the damage thresholds for these coatings? YLohia
 (posted 2020-04-29 08:35:52.0) Thank you for contacting Thorlabs. Unfortunately, we do not currently have enough data to characterize formal damage threshold ratings for these mirrors. I have reached out to you directly to discuss the suitability of these mirrors for your laser beam parameters. Chris McGahan
 (posted 2019-09-17 13:13:45.557) On your page: https://www.thorlabs.com/newgrouppage9.cfm?objectgroup_id=9640
The first graph visible shows Reflectance vs Wavelength. The wavelength units are shown as nm. Do you mean um? YLohia
 (posted 2019-09-17 02:43:43.0) Hello, thank you for your feedback and pointing out this error. We are working on updating the units to microns immediately. |