Abstract

The design and manufacturing technology of interference-absorbing short-wave filters based on a layered composition of Si-SiO on a sapphire substrate of various shapes was developed. A transition layer of SiO was applied to the surface of the substrate, alternating with layers of Si-SiO with an odd number of quarter-wave layers of materials with high (Si) and low refractive indices (SiO), and the application of an outer layer of SiO as an appropriate control of the materials' thickness. The optical properties of the infrared light filter were studied. It was established that the created design of the light filter provides the minimum light transmission in the visible region of the spectrum from 0.38 to 0.78 µm and the maximum in the near infrared region from 1.25 to 5 µm and has stable optical indicators. A method for studying the stress-strain state and strength of a multilayer coating of a light filter under the action of a local arbitrarily oriented load was developed. For simplicity in the analysis and for obtaining results in the analytical form, the one-dimensional model of the configuration "multilayer covering-firm substrate" constructed earlier by authors was used. From a mechanical point of view, the upper protective layer of the multilayer coating was modeled by a flexible plate, and the inner operational composite N-layer was subjected to Winkler's hypothesis about the proportionality of stresses and elastic displacements.

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