The Diffraction Grating Replication Process

The process for making replica gratings results in a grating whose grooves are formed in a very thin layer of resin that adheres strongly to the surface of the substrate material. The optical surface of a reflection replica is usually coated with aluminum (Al), but gold (Au) or silver (Ag) is recommended for greater diffracted energy in certain spectral regions. Transmission gratings have no reflective coating.

Most commercially-available surface-relief gratings are made using a casting process, which faithfully reproduces the three-dimension nature of the grating surface. It is for this reason that photographic replication techniques are not generally sufficient.

The casting process for the production of a replicated diffraction grating is a series of sequential steps:

Submaster selection. The replication process starts with the selection of a suitable submaster grating that has the desired specifications (groove frequency, blaze angle, size, etc.). [A submaster grating is a grating replicated from a master, or from another submaster, but is itself used not as a final optical product but as a mold for the replication of product gratings; for this reason, it is not strictly required that a submaster grating meet all of the performance specifications of the product grating (e.g., it need not have a suitably reflective coating).]

Application of parting agent. A parting agent is applied to the surface of the submaster grating. The parting agent serves no optical purpose and should have no deleterious optical effects but aids in the separation of the delicate submaster and product grating surfaces. Since the replicated optical surface is intended to match that of the submaster as closely as possible, the parting agent must be very thin and conformal to the surface of the submaster.

Application of transfer coating. After the parting agent is applied, a reflective coating (usually aluminum) is applied to the surface of the submaster. This coating will form the optical surface of the product grating upon separation. To obtain an optical quality coating, this step is performed in a vacuum deposition chamber. [Since this coating is applied to the submaster, but transfers to the product grating upon separation, it is called a transfer coating.] Typical transfer coating thicknesses are about one micron.

Cementing. A substrate is then cemented with a layer of resin to the grooved surface of the master grating; this layer can vary in thickness, but it is usually tens of microns thick. It is the resin that holds the groove profile and replicates it from the submaster to the product; the transfer coating is much too thin for this purpose. The “sandwich” formed by the substrate and submaster cemented together is shown in Figure 5-1.

Since the resin is in the liquid state when it is applied to the submaster, it must harden sufficiently to ensure that it can maintain the groove profile faithfully when the product grating is separated from the submaster. This hardening, or curing, is usually accomplished by a room-temperature cure period (lasting from hours to days) or by heating the resin to accelerate the curing, though gratings can also be replicated using a UV-curable resin.

Separation. After the resin is fully cured, the groove profile is faithfully replicated in the resin when the submaster and product are separated. The parting agent serves as the weak interface and allows the separation to take place between the submaster coating and the transfer metallic coating. The groove profile on the product is the inverse of the groove profile on the submaster; if this profile is not symmetric with respect to this inversion, the efficiency characteristics of the product grating will generally differ from those of the submaster grating. In such cases, an additional replication must be done to invert the inverted profile, resulting in a profile identical to that of the original submaster. However, for certain types of gratings, inversion of the groove increases efficiency significantly.

Figure 5-1. The replication “sandwich”. The substrates, the resin layers, the metallic coatings, and the parting agent are shown.

At this stage, if a transmission grating is desired, the transfer coating is removed from the product, leaving the groove structure intact in the transparent resin.

Inspection. After separation, both the submaster and the product gratings are inspected for surface or substrate damage. The product grating may also be tested for key performance characteristics (e.g., efficiency, wavefront flatness (or curvature), scattered light, alignment of the grooves to a substrate edge) depending on requirements.

The product grating formed by this replication process may be used as an optical component, or it may serve as a mold (replication tool) by being considered a submaster. In this way, a single master grating can make several submasters, each of which can make several more submasters, etc., to form a replication tree (see Figure 5-2).

The replication tree shown in Figure 5-2 illustrates two important features of replication: extension horizontally (within a generation) and vertically (to subsequent generations). Replication within a generation is accomplished by the successive replication of a single grating (much as a parent can have many children). Replication to additional generations is accomplished by forming a replica (child), which itself forms a replica (grandchild), etc. Thus replication can extend both within generations (X-1, X-2, X-3, X-4, …, all of which are replicated directly from the master) and to subsequent generations (X-1, X-1-3, X-1-3-1, X-1-3-1-4, …, each of which is replicated from the submaster before it) to create a large number of replicas from a single master grating.

As an example, consider a master grating X from which five firstgeneration replicas are made (X-1 through X-5). Each of these is used as a submaster to form five replicas: X-1 forms X-1-1 through X-1-5, X-2 forms X-2-1 through X-2-5, and so on. This forms twenty-five second generation replicas. If each of these replicas is itself replicated five times, we arrive at 125 third-generation replicas (X-1-1-1, X-1-1-2, …, through X-5-5-5). This example illustrates that a large number of replicas can be made from a single master grating, assuming a conservative number of replicas and a reasonable number of generations.

Figure 5-2. A replication tree. Master X is replicated to create several first-generation replicas (X-1, X-2, …), which themselves are replicated to form second-generation replicas (X-1-1, …), etc.

The number N of replicas of a particular generation that can be made from a single master can be estimated using the following formula,

NRg     (5-1)

where R is the number of replications per generation and g is the number of generations. Reasonable values of R are 5 to 10 (though values well above 20 are not unheard of), and g generally ranges from 3 to 9. Conservatively, then, for R = 5 and g = 3, we have N = 125 third-generation replicas; at the other end of the ranges we have R = 10 and g = 9 so that N = 1,000,000,000 ninth-generation replicas. Of course, one billion replicas of a single grating have never been required, but even if it were, Eq. (5-1) assumes that each replica in every generation (except the last generation) is replicated R times, whereas in practice most gratings cannot be replicated too many times before being damaged or otherwise rendered unusable. That is, some branches of the replication tree are truncated prematurely as a result of manufacturing defects, i.e., because the manufacturing yield is less than 100%. Consequently, Eq. (5-1) must be taken as an unreasonable upper limit, which becomes unrealistically high as either R or g increases beyond small numbers. In practice, N is often in the thousands when required, and can be even higher if extra care is taken to ensure that the submasters in the replication tree are not damaged.


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