Table of Contents
- 1 Why are interference colors more apparent for thin films than for thick films?
- 2 Why a thick film seen in reflected light shows no colors but appear white?
- 3 Why is it much more difficult to see interference fringes for light reflected from a thick piece of glass than from a thin film?
- 4 How can you tell if thin film interference is constructive or destructive?
Why are interference colors more apparent for thin films than for thick films?
A necessary condition for interference is that the out-of-phase parts of the wave coincide. If the film is thick, the part of the wave that reflects from one surface will be displaced from the part that reflects from the other surface. For thin films, the two parts of the wave coincide as they recombine.
Why colours are not observed in thick films?
Thick plates doesnt show interference pattern as the optical path difference is greater than coherency length. Hence no fringe formation takes place and colours don’t segregate and hece all light is seen as white light.
Which film does not show interference?
Explanation: An excessively thin film shows no interference pattern because in that case, as the thickness of the film is negligible, the path difference, Δ, between the two reflected rays turns out to be λ/2 which is the condition of minima. Hence, the pattern is not observed.
Why a thick film seen in reflected light shows no colors but appear white?
In broadband light, for example “white light,” the coherence length (a measure of the temporal coherence of the light), is only a few microns. Therefore, films much thicker than that will have the fringes all washed out.
What happens if white light incident over the thin film?
Colours of Thin Films These colours are due to interference between light waves reflected from the top and the bottom surfaces of thin films. When white light is incident on a thin film, the film appears coloured and the colour depends upon the thickness of the film and also the angle of incidence of the light.
What would be the maximum thickness of thin film upto which one can see the interference pattern?
In white light, only a few microns. (The path length difference is less than 4 microns from one side of the photo to the other. White light gets kind of grayish after about 10 to 20 microns.) The picture below shows effectively a thin film that varies from about -1.8 microns on the left to +1.8 microns (right) thick.
Why is it much more difficult to see interference fringes for light reflected from a thick piece of glass than from a thin film?
To observe interference fringes, the size of object interfering with light must be smaller or comparable to wavelength of light. Therefore, it is difficult to observe interference fringes in a thick glass slab as compared to thin slab.
What will happen if a white light is incident on a thin film of an oil?
Thus when white light, which consists of a range of wavelengths, is incident on the film, certain wavelengths (colors) are intensified while others are attenuated. Thin-film interference explains the multiple colors seen in light reflected from soap bubbles and oil films on water.
How can the thickness of a thin film be measured using interference?
It is a powerful means to measure a surface using light’s interference phenomenon. The thickness can be measured by the phase difference of the interferograms generated on the upper and lower surfaces of the thin film [2].
How can you tell if thin film interference is constructive or destructive?
Thin film interference can be both constructive and destructive. Constructive interference causes the light of a particular wavelength to increase in intensity. (It brightens a particular color like red, green, or blue.) Destructive interference causes the light of a particular frequency to decrease in intensity.
What is the role of thin film in thin film interference?
Thin films are used commercially in anti-reflection coatings, mirrors, and optical filters. They can be engineered to control the amount of light reflected or transmitted at a surface for a given wavelength.