Dependence of the damage in optical metal/dielectric coatings on the energy of ions in irradiation experiments for space qualification

Abstract Terrestrial accelerator facilities can generate ion beams which enable the testing of the resistance of materials and thin film coatings to be used in the space environment. In this work, a $$\hbox {TiO}_2$$ TiO 2 /Al bi-layer coating has been irradiated with a $$\hbox {He}^+$$ He + beam at...

Description complète

Enregistré dans:
Détails bibliographiques
Auteurs principaux: Maria G. Pelizzo, Alain J. Corso, Giovanni Santi, René Hübner, Denis Garoli, Dominic Doyle, Philip Lubin, Alexander N. Cohen, Jacob Erlikhman, Giulio Favaro, Marco Bazzan, Jon Drobny, Davide Curreli, Maxim Umansky
Format: article
Langue:EN
Publié: Nature Portfolio 2021
Sujets:
R
Q
Accès en ligne:https://doaj.org/article/735a2e62399c4bb1a6c908273c9b7a3a
Tags: Ajouter un tag
Pas de tags, Soyez le premier à ajouter un tag!
Description
Résumé:Abstract Terrestrial accelerator facilities can generate ion beams which enable the testing of the resistance of materials and thin film coatings to be used in the space environment. In this work, a $$\hbox {TiO}_2$$ TiO 2 /Al bi-layer coating has been irradiated with a $$\hbox {He}^+$$ He + beam at three different energies. The same flux and dose have been used in order to investigate the damage dependence on the energy. The energies were selected to be in the range 4–100 keV, in order to consider those associated to the quiet solar wind and to the particles present in the near-Earth space environment. The optical, morphological and structural modifications have been investigated by using various techniques. Surprisingly, the most damaged sample is the one irradiated at the intermediate energy, which, on the other hand, corresponds to the case in which the interface between the two layers is more stressed. Results demonstrate that ion energies for irradiation tests must be carefully selected to properly qualify space components.