Sellmeier equation
The Sellmeier equation is an empirical relationship between refractive index and wavelength for a particular transparent medium. The equation is used to determine the dispersion of light in the medium.
It was first proposed in 1872 by Wolfgang Sellmeier and was a development of the work of Augustin Cauchy on Cauchy's equation for modelling dispersion.<ref> Template:Cite journal</ref>
DescriptionEdit
In its original and the most general form, the Sellmeier equation is given as
- <math>
n^2(\lambda) = 1 + \sum_i \frac{B_i \lambda^2}{\lambda^2 - C_i} </math>, where n is the refractive index, λ is the wavelength, and Bi and Ci are experimentally determined Sellmeier coefficients. These coefficients are usually quoted for λ in micrometres. Note that this λ is the vacuum wavelength, not that in the material itself, which is λ/n. A different form of the equation is sometimes used for certain types of materials, e.g. crystals.
Each term of the sum representing an absorption resonance of strength Bi at a wavelength Template:Math. For example, the coefficients for BK7 below correspond to two absorption resonances in the ultraviolet, and one in the mid-infrared region. Analytically, this process is based on approximating the underlying optical resonances as dirac delta functions, followed by the application of the Kramers-Kronig relations. This results in real and imaginary parts of the refractive index which are physically sensible.<ref name="b841">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> However, close to each absorption peak, the equation gives non-physical values of n2 = ±∞, and in these wavelength regions a more precise model of dispersion such as Helmholtz's must be used.
If all terms are specified for a material, at long wavelengths far from the absorption peaks the value of n tends to
- <math>\begin{matrix}
n \approx \sqrt{1 + \sum_i B_i } \approx \sqrt{\varepsilon_r} \end{matrix},</math> where εr is the relative permittivity of the medium.
For characterization of glasses the equation consisting of three terms is commonly used:<ref>Refractive index and dispersion. Schott technical information document TIE-29 (2007).</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- <math>
n^2(\lambda) = 1 + \frac{B_1 \lambda^2 }{ \lambda^2 - C_1} + \frac{B_2 \lambda^2 }{ \lambda^2 - C_2} + \frac{B_3 \lambda^2 }{ \lambda^2 - C_3}, </math>
As an example, the coefficients for a common borosilicate crown glass known as BK7 are shown below:
Coefficient | Value |
---|---|
B1 | 1.03961212 |
B2 | 0.231792344 |
B3 | 1.01046945 |
C1 | 6.00069867×10−3 μm2 |
C2 | 2.00179144×10−2 μm2 |
C3 | 1.03560653×102 μm2 |
For common optical glasses, the refractive index calculated with the three-term Sellmeier equation deviates from the actual refractive index by less than 5×10−6 over the wavelengths' range<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> of 365 nm to 2.3 μm, which is of the order of the homogeneity of a glass sample.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Additional terms are sometimes added to make the calculation even more precise.
Sometimes the Sellmeier equation is used in two-term form:<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- <math>
n^2(\lambda) = A + \frac{B_1\lambda^2}{\lambda^2 - C_1} + \frac{ B_2 \lambda^2}{\lambda^2 - C_2}. </math> Here the coefficient A is an approximation of the short-wavelength (e.g., ultraviolet) absorption contributions to the refractive index at longer wavelengths. Other variants of the Sellmeier equation exist that can account for a material's refractive index change due to temperature, pressure, and other parameters.
DerivationEdit
Analytically, the Sellmeier equation models the refractive index as due to a series of optical resonances within the bulk material. Its derivation from the Kramers-Kronig relations requires a few assumptions about the material, from which any deviations will affect the model's accuracy:
- There exists a number of resonances, and the final refractive index can be calculated from the sum over the contributions from all resonances.
- All optical resonances are at wavelengths far away from the wavelengths of interest, where the model is applied.
- At these resonant frequencies, the imaginary component of the susceptibility (<math>{\chi_i}</math>) can be modeled as a delta function.
From the last point, the complex refractive index (and the electric susceptibility) becomes:
- <math>\chi_i(\omega) = \sum_i A_i \delta(\omega-\omega_i)</math>
The real part of the refractive index comes from applying the Kramers-Kronig relations to the imaginary part:
- <math> n^2 = 1 + \chi_r(\omega) = 1 + \frac{2}{\pi}\int_0^\infty \frac{\omega \chi_i(\omega)}{\omega ^2 - \Omega ^2}d\omega</math>
Plugging in the first equation above for the imaginary component:
- <math> n^2 = 1 + \frac{2}{\pi}\int_0^\infty \sum_i A_i \delta(\omega-\omega_i) \frac{\omega}{\omega ^2 - \Omega ^2}d\omega</math>
The order of summation and integration can be swapped. When evaluated, this gives the following, where <math>H</math> is the Heaviside function:
- <math> n^2 = 1 + \frac{2}{\pi} \sum_i A_i \int_0^\infty \delta(\omega-\omega_i) \frac{\omega}{\omega ^2 - \Omega ^2}d\omega = 1 + \frac{2}{\pi} \sum_i A_i \frac{\omega_i H(\omega_i)}{\omega_i^2-\Omega^2}</math>
Since the domain is assumed to be far from any resonances (assumption 2 above), <math>H(\omega_i)</math> evaluates to 1 and a familiar form of the Sellmeier equation is obtained:
- <math> n^2 = 1 + \frac{2}{\pi} \sum_i A_i \frac{\omega_i}{\omega_i^2-\Omega^2}</math>
By rearranging terms, the constants <math>B_i</math> and <math>C_i</math> can be substituted into the equation above to give the Sellmeier equation.<ref name="b841"></ref>
CoefficientsEdit
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Material | B1 | B2 | B3 | C1, μm2 | C2, μm2 | C3, μm2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
borosilicate crown glass (known as BK7) |
1.03961212 | 0.231792344 | 1.01046945 | 6.00069867×10−3 | 2.00179144×10−2 | 103.560653 |
sapphire (for ordinary wave) |
1.43134930 | 0.65054713 | 5.3414021 | 5.2799261×10−3 | 1.42382647×10−2 | 325.017834 |
sapphire (for extraordinary wave) |
1.5039759 | 0.55069141 | 6.5927379 | 5.48041129×10−3 | 1.47994281×10−2 | 402.89514 |
fused silica | 0.6961663 | 0.4079426 | 0.8974794 | 0.004679148 | 0.01351206 | 97.934 |
Magnesium fluoride | 0.48755108 | 0.39875031 | 2.3120353 | 0.001882178 | 0.008951888 | 566.13559 |
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- RefractiveIndex.INFO Refractive index database featuring Sellmeier coefficients for many hundreds of materials.
- A browser-based calculator giving refractive index from Sellmeier coefficients.
- Annalen der Physik - free Access, digitized by the French national library
- Sellmeier coefficients for 356 glasses from Ohara, Hoya, and Schott