Breaking trade-offs between translucency and diffusion in particle-doped films

Citation:

Rogers, W. B. ; Corbett, M. ; Magkiriadou, S. ; Guarillof, P. ; Manoharan, V. N. Breaking trade-offs between translucency and diffusion in particle-doped films. Optical Materials Express 2014, 4 2621-2631.

Abstract:

Particle-doped thin films that are translucent and diffusive have applications in cosmetics, coatings, and display technologies, but finding material combinations that produce these effects simultaneously is challenging: formulations tend to be either transparent or opaque. Using a combination of Mie scattering calculations and spectral transmission measurements on monodisperse colloidal suspensions, we demonstrate that the two characteristic optical properties of the films, total transmittance and haze, scale with the effective backscattering and forward scattering cross sections, both of which are properties of single particles. These scalings enable an efficient computational search for combinations of particle sizes, concentrations, and refractive indices that break the trade-off between translucency and diffusion. The optimum particle sizes and concentrations obey power-law dependences on the refractive index difference, a result of the interference condition for resonances in the scattering cross sections. The power laws serve as design equations for formulating particle-doped thin films.

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Last updated on 03/26/2015