Flashlight lens, transmission efficiency?

Alan_P

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Yes, but most of the loss is due to reflections therefore the need for anti reflective coatings.
 

Flash_Gordon

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No. Assuming identical material. the index of refraction is the same. The index of refraction in a vacuum is 1.000, air about 1.0003, distilled water about 1.33and the types of glass we use in flashlight windows about 1.5-1.6. The depth of the material, assuming a pure and consistent medium is not a factor.

While logic would tell us that a 2mm window is twice as thick as a 1mm window and therefore must block more light, we need to relate this "double" thickness to the wavelength of visible light.

Visible light is in the wavelength range of 400-750nm. A nanometer is equal to 10-6 mm. So the wavelength of the visible light we care about is so short that the difference between a 1mm or 2mm window is irrelevant.

Significant loss is caused by internal reflection between the 2 surfaces of the glass. The behavior of this incident light will cause a loss of transmitted light through the window. Surface coatings or multi coatings can greatly reduce this factor but not eliminate it.

Mark
 
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Justin Case

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Mar 19, 2008
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Of course there is a dependence on amount of absorption vs thickness. Google Beer-Lambert Law.
 

2xTrinity

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Curious... do thinner lenses obstruct less light than thicker ones (all else being equal)?
Yes, but light loss due to absorption in the glass on the order of ~mm thickness is insignificant compared to the ~4% reflected from the front and back air-glass interfaces.

Note that while these multiple reflections (for uncoated glass) cause 8% of the incident light to be reflected, this does not necessarily mean 8% lumen loss. In many cases, some of that light will bounce off the reflectors again, then eventually make it back out again as diffuse sidespill.
 
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