Transmission Grating

A transmission grating is a type of diffraction grating. It consists of numerous parallel, equidistant, and equally wide narrow slits etched onto a transparent glass substrate. Relying on the principle of multi-slit diffraction, it disperses polychromatic light into its constituent wavelengths.

The transmission grating is a fundamental type of diffraction grating. Its design features an array of parallel, uniformly spaced, and identically wide transparent slits fabricated on the surface of a transparent optical substrate—such as optical glass. Incident polychromatic light undergoes dispersion via multi-slit diffraction. The grooved (etched) regions scatter light strongly and thus behave effectively as opaque areas, while the ungrooved regions serve as the light-transmitting slits.

Structure, Applications, and Selection Criteria for Transmission Gratings

Structural Principle: A transmission grating is fabricated by ruling a series of parallel, uniformly spaced, and equally wide grooves onto the surface of an optically flat glass substrate. Due to strong light scattering, the grooved regions become effectively opaque; the ungrooved regions, in contrast, form an array of light-transmitting slits. Spectral separation is achieved through the combined effects of diffraction and interference.

 

Groove Density 100 – 2400 lines/mm
Blaze Angle  Customizable (target blaze wavelength must be specified)
Standard Coating Aluminum (high-reflectivity coating)
Grating Type  Transmission-type blazed diffraction grating
Substrate Material Optical glass K9 / UV-grade fused silica
Dimensional Tolerance (Outer Dimensions) ±0.5 mm
Thickness Tolerance ±0.5 mm
Typical Groove Density Options 300 l/mm, 600 l/mm, 1200 l/mm, 1800 l/mm
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