Filters

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
G063462000

G063462000

Excelitas Technologies

NEUTRAL FILTER; T=10%; D=22.4; M

27

G063464000

G063464000

Excelitas Technologies

NEUTRAL FILTER; T=2%; D=22.4; MO

2

G063466000

G063466000

Excelitas Technologies

NEUTRAL FILTER; T=0.1%; D=22.4;

25

G063461000

G063461000

Excelitas Technologies

NEUTRAL FILTER; T=20%; D=22.4; M

1

G063463000

G063463000

Excelitas Technologies

NEUTRAL FILTER; T=5%; D=22.4; MO

3

G063460000

G063460000

Excelitas Technologies

NEUTRAL FILTER; T=50%; D=22.4; M

4

G063465000

G063465000

Excelitas Technologies

NEUTRAL FILTER; T=1%; D=22.4; MO

19

G063468000

G063468000

Excelitas Technologies

NEUTRAL FILTER; T=40%; D=22.4; M

1

Filters

1. Overview

Optical filters are optical components designed to selectively transmit or block specific wavelengths of light. They play a critical role in manipulating light signals across various applications, including imaging, spectroscopy, telecommunications, and biomedical instrumentation. By controlling spectral composition, these filters enhance signal quality, reduce noise, and enable precise wavelength management in complex optical systems.

2. Main Types and Functional Classification

TypeFunctional CharacteristicsApplication Examples
Bandpass FiltersTransmit a specific wavelength range while blocking othersFluorescence microscopy, spectroscopy
Longpass FiltersTransmit wavelengths longer than a cutoff wavelengthInfrared cutoff in cameras, Raman spectroscopy
Shortpass FiltersTransmit wavelengths shorter than a cutoff wavelengthUV protection, laser cleanup
Notch FiltersBlock a narrow wavelength range while transmitting othersLaser line filtering, telecommunications
Polarization FiltersControl light polarization states3D imaging, LCD displays
Neutral Density (ND) FiltersReduce light intensity without color distortionPhotography, laser power control

3. Structure and Composition

Typical optical filters consist of:

  • Substrate: Optical glass, fused silica, or polymer materials providing structural support
  • Coating Layers: Multi-layer dielectric films or metallic coatings engineered for interference effects
  • Protective Layers: Hard coatings to prevent environmental degradation
  • Mounting Frame: Metal or plastic housing for integration into optical systems
Advanced designs employ thin-film interference technology to achieve precise spectral control with tolerances below 1 nm.

4. Key Technical Specifications

ParameterImportance
Wavelength RangeDetermines operational spectrum (UV/VIS/NIR/MWIR)
Transmission EfficiencyImpacts signal-to-noise ratio (typically >90% in passband)
Optical Density (OD)Measures blocking capability (OD 6 = 0.001% transmission)
Angle of Incidence (AOI)Shifts spectral response with incident angle (0-45 typical)
Environmental StabilityDurability under temperature/humidity (MIL-STD-810 tested)

5. Application Fields

Key industries utilizing optical filters include:

  • Biomedical: Flow cytometers, confocal microscopes
  • Telecommunications: WDM systems, optical amplifiers
  • Industrial: Machine vision inspection systems
  • Astronomy: Narrowband filters for nebulae imaging
  • Consumer Electronics: Camera sensors, AR/VR headsets

6. Leading Manufacturers and Products

ManufacturerRepresentative ProductsTechnical Advantages
Edmund Optics59-870 Broadband NIR Filter400-1200nm range, 10-50mm sizes
ThorlabsFBH1500-1250 Notch Filter1550nm laser blocking with OD 6
SemrockBrightLine HC 405/488/561/635Multipass filter for fluorescence imaging
Melles Griot54-925 Shortpass Filter500nm cutoff with steep transition

7. Selection Guidelines

Key selection criteria:

  1. Match spectral requirements with filter transmission curves
  2. Consider AOI effects in beam steering applications
  3. Verify environmental durability for outdoor/system integration
  4. Evaluate cost-performance trade-offs (e.g., hard vs soft coatings)
  5. Check size/shape compatibility with optical mounts
Example: Selecting a 488nm bandpass filter for flow cytometry requires OD 6 blocking at 20nm with <1% passband ripple.

8. Industry Trends

Emerging developments include:

  • Miniaturized MEMS-tunable filters for hyperspectral imaging
  • Metamaterial-based filters with sub-wavelength control
  • High-laser-damage-threshold coatings for industrial lasers
  • Customizable liquid crystal filters for adaptive optics
  • AI-optimized multilayer deposition processes
Market growth is driven by biomedical imaging (CAGR 12.3%) and LiDAR applications, with increasing demand for multispectral filters in autonomous vehicle sensors.

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