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1.INTRODUCTIONThe Copernicus Land Surface Temperature Monitoring (LSTM) mission will carry a high spatial-temporal resolution thermal infrared sensor to provide observations of the land-surface temperature. The mission responds to priority requirements of the agricultural user community for improving sustainable monitoring requirements to better manage water resources and learn about yield, vegetation and crop growth. The LSTM observations are made in 6 spectral channels in the VNIR-SWIR spectral range as well as 5 TIR spectral bands (see Table 1). The VNIR-SWIR path splits into 2 paths by a dichroic beam-splitter. The first path is the NIR-SWIR focal plane with NIR-SWIR filters and detector on dichroic-2 transmitted path and second, the VIS focal plane with VIS filters and detector on dichroic beam-splitter-2 reflected path. The bandpass is shaped by a first stage of filtering (acronym IPF). The background is rejected, and the crosstalk is minimized thanks to a second stage of filtering (acronym DPF). On VNIR-SWIR paths, the first common stage is with IPF-VNIR filters located close to the dichroic, while the filtering is completed with DPF-NIR and DPF-VIS, respectively. Table 1.LSTM Spectral Channels
Each mounted filter unit includes stripe filters dedicated to several spectral VNIR and SWIR. The IPF units are large stripe filters and a wedged lens element operating under low incidence angles and with high F-number beams. The DPF units are smaller stripe filters operating under a wide range of incidence angles and with low F-number beams. The LSTM satellite is designed and build by Airbus DS in Madrid, while the development and production of the advanced technology instrument is carried out by Airbus DS in Toulouse. The detector plane filters (DPF) for the SWIR and VIS detector, the intermediate plane filters VNIR (IPF-VNIR), the IPF lens and the dichroic plate are developed and manufactured by Materion Balzers Optics (MBO). MBO is also the responsible supplier for the VNIR/SWIR filter assemblies. In this presentation, we address the design, manufacturing and characterization of the demanding dielectric optical coatings for the sophisticated band-pass filter (BPF) stripes and the dichroic developed by Materion Balzers Optics [1]. In the case of the IPF SWIR, the coatings are up to 25μm thick on each side. The optical thin film layers are deposited by Plasma-Assisted Reactive Magnetron Sputtering (PARMS) and cover the spectral range for the central wavelength from 490nm to 1610nm with a bandwidth ranging between 20 and 90nm. The outstanding optical performance of the optical components is ensured by the combination of the PARMS technology with a state-of-the-art optical broad-band monitoring system (BBM) which allows in-situ process control and in-situ correction. The overall optical performance is achieved by distributing the optical design among the 4 included surfaces – 2 for the dichroic and 2 for the BPFs. We show very steep dichroic edge performance, due to narrow transition from reflectance to high transmittance. There is a very low angular shift of the dichroic edge for several challenging illumination scenarios. The BPFs exhibit very broad out-of-band blocking down to OD6. 2.LSTM FILTER STRIPE ASSEMBLY APPROACHThe manufacturing of the LSTM filter arrays is based on the concept of the integration of single filter stripes into a mechanical frame. This requires besides the manufacturing of filter stripes also the development and manufacturing of a sophisticated mechanical frame. This approach was used for Sentinel 2 MSI [2,3,4] and is subcontracted in the LSTM project to Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Optics and Precision Engineering in Jena, Germany. Single filter elements for the detector plane filters (DPF) and intermediate plane filters (IPF) are be arranged into mechanical subassemblies made of titanium alloys and are aligned into the optical instrument in front of the detectors. During the integration of the single filter elements to filter arrays, the optical elements are arranged into the mechanical holders with positioning accuracies in the order of up to 10 μm. Metallic foils with a black coating are inserted in between the single filter stripes in order to avoid cross talk. The filter stripes are covered by a frame with optical apertures. The deposition of the BPFs is performed on Ø100 mm fused silica wafers followed by dicing. The dicing of the stripes is carried out with a DISCO chip saw DAD 3650. Figure 1 shows the schematic layout of the LSTM DPF-SWIR filter stripes on the wafer (left in blue) and a microscopy image of a diced BPF stripe (right), respectively. The picture shows the smooth dicing edges with chipping well below 10μm and a typical 50μm protection chamfer. 3.OPTICAL DESIGN AND MANUFACTURING APPROACHThis chapter briefly describes the driving requirements for the LSTM BPF and dichroic design and production approach. 3.1Deposition of multi-layer systemsThe coatings of the LSTM optical elements are performed by means of state-of-the-art Plasma-Assisted Reactive Magnetron Sputtering (PARMS) [5, 6]. All PARMS plants at MBO-J are equipped with a sophisticated optical broadband monitoring system (BBM) that allows the measuring of the optical thickness of the growing thin films directly on the rotating substrate holder with an approximated accuracy of 0.5nm as minimum [5]. During the earlier Sentinel 2 project a study regarding PARMS suitability had been conducted. It could be shown that applied to complex self-blocking BPF the PARMS process is superior to the IAD (ion-assisted deposition) process in terms of spectral performance, uniformity, process stability, scattering performance and surface roughness. The PARMS process revealed an excellent ability to reproduce the surface quality of the substrate. MBO-J uses its Helios plants (Helios 500 and 800 by Bühler) to perform the optical coatings for the LSTM project. As substrates for the BP Filters and dichroic Corning Fused Silica (HPFS 7979 0F) is used. The BPF operate in the spectral channels reported in Table 1. 3.2Optical design approachThe instrument set-up allows for distributing spectral properties onto the different optical components within the optical path. The spectral transmittance form of the BPF is essentially given by the Intermediate Plane Filters (IPF), whereas the blocking function is finalized by the Blocking Filters (BKF), which are the Detector Plane Filters (DPF). For each channel individual blocking levels in the order of optical density 4 to 5 are required. Also, every filter surface pair must consider a slightly different angular distribution of incidence angles. Smallest possible angles fit to the position of the DPF, which reduce the angular shift inherent to the interference coatings, shaping the band pass. It is this angular shift which extends the filter edge steepness to fit into the specified spectral template (see Figure 2), that is driving the overall thin film layer thickness, and number of layers, of the BPF side providing the BPF shape. In case of the SWIR1-channel this sums up to 25μm. The combined blocking behavior can be realized with a lower amount of filter thickness applied to the other surfaces, being a compromise of ensured spectral performance as outcome and a robust thin-film-design, which is not too sensitive to thickness-errors. The 7 BP filters operating in the VNIR and SWIR spectral range are characterized by high constant transmittance in the pass region and broad blocking regions, comprising low levels of scattering. This requires a high-energetic deposition process and excellent thin-film growth control in the region of few Å (angstrom). The Plasma Assisted Reactive Magnetron Sputtering (PARMS) process with Broad Band Monitoring (BBM) is an adequate technological approach here. Additional criteria, which drive the overall thickness of a BPF coating, are the slope requirement and the rejection ratio, which defines the absolute level of the transmittance in the Out-of-Band spectral range. Furthermore, the requirements for low In- and Out-of-Band scattering into the forward direction of incoming light influences the thin-film design itself, the concept of coating combination and filter orientation as well as the choice of coating materials. MBOs realized the requested spectral performance with a certain optimum number of layers to be coated and minimal total thickness of the coatings. This was motivated by:
From MBOs practical experience in maintaining opto-mechanical properties at a reasonable level demonstrated in the past, a restriction of the total thickness to about 30μm of a single coating was targeted. It evolved that the realization of such coatings – especially with the required homogeneity – depends on a stable and extremely deterministic deposition process. The individual layers are allowed to comprise an absolute error-level of few angstroms only. Each BP filter design calculation is based on the AOI histogram data in order to achieve the overall subsystem performance. 3.3Spectral performance of optical designFigure 2 shows the VNIR-2 combined spectral response function of the design IPF unit together with the DPF design. 3 different field of view scenarios are shown in yellow, blue and grey, respectively. The combined blocking is depicted in Figure 3. The black curve shows the target blocking. As described in 3.2 this superior BPF shape blocking of down to OD6 is achieved by the distribution of the thin film layer stacks onto the available surfaces of the IPF stripes, dichroic and DPF stripes. 4.SPECTRAL CHARACTERIZATION OF LSTM BP FILTERSThis section contains a spectral characterization of the LSTM BPFs and dichroic. 4.1Transmission and block measurementsThe spectral characterization of the BP filters was done using spectrometers Perkin Elmer Lambda 950/1050, which are double beam, double monochromator, ratio recording UV/Vis/NIR spectrophotometers. Figure 4 shows the measured transmission spectral of the IPF VNIR-2 BPF as a typical example for the LSTM bandpass filters. The averaged measured FWHM is 19.9nm with the average transmission level in the bandpass region is 99%. The specific designs were chosen to fulfil a pre-defined IPF stripe + IPF lens + DPF stripe spectral shape templates (see example in Figure 5). The figure shows the IPF VNIR-2 BPF (measurement uncertainty is given by horizontal bars) combined with the design performance of the IPF lens and DPF stripes. Main-drivers for the complexity, i.e. number of layers and also the total thickness of the required coatings were the width and depth of the spectral blocking range, the slopes of the bandpass-edges and the In-Band Equivalent Transmittance/Reflectance while partly being related. 5.DICHROIC DEPOSITION AND SPECTRAL CHARACTERIZATIONThe deposition of the LSTM dichroic is also done by means of the PARMS technology described in 3.1. Different FOV scenarios (FOV max, FOV, min and center) are considered in the calculation and production of the dichroic and BPFs together. An overall analysis combines the FOV scenarios (AOIs) with different homogeneity scenarios. This ensures the desired spectral system performance. The conception and detailed design of the dichroic was done during the pre-design phase of LSTM. The main technological characteristics of the design and coating approach are listed hereafter:
Figure 7 and Figure 8 show the measured reflectance and transmittance performance of the dichroic from the LSTM predevelopment. The results at the AOIs 8°, 22° and 36° of the dichroic with corresponding requirement levels from the predesign project phase and design data (dotted lines) are depicted together with the s-, p- and randomly polarized light scenarios. The spectral position of the six channels of the BPFs are indicated by the black/grey curves. 6.CONCLUSIONWe presented the optical design concept for the dichroic and VNIR/SWIR band pass filters for the LSTM project. The manufacturing approach of the LSTM BPFs was discussed in detail. The optical thin films deposited by the PARMS method show outstanding optical performance with typical transmission levels of 99%. The first spectral results of produced VNIR-2 filters were shown. The combined IPF VNIR-2 stripe (measurement), IPF lens (design), DPF stripe transmission and blocking curves were shown. These results resemble the expected optical design curves very closely. A out-of band blocking over a wide range down to OD6 was presented. Preliminary dichroic results show very steep dichroic edge performance, due to narrow transition from reflectance to high transmittance. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTSThe LSTM Filter Assemblies are funded by the European Union and were developed with financial and technical support from and the European Space Agency (ESA) in the frame of the Copernicus Land Surface Temperature Monitoring (LSTM) mission. REFERENCESRistau, D., Ehlers, H., Gross, T., Lappschies, M.,
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