Boyd R D, Britten J A, Decker D E, Shore B W, Stuart B C, Perry M D, Li L
Appl Opt. 1995 Apr 1;34(10):1697-706. doi: 10.1364/AO.34.001697.
The design and fabrication of large-area, high-efficiency metallic gratings for use in high-power laser systems is described. The gratings exhibit a diffraction efficiency in excess of 95% in the m = -1 order (Littrow mount) and have a high threshold for laser damage. Computations and experimental measurements are presented that illustrate the effect of grating shape and polarization on efficiency. A simple theory for optical damage to metallic diffraction gratings is developed and compared with experimental measurements of the laser-damage threshold over the pulse range from 400 fs to >1 ns.