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72 - On Copying Diffraction-Gratings, and on some Phenomena connected therewith

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2011

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Summary

In the Phil. Mag. for February and March 1874 [Art. xxx.] I gave an account of experiments in the photographic reproduction of gratings ruled with lines at a rate of 3000 and 6000 to the inch. Since that time I have had further experience, extending to more closely ruled gratings, and have examined more minutely certain points which I was then obliged to leave unexplained. The present communication is thus to be regarded as supplementary to the former.

Some years ago Prof. Quincke described an unphotographic process by which he had succeeded in copying engraved glass gratings. He began by depositing a thin coating of silver by the chemical method upon the face of the grating. The conducting layer thus obtained was then transferred to an electrolytic cell, and thickened by the deposit of copper, until stout enough to be detached from the glass substratum. In this way he prepared an accurate cast of the glass surface, faced with highly reflecting silver. Since the optical depth of the lines is increased some four times, these gratings usually give much brighter spectra than the glass originals.

Prof. Quincke was kind enough to send me some specimens of his work, giving extremely beautiful spectra. I found, however, that, though carefully preserved, these gratings deteriorated after a time, apparently either from insufficient thickness, or from imperfect adhesion, of the silver layer. In my own attempts I endeavoured to remedy this defect by not allowing the silver to dry before transference to the electrolytic cell, and by commencing the electric deposit with a silver instead of with a copper solution. I did not, however, succeed in finding a thoroughly satisfactory platingliquid.

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Scientific Papers , pp. 504 - 512
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1899

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