Andover Corporation

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 Heat Control Filters

Cold Mirrors UV Cold Mirrors
Hot Mirrors IR Suppression Filters


Heat Control Filters are mainly used to remove the heat from high-power illumination systems. These high power illumination systems offer a very high output in the visible and ultraviolet which makes them an excellent choice as a source of radiation. However, there is one major drawback to these systems; they produce a high amount of heat. This radiation (heat) must be removed from the optical system and the most effective way to do so is to use a combination of Heat Control Filters.

The optical system should be configured so that the first mirror in the system is a Cold Mirror mounted at 45° to the incident radiation. This configuration will transmit a major portion of the systems heat while reflecting the visible light. The second component in the optical path should be a hot mirror mounted perpendicular to the light beam. This mirror will reflect the remaining heat while still transmitting 90% of the visible light.

Photo of heat control filters

The end result should be a much cooler beam of light. One must keep in mind that if the Heat Control Filters remove 99% of the heat from the optical system, there is still 1% left, which can be quite substantial if one is using a 1500-2500 watt source. In all cases, the beam will be much cooler but one still may be concerned with the amount of heat remaining.



General Specifications
Size Tolerance: +0.0mm/-0.5mm
Thickness: 3.0mm ±0.5mm
Minimum Clear Aperture: 95% of O.D.
Substrate Material: Borosilicate Glass
Flatness: 5 to 10 waves per 25mm
Parallelism: 3 Arc Minutes Or Better
Surface Quality: 80/50 Per MIL-O-13830
Coating Quality: 40/20 Per MIL-O-13830
Humidity and Abrasion: Per MIL-C-675A
Max Operating Temperature: +200°C

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