Amorphous optical coatings of present gravitational-wave interferometers
Massimo Granata, Alex Amato, Laurent Balzarini, Maurizio Canepa,, J\'er\^ome Degallaix, Dani\`ele Forest, Vincent Dolique, Lorenzo Mereni,, Christophe Michel, Laurent Pinard, Beno\^it Sassolas, Julien Teillon,, Gianpietro Cagnoli

TL;DR
This study extensively characterizes the optical and mechanical properties of ion-beam sputtered oxide coatings used in gravitational-wave detectors, revealing how deposition and annealing affect internal friction and updating loss estimates for key mirror coatings.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of coating properties and their dependence on fabrication processes, improving understanding of coating losses in gravitational-wave interferometers.
Findings
Internal friction increases with deposition rate for Ta2O5 and SiO2.
Annealing reduces internal friction and mitigates deposition history effects.
Updated loss values for LIGO and Virgo mirror coatings are about 10% higher.
Abstract
We report on the results of an extensive campaign of optical and mechanical characterization of the ion-beam sputtered oxide layers (TaO, TiO, TaO-TiO, SiO) within the high-reflection coatings of the Advanced LIGO, Advanced Virgo and KAGRA gravitational-wave detectors: refractive index, thickness, optical absorption, composition, density, internal friction and elastic constants have been measured; the impact of deposition rate and post-deposition annealing on coating internal friction has been assessed. For TaO and SiO layers, coating internal friction increases with the deposition rate, whereas the annealing treatment either erases or largely reduces the gap between samples with different deposition history. For TaO-TiO layers, the reduction of internal friction due to TiO doping becomes effective only if coupled with annealing.…
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