Open Access
30 December 2022 Initial fabrication and characterization of chemically etched silicon slits for KOSMOS
Debby Tran, Sarah E. Tuttle, Kal Kadlec, Rishi Pahuja, Ali C. Jones, William Ketzeback, Russet McMillan, Amanda J. Townsend
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

KOSMOS is a low-resolution, long-slit, optical spectrograph that has been upgraded at the University of Washington for its move from Kitt Peak National Observatory’s Mayall 4-m telescope to the Apache Point Observatory’s ARC 3.5-m telescope. One of the additions to KOSMOS is a slitviewer, which requires the fabrication of reflective slits, as KOSMOS previously used matte slits machined via wire electrical discharge machining. We explore an innovative method of slit fabrication using nanofabrication methods and compare the slit edge roughness, width uniformity, and the resulting scattering of the new fabricated slits to the original slits. We find the kerf surface of the chemically etched reflective silicon slits are generally smoother than the machined matte slits, with an upper limit average roughness of 0.42 ± 0.03 μm versus 1.06 ± 0.04 μm, respectively. The etched slits have width standard deviations of 6 ± 3 μm versus 10 ± 6 μm, respectively. The scattering for the chemically etched slits is higher than that of the machined slits, showing that the reflectivity is the major contributor to scattering, not the roughness. This scattering, however, can be effectively reduced to zero with proper background subtraction. As slit widths increase, scattering increases for both types of slits, as expected. Future work will consist of testing and comparing the throughput and spectrophotometric data quality of these nanofabricated slits to the machined slits with on-sky data, in addition to making the etched slits more robust against breakage and finalizing the slit manufacturing process.

CC BY: © The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Distribution or reproduction of this work in whole or in part requires full attribution of the original publication, including its DOI.
Debby Tran, Sarah E. Tuttle, Kal Kadlec, Rishi Pahuja, Ali C. Jones, William Ketzeback, Russet McMillan, and Amanda J. Townsend "Initial fabrication and characterization of chemically etched silicon slits for KOSMOS," Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems 8(4), 045004 (30 December 2022). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.JATIS.8.4.045004
Received: 18 April 2022; Accepted: 29 November 2022; Published: 30 December 2022
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KEYWORDS
Silicon

Etching

Fabrication

Semiconducting wafers

Scattering

Edge detection

Telescopes

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