filling materials
Refractive Index Comparison: Air vs. Optical Materials
Yes, a refractive index of 1.5 is significantly higher than air:
-
Air: n ≈ 1.0003 (~1.0 for practical purposes)
-
PMMA (Acrylic): n ≈ 1.49
-
Polycarbonate (PC): n ≈ 1.58
-
Glass (BK7): n ≈ 1.51
1. Typical Values
| Type / Grade | Refractive Index (n) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Light mineral oil (cosmetic grade) | 1.467–1.470 | Common in electronics and lubrication |
| Standard mineral oil (industrial) | 1.468–1.474 | Used in transformers, immersion cooling |
| Heavy mineral oil | 1.474–1.480 | Higher density, more viscous |
| Food-grade mineral oil | 1.467–1.470 | Safe for contact with materials like plastics |
1. Typical Refractive Indices of Common Liquids
| Fluid | Refractive Index (n) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Water | 1.333 | Standard, much higher than air |
| Mineral oil | 1.467–1.480 | Common dielectric oil |
| Ethanol | 1.361 | Transparent alcohol |
| Glycerin | 1.473 | Thick, high n |
| Fluorinated liquids (like FC-72, perfluorocarbons) | 1.25–1.28 | Lowest practical liquids, still far from air |
| Liquid helium (near 4K) | 1.026 | Lowest natural fluid n, cryogenic |
| Liquid hydrogen | 1.121 | Low n, cryogenic, dangerous |
2. Notes
-
Most fluids have n > 1.2, which is 20% or more higher than air.
Compensating Optical Changes by Adjusting Lens Position
Yes, you can compensate for the optical changes caused by filling a lens assembly with oil or another medium by adjusting the lens position relative to the sensor.
1. Why It Works
- Replacing air (n ≈ 1.0) with oil or solid (n ≈ 1.45–1.5) increases the optical path length between lens elements.
- This shifts the focus plane forward or backward.
- Moving the lens closer or farther from the sensor can restore focus on the image plane.