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Green Field Public SCHOOL: Certificate

The document describes the concept and phenomenon of total internal reflection. It explains what total internal reflection is, the critical angle, applications of total internal reflection such as in optical fibers and diamonds, and includes an experiment demonstrating total internal reflection using a soda bottle filled with water.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
20 views16 pages

Green Field Public SCHOOL: Certificate

The document describes the concept and phenomenon of total internal reflection. It explains what total internal reflection is, the critical angle, applications of total internal reflection such as in optical fibers and diamonds, and includes an experiment demonstrating total internal reflection using a soda bottle filled with water.

Uploaded by

gujjarpreet2102
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
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You are on page 1/ 16

Green Field Public SCHOOL

G-Block, Govindpuram
GZB

REFLECTION OF LIGHT

Submitted to- Submitted by-


Mr. Tapesh xyz
PGT- Physics Class-12A
Roll No.-

CERTIFICATE

Page 1 of 16
This is to certify that PTQ a student of Class
XII of are Roll no________, Session 2023-
24 ,has satisfactorily completed The
required Physics project work as per the
Syllabus of standard XII

DATE: Teacher
Signature

Page 2 of 16
Acknowledgement
I selected this project as a part of my studies. As
gratitude, convey my sincere thanks to our Physics
teacher Mr. Tapesh , who was my constant guide
during the period of study and without whose help
it would not have been Possible for me to complete
the project.

Xyz

Page 3 of 16
Content Page NO.
Introduction
TIR in Diamond
Application of TIR
TIR using Soda Bottle
Material Required
Procedure
Precaution
Bibliography

Index

Page 4 of 16
Total internal reflection is an optical phenomenon that happens when a ray of
light strikes a medium boundary at an angle larger than a particular critical angle
with respect to the normal to the surface. If the refractive index is lower on the
other side of the boundary and the incident angle is greater than the critical
angle, no light can pass through and all of the light is reflected. The critical angle
is the angle of incidence above which the total internal reflectance occurs.

When a light beam crosses a boundary between materials with different kinds of
refractive indices, the light beam will be partially refracted at the boundary
surface, and partially reflected. However, if the angle of incidence is greater (i.e.
the ray is closer to being parallel to the boundary) than the critical angle – the
angle of incidence at which light is refracted such that it travels along the
boundary – then the light will stop crossing the boundary altogether and instead
be totally reflected back internally. This can only occur where light travels from a
medium with a higher [n1=higher refractive index] to one with a lower refractive
index [n2=lower refractive index]. For example, it will occur when passing from
glass to air, but not when passing from air to glass.

Optical Description
Total internal reflection can be demonstrated using a semi-circular block of glass
or plastic. A “ray box” shines a narrow beam of light (a “ray”) onto the glass. The
semi-circular shape ensures that a ray pointing towards the centre of the flat face
will hit the curved surface at a right angle; this will prevent refraction at the
air/glass boundary of the curved surface. At the glass/air boundary of the flat
surface, what happens will depend on the angle? Where is the critical angle
measurement which is caused by the sun or a light source (measured normal to
the surface):
 If Θ<ΘC , the ray will split. Some of the ray will reflect off the boundary, and
some will refract as it passes through. This is not total internal reflection.
 If Θ>ΘC , the entire ray reflects from the boundary. None passes through.
This is called total internal reflection.This physical property makes optical
fibres useful and prismatic binoculars possible. It is also what
gives diamonds their distinctive sparkle, as diamond has an unusually high
refractive index.

Page 5 of 16
Critical Angle

The critical angle is the angle of incidence above which total internal reflection
occurs. The angle of incidence is measured with respect to the normal at the
refractive boundary (see diagram illustrating Snell’s law). Consider a light ray
passing from glass into air. The light emanating from the interface is bent towards
the glass. When the incident angle is increased sufficiently, the transmitted angle
(in air) reaches 90 degrees. It is at this point no light is transmitted into air.

The critical angle is given by Snell’s law.

Page 6 of 16
Page 7 of 16
Phase Shift upon Total Internal Reflection

A lesser-known aspect of total internal reflection is that the reflected light has an
angle dependent phase shift between the reflected and incident light.
Mathematically this means that the Fresnel reflection coefficient becomes a
complex rather than a real number. This phase shift is polarization dependent and
grows as the incidence angle deviates further from the critical angle toward
Page 8 of 16
grazing incidence. The polarization dependent phase shift is long known and was
used by Fresnel to design the Fresnel rhomb which allows transforming circular
polarization to linear polarization and vice versa for a wide range of wavelengths
(colours), in contrast to the quarter wave plate. The polarization dependent phase
shift is also the reason why TE and TM guided modes have different dispersion
relations.

Total Internal Reflection in Diamond

From glass to air the critical angle is about but it varies from one medium to
another. The material that gives the smallest critical angle is diamond. That is why
they sparkle so much! Rays of light can easily be made to ‘bounce around inside
them’ by careful cutting of the stone and the refraction at the surfaces splits the
light into a spectrum of colours! Relatively speaking, the critical angle for the
diamond-air boundary is extremely small. This property of the diamond-air
boundary plays an important role in the brilliance of a diamond gemstone. Having
a small critical angle, light has the tendency to become “trapped” inside of a
diamond once it enters. Most rays approach the diamond at angles of incidence
greater than the critical angle (as it is so small) so a light ray will typically undergo
TIR several times before finally refracting out of the diamond. This gives diamond
a tendency to sparkle. The effect can be enhanced by the cutting of a diamond
gemstone with a ‘strategically’ planned shape.

Page 9 of 16
Application of Total Internal Reflection
 Total internal reflection is the operating principle of optical fibres, which are
used in endoscopes and telecommunications.
 Total internal reflection is the operating principle of automotive rain
sensors, which control automatic windscreen/windshield wipers.
 Another application of total internal reflection is the spatial filtering of light.
 Prismatic binoculars use the principle of total internal reflections to get a
very clear image.
 Gonioscopy employs total internal reflection to view the anatomical angle
formed between the eye’s cornea and iris.
 Optical fingerprinting devices use frustrated total internal reflection
in order to record an image of a person’s fingerprint without the use of ink.
 A Total internal reflection fluorescence microscope uses the evanescent
wave produced by TIR to excite fluorophores close to a surface. This is
useful for the study of surface properties of biological samples.

Page 10 of 16
How a turtle experience TIR from inside water

Page 11 of 16
Total Internal Reflection using Soda Bottle

In this demo, light will continually reflect through the stream of water creating total internal reflection (TIR).
The stream of water will ‘carry’ the light though, to the end of the stream.

Page 12 of 16
Total Internal Reflection is the principle behind fiber optics

Material Required
 Empty soda pop bottle (2 Litre)

 Tape

 Hand drill

 Drill bits

 Water

 Green laser

 Bucket

 Old books etc for stands

Procedure

Page 13 of 16
 First set up the soda bottle by drilling a hole near the bottom of the bottle.
Begin with a drill bit that has a diameter which is slightly larger than the
diameter of the laser that will be used. We used a 1/4-inch drill bit, however
sizes as small as 7/32 inch worked as well.

 First tape the hole and then fill the bottle with water. The cap will prevent
leaking because it creates a vacuum in the bottle.
 Stand the soda bottle on top of a stack of books so the hole is facing the
bucket. The laser should be placed in a binder clip so it stays on, and then
set on a stack of books and papers. The laser should be lined up so that the
laser light goes through the soda bottle, and into the centre of the hole. See
for details.
 Carefully remove the tape and then unscrew the top of the soda bottle. The
light should reflect within the stream of water so that you could see at
least a few points of reflection. The light should be visible through the
entire stream.
 If the reflections of the light aren’t clear, it may be necessary to expand the
hole by drilling through the existing hole with a larger drill bit. This process
may need to be repeated several times.
Page 14 of 16
Precaution
 This is a messy experiment. Be ready to adjust the bucket which catches
the stream of water.

 Also, be aware that the stream’s curvature will change as the water level
decreases. It will bend closer to the bottle, and the bucket may need to be
adjusted again. When the water level is a little above the hole there will be
no total internal reflection although the stream will continue. Place
the cap back on, or put the bottle inside of the bucket.

 Make sure to have lots of paper towels! Towels or rags could be useful too.
However, this mess is water, and therefore easy to clean up.

 Some resources suggest putting a drop of food coloring in the bottom of the
bucket to match the laser light, giving the appearance that the water has
permanently ‘trapped’ the coloured light.
sfsfbliography

 wikipedia.com
Page 15 of 16
 Google search engine
 YouTube.com
 http://physicsed.buffalostate.edu
 Physics NCERT book for class XII
 www.knowledgecycle.in/Blog

Page 16 of 16

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