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lidt

LIDT stands for Laser-Induced Damage Threshold. It is a measure of the maximum laser energy density or power that a material or optical component can tolerate without sustaining damage when exposed to a laser under specified conditions. LIDT is a property of the particular material or coating, and it depends on factors such as wavelength, pulse duration, pulse shape, beam size, polarization, and environment.

In practice, LIDT is reported in terms of fluence (Joules per square centimeter) for pulsed lasers or

Standards and methods exist to standardize LIDT testing and reporting. International guidelines, such as ISO-related documents,

LIDT is essential in the design and qualification of optical components for high-power laser systems, space

irradiance
(Watts
per
square
centimeter)
for
continuous-wave
lasers.
Measurements
typically
involve
exposing
a
representative
set
of
test
sites
to
increasing
laser
fluences
or
irradiances
and
recording
the
onset
of
damage.
For
pulsed
sources,
common
test
protocols
assess
multiple
shots
(for
example,
S-on-1
or
S-on-2
sequences)
to
estimate
a
damage
probability
at
each
fluence.
The
resulting
threshold
is
often
expressed
with
a
statistical
confidence
level.
describe
how
to
perform
damage
testing
on
optical
coatings
and
materials,
specify
test
durations,
beam
characteristics,
and
how
to
derive
a
threshold
value
with
defined
confidence.
The
exact
LIDT
value
depends
on
the
test
setup
and
conditions,
so
comparisons
should
be
made
only
between
tests
performed
under
the
same
conditions.
instrumentation,
and
safety-critical
optics.
It
highlights
the
need
to
consider
material
quality,
coating
deposition,
cleanliness,
and
conditioning,
as
well
as
potential
aging
effects.