Neipp, Cristian, Márquez, Andrés, Hernández Prados, Antonio, Alvarez, Mariela L., Beléndez, Augusto Thin and thick diffraction gratings: thin matrix decomposition method NEIPP LÓPEZ, Cristian, et al. "Thin and thick diffraction gratings: thin matrix decomposition method". Optik. Vol. 115, Issue 9 (2004). ISSN 0030-4026, pp. 385-392 URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10045/9259 DOI: 10.1078/0030-4026-00382 ISSN: 0030-4026 (Print) Abstract: A brief review of the properties of transmission diffraction gratings is presented. Two types of gratings will be analyzed: thin and volume gratings explaining how the efficiency of the different orders that propagate inside the gratings can be calculated in both cases. For thin diffraction gratings the so-called amplitude transmittance method is applied in order to get the amplitude of the different orders, whereas in the case of volume gratings more complex methods are needed, such as Coupled Wave or modal theories. We will comment on the thin matrix decomposition method (TMDM), firstly proposed by Alferness, which gives a very intuitive approach and connects the properties of thin gratings to the properties of volume ones. The thin matrix decomposition method consists in dividing the volume grating in a number of thin gratings and applying the amplitude transmittance method to each thin grating. In this way the output of a grating will be considered as the input of the next and any individual grating can be treated by the amplitude transmittance method. The novelty of this work is that a comparison is made between the analytical expressions obtained by Alferness using the TMDM with the numerical results obtained using the coupled wave (CW) and rigorous coupled wave (RCW) theories for the efficiencies of the zero, first and second order when a plane wave incides onto a sinusoidal diffraction grating at the second on-Bragg replay angular condition. Keywords:Holography, Volume holography, Holographic recording materials, Silver halide emulsions Elsevier info:eu-repo/semantics/article