Hi all, I'm new here. My professional background is in computers and airplanes, but about a year ago I started getting really curious about how telescope mirrors were made. I know that typically they are coated with aluminum in a very good vacuum. What follows is a dreamed up alternative process that is almost certainly less effective (or totally useless?), but since this is far out of my profession I need some help coming up with some reasonable hypotheses for what might happen if this were tried (not just what I wish would happen). Right now I live in a hotel room for work, but perhaps later this year I will have a garage again and may try it myself.
Most hobbyists, when finishing a telescope mirror, send the glass out to get professionally coated. Most hobbyists (not all!) cannot build a good enough vacuum chamber to successfully vapor deposit aluminum themselves. My understanding is that the reasons a high vacuum is required are twofold. 1) In a low vacuum, even if successfully vaporized, the aluminum will bump into other air molecules and cool off to a solid along its transit, and so would deposit as a (black?) powder. 2) In the presence of oxygen, aluminum quickly forms aluminum oxide, which deposits as a white powder. A vacuum solves both of these problems. Are these assumptions correct and are there other reasons a vacuum is required?
Here is my hypothetical experiment.
1. Place a small piece of aluminum inside an empty jar, preferably made of Pyrex
2. Add a small amount of water to the jar (enough to cover the aluminum?)
3. Cover the jar with a flat piece of glass to be coated
4. Place a second jar full of water on top of the flat glass
5. Put the whole stack on a heat source, VERY slowly bringing it up enough to melt the aluminum
Then wait (hours? days?). The water in the first jar will have all boiled, hopefully forcing all of the air (especially O2) out the top and filling the space with superheated steam, at the melting point of aluminum (660 C I think). The water in the second, top jar, will be boiling and, by evaporative cooling, self regulating its own temperature to 100 C. The glass plate on which it rests should be slightly above 100 C.
In my ideal imaginary world, the aluminum would (albeit slowly) vaporize and be carried by the superheated steam to the cool plate, where it would instantly deposit itself in a nice shiny coating. By filling the chamber with 700 C steam, in theory we have displaced all of the oxygen, and prevented the aluminum from cooling to a solid prematurely. This would allow simple hobbyists like myself to perform aluminum vapor deposition without the need for a high vacuum system.
So here are my questions. While I feel like this shouldn't work (it would be too easy), why exactly wouldn't it?
1. Would the aluminum still cool off because of a boundary layer of cooler steam on the plate? Is it ok if the aluminum atoms become supercooled before freezing onto the glass plate?
2. Is the vapor pressure of liquid aluminum just too low to get any useful deposition rates?
Perhaps trying this with tin first would be a better idea, less extreme temperatures required Thanks in advance for any input or other wild ideas, cheers!
-- Keegan
PS: Attached is an embarrassingly crude drawing of the idea, if that helps picture it.