I was working with this method of surface treatment of glass more decades ago 
than I care to remember. You simply immerse ordinary glass into a bath of 
molten potassium nitrate and the sodium Ions at the surface are replaced with 
potassium ions, resulting in a highly impact resistant glass. These days it's 
called gorilla glass, but I was using this technique long before Corning.

I see that cerium doped sheet is just glass, not fused silica. So it may be 
that no cerium ions could be implanted into pure silica by the molten salt 
technique.

I recently discovered a method of depositing a layer of silica on any given 
surface using a ridiculously simple and inexpensive technique. This is 
something that should have been discovered 200 or so years ago, but wasn't. 
I've searched for months trying to find out if this was done before, but I find 
no reference to it. The silica layer deposited is only a few tens of microns 
thick, but the process can be repeated. Other compounds can be included; so far 
I've only tried copper. This is a solid transparent well adhered layer, not 
some powdered composite. I really don't know what to do with this, probably 
nothing. Thought you might be interested anyway.

------- Original Message -------
On Tuesday, December 20th, 2022 at 10:00 PM, Andrew Meulenberg 
<mules...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Foster,
>
> You have raised an interesting possibility. I have been out of the loop for 
> 25 years, so my info may be dated. However, the cerium was included in the 
> melt, with the quantity a djusted for the optimum UV absorption for the 
> coverslide thickness.
>
> Use of a doped layer rather than the bulk could possibly provide some 
> improved optical matching in the "STACK". It would have to be tested for 
> stability during the thermal cycles. If the surface doping (by dipping or by 
> ion implantation) is a reliable process, this might be worth mentioning it to 
> the appropriate people (who I no longer know).
>
> Andrew
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ---------
>
> I guess this is getting off into the weeds a bit, but is the quartz layer 
> doped with cerium in the mass? Or is the cerium diffused into the surface by 
> immersion in a molten cerium compound?
>
> --
> On Tuesday, December 20th, 2022 at 2:26 AM, Andrew Meulenberg 
> <mules...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>>>

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