Cycles: Expand thin film documentation #104861
@ -347,21 +347,33 @@ Strength
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Strength from 0.0 to 10.0
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Thin Film
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---------
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Thin Film :guilabel:`Cycles Only`
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---------------------------------
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Thin Film simulates the effect of iridescence which is the
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phenomenon of a surface changing color as the view angle changes.
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Thin Film simulates the effect of interference in a thin film sitting on top of the material.
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This causes the specular reflection to be colored in a way which strongly depends on the view
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angle as well as the film thickness and the index of refraction (:term:`IOR`) of the film and
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the material itself.
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This effect is commonly seen on e.g. oil films, soap bubbles or glass coatings. While its
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influence is more obvious in specular highlights, it also affects transmission.
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.. note::
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Thin-film interference is currently only applied to dielectric materials. Support for
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thin films on top of Metallic is planned in the future.
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Thickness
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The thickness of the film, in nanometers a value of 0 disables the simulation.
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For reference the thickness of a colorful looking bubble is about 200 to 500 nanometers.
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The thickness of the film in nanometers. A value of 0 disables the simulation.
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The interference effect is strongest between roughly 100 and 1000 nanometers, since this is
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near the wavelengths of visible light.
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IOR
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Index of refraction (:term:`IOR`) for rays transmitting through the thin film
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For most materials, the IOR is between 1.0 (vacuum and air) and 4.0 (germanium).
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Index of refraction (:term:`IOR`) of the thin film.
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The common range for this value is between 1.0 (vacuum and air) and roughly 2.0,
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though some materials can reach higher values.
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The default value of 1.33 is a good approximation for water.
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For reference soap has an IOR of 1.5, so the IOR for a soap bubble should be between 1.33 and 1.5.
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Note that when the value is set to 1.0 or to the main IOR of the material, the thin film
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effect disappears since the film optically blends into the air or the material.
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Outputs
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