The
borosilicate glass Schott BK7 (
glass code 517642) is an extremely common crown glass, used in precision lenses. Borosilicates contain about 10%
boric oxide, have good optical and mechanical characteristics, and are resistant to chemical and environmental damage. Other additives used in crown glasses include
zinc oxide,
phosphorus pentoxide,
barium oxide,
fluorite and
lanthanum oxide. The crown/flint distinction is so important to optical glass technology that many glass names, notably Schott glasses, incorporate it. A
K in a Schott name indicates a crown glass (
Krone in German). The
B in
BK7 indicates that it is a borosilicate glass composition.
BAK-4 barium crown glass (glass code 569560) has a higher index of refraction than BK7, and is used for prisms in high-end binoculars. In that application, it gives better image quality and a round exit pupil. , which combines
crown glass and
flint glass. A
concave lens of
flint glass is commonly combined with a
convex lens of crown glass to produce an
achromatic doublet. The dispersions of the glasses partially compensate for each other, producing reduced
chromatic aberration compared to a
singlet lens with the same
focal length. ==See also==