Total Internal Reflection
- As the angle of incidence is increased, the angle of refraction also increases until it gets closer to 90°
- When the angle of refraction is exactly 90° the light is refracted along the boundary
- At this point, the angle of incidence is known as the critical angle C
- This angle can be found using the formula:
- This can easily be derived from Snell’s law where:
- θ1 = C
- θ2 = 90°
- n1 = n
- n2 = 1 (air)
- Total internal reflection (TIR) occurs when:
The angle of incidence is greater than the critical angle and the incident refractive index n1 is greater than the refractive index of the material at the boundary n2
- Therefore, the two conditions for total internal reflection are:
- The angle of incidence, θ1 > the critical angle, C
- Refractive index n1 > refractive index n2 (air)
Worked example
A glass cube is held in contact with a liquid and a light ray is directed at a vertical face of the cube.The angle of incidence at the vertical face is 39° and the angle of refraction is 25° as shown in the diagram.The light ray is totally internally reflected at X.Complete the diagram to show the path of the ray beyond X to the air and calculate the critical angle for the glass-liquid boundary.
Step 1: Draw the reflected angle at the glass-liquid boundary
- When a light ray is reflected, the angle of incidence = angle of reflection
- Therefore, the angle of incidence (and reflection) is 90° – 25° = 65°
Step 2: Draw the refracted angle at the glass-air boundary
- At the glass-air boundary, the light ray refracts away from the normal
- Due to the reflection, the light rays are symmetrical to the other side
Step 3: Calculate the critical angle
- The question states the ray is “totally internally reflected for the first time” meaning that this is the lowest angle at which TIR occurs
- Therefore, 65° is the critical angle
Examiner Tip
Always draw ray diagrams with a ruler, and make sure you're comfortable calculating unknown angles. The main rules to remember are:
- Angles in a right angle add up to 90°
- Angles on a straight line add up to 180°
- Angles in any triangle add up to 180°