Optics Fused Silica

JGS1 JGS2 JGS3 vs UV Fused Silica Explained

UV Fused Silica vs Optical Quartz: Understanding JGS1, JGS2, and JGS3

If you work with UV optics, lasers, or precision optical components, you’ve likely encountered terms such as optical quartz, UV quartz, fused silica, and the grades JGS1, JGS2, and JGS3. These terms are often used interchangeably, which can cause confusion during material selection. This article clarifies what JGS grades really mean and how they relate to UV fused silica.

 

Optical Quartz vs Fused Silica: The Key Difference

Although commonly called “optical quartz,” JGS materials are not crystalline quartz.

  • Crystalline quartz is anisotropic, exhibits birefringence, and is rarely used in modern imaging or laser optics.
  • Fused silica is an amorphous (glassy) form of SiO₂, isotropic, birefringence-free, and widely used for high-performance optical systems.

JGS1, JGS2, and JGS3 are all fused silica. They are not true optical quartz crystals

The term “optical quartz” is largely historical and refers to the quartz raw material used to produce fused silica.

 

What Does JGS Mean?

JGS (精光石) is a Chinese industrial grading system for fused silica.
It classifies materials based on:

  • Manufacturing process
  • Hydroxyl (OH) content
  • UV and IR transmission performance

JGS is not a different material type, but a performance-based classification within fused silica.

 

JGS Grades Explained

JGS1 – UV-Grade Fused Silica

JGS1 is synthetic fused silica produced from high-purity chemical precursors. It contains high hydroxyl content and offers excellent deep-UV transmission.

 

Key features

  • High transmission down to 185 nm
  • Bubble- and inclusion-free
  • Best choice for deep-UV optics

 

Typical applications

  • UV laser optics
  • Lithography systems
  • UV windows, prisms, and lenses

 

International equivalents

  • Corning 7980
  • Heraeus Suprasil 1 / 2
  • Saint-Gobain Spectrosil A / B

 

JGS2 – UV–Visible Fused Silica

JGS2 is made by melting natural quartz crystal and gas refining. It provides good UV and visible transmission with lower cost than JGS1.

 

Key features

  • UV transmission from ~220 nm
  • Moderate OH content
  • Economical choice for UV–VIS optics

 

Typical applications

  • Condenser optics
  • Optical flats
  • Sight glasses
  • General-purpose UV windows

 

International equivalents

  • Heraeus Homosil series
  • Dynasil 1000 / 4000

 

JGS3 – Broadband UV–IR Fused Silica

JGS3 is designed for applications requiring wide spectral coverage, from UV to infrared.

 

Key features

  • Excellent IR transmission
  • Low OH content
  • Suitable for multi-spectral systems

 

Typical applications

  • UV–IR broadband windows
  • Spectroscopy
  • Multi-band optical systems

 

International equivalent

  • Heraeus Suprasil 300

 

JGS vs UV Fused Silica: Are They Different?

Chemically: No difference
Terminology: Yes

TermMeaningUsage
Optical Quartz (JGS)Industrial name for fused silicaChina / Asia
UV Fused SilicaCorrect material termGlobal
Suprasil / SpectrosilBrand namesEurope / USA

UV fused silica is the internationally correct term. JGS is a regional grading system.

 

How to Select the Right JGS Grade

ApplicationRecommended Material
Deep UV (185–200 nm)JGS1 UV fused silica
UV–Visible opticsJGS2 fused silica
UV–IR broadbandJGS3 fused silica
High-power UV laserSynthetic fused silica (JGS1)
Cost-sensitive UV windowJGS2

 

Summary

JGS1, JGS2, and JGS3 are all fused silica materials—not crystalline quartz.
Understanding the JGS classification helps you select the correct UV fused silica grade for performance, cost, and wavelength requirements.

If you need assistance selecting the right fused silica material for your optical system, Shape Optics’ engineers are happy to help.