In the design optimisation of ion-cavity interfaces for quantum networking
applications, difficulties occur due to the many competing figures of merit and
highly interdependent design constraints, many of which present `soft-limits',
amenable to improvement at the cost of engineering time. In this work we
present a systematic approach to this problem which offers a means to identify
efficient and robust operating regimes, and to elucidate the trade-offs
involved in the design process, allowing engineering efforts to be focused on
the most sensitive and critical parameters. We show that in many relevant cases
it is possible to approximately separate the geometric aspects of the
cooperativity from those associated with the atomic system and the mirror
surfaces themselves, greatly simplifying the optimisation procedure. Although
our approach to optimisation can be applied to most operating regimes, here we
consider cavities suitable for typical ion trapping experiments, and with
substantial transverse misalignment of the mirrors. We find that cavities with
mirror misalignments of many micrometres can still offer very high photon
extraction efficiencies, offering an appealing route to the scalable production
of ion-cavity interfaces for large scale quantum networks