Topics Covered
Introduction
Challenges of High Slopes and
Roughness
Maximizing the Signal
Conclusion
About Bruker Nano Surfaces
Introduction
Optical profilers
that employ white light interferometry are one of the most accurate and flexible
metrology tools for precision three-dimensional surface characterization. They
are instrumental in an incredibly diverse range of industrial applications, from
the measurement of data storage read-write heads or the cylinder walls of
engines to the characterization of the drying rates of paint and adhesives,
semiconductor linewidths and spacing analysis, and medical devices
metrology.
Challenges of High Slopes and Roughness
One of the challenges with any optical measurement is characterizing anything
with steep angles. The larger the field of view of an optical system, the lower
its numerical aperture will be. Light that strikes a surface through the
microscope objective must be collected again for focus onto a camera in order to
process the information and create the desired three-dimensional surface
map.
Light reflected from surfaces of higher angle than accepted by the microscope
objective is not collected by the optical system, making accurate measurement
impossible. This metrology limitation affects results on both steep and very
rough surfaces. Steep surfaces, such as lenses, gratings, microfluidics devices,
and ball bearings may have large slope areas that do not reflect light back into
the optics. Rough surfaces also contain many local slopes and, generally, have
fewer locations that are flat with respect to the optics. Therefore, much of the
light is never collected by the objective, and resulting data is either noisy or
completely missing. Table 1 shows theoretical maximum collection angles for a
variety of common interferometric microscope objectives.
Table 1. Typical magnifications, numerical apertures, and
slopes on smooth surfaces for interferometric objectives
|
Objective
Magnification |
Numerical Aperture |
Nominal Field of View
(mm) |
Maximum Slope
(degrees) |
|
2.5 |
0.075 |
2.53 x 1.9 |
1.9 |
|
5 |
0.13 |
1.27 x 0.95 |
3.8 |
|
10 |
0.3 |
0.63 x 0.48 |
7.6 |
|
20 |
0.4 |
0.32 x 0.24 |
14.2 |
|
50 |
0.55 |
0.13 x 0.1 |
26.7 |
|
100 |
0.7 |
0.07 x 0.05 |
34.8 |
Fortunately, the limits in Table 1 apply strictly for very smooth surfaces,
where all of the light that strikes the sample from a single direction reflects
away in a single direction. Such surfaces would typically appear visually
smooth, and numerically have surface roughness less than 10 nanometers. Many
surfaces, particularly machined metal surfaces, are not that smooth, and the
light that strikes them from one angle is reflected at a variety of angles. The
scattered light can be collected by the microscope on these rougher surfaces,
and, if it exceeds the signal-to-noise ratio of the system, accurate and
quantitative surface metrology is possible.
Figure 1 diagrams the light path for steep smooth and rough surfaces. For a
smooth surface, the light exiting the microscope leaves at the same relative
angle as the incoming light with equal intensity. For a rough surface, some of
the exiting light leaves at the same relative angle as the incoming light, but
at a lesser intensity since much of the light is scattered across many other
angles.
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Figure 1. A smooth surface (left) will reflect all
incident light at the same relative angle as it strikes the surface. A rough
surface (right) will reflect some of the light this way, but also scatter a
significant amount of light at other angles.
Maximizing the Signal
Bruker's latest generation of optical
profilers take advantage of advanced LED light sources, superior cameras,
precision scanners, and sophisticated noise-reduction electronics and algorithms
to maximize their signa lto- noise ratio. Current systems have a noise floor
more than two times lower than previous generation products. This allows even
very small amounts of light collected by the microscope objective to lead to
good measurement performance on a surface.
Figure 2 shows a measurement of a screw thread with a 20X objective with a
theoretical slope limit of about 17 degrees. Multiple fields have been stitched
together to obtain a length of more than 4 millimeters along the screw thread in
a single image. Threads over 63 degrees in slope are accurately measured because
the low noise of the instrument allows the small amount of scattered light to be
efficiently collected for accurate metrology. With this kind of configuration,
50X objectives can achieve slopes over 70 degrees, while even a 5X objective can
achieve most data up to 30 degrees and some data at upwards of 50 degrees.
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Figure 2. Top: Measurements of a 10mm pitch screw showing
slopes of more than 63 degrees can be measured even with a 20X magnification
objective. Bottom: Measurement of a machined cylinder using 5X objective with
over 1mm2 field of view; near continuous data up to about 30 degrees and
sporadic data up to 50 degrees slope.
For rough surfaces, the improved signalto- noise capability means that more
data is collected even on extremely rough surfaces. Figure 3 demonstrates the
data achievable on two very rough surfaces, a ceramic with approximately 4
microns average roughness and a CMP polishing pad with more than 7 microns
average roughness. A 20X objective and 0.55X field conversion lens were used to
achieve a field of view of approximately 0.5mm on a side. More than 95% of the
ceramic and more than 70% of the pad surface area achieved valid measurement
data, allowing rapid, accurate and repeatable characterization over fairly large
fields. The 2D traces in Figure 4 illustrate how local slopes can significantly
exceed the theoretical maximum slope of 16.7 degrees maximum angle. Angles
upwards of 50 degrees are measured.
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Figure 3. Rough surface metrology of ceramic (top) and
polishing pad (bottom), with fields of view of 0.42mm x 0.56mm.
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Figure 4. 2D traces of the ceramic part showing local
slopes of more than 50 degrees can be characterized, which is much higher than
the stated limit of 17 degrees for this magnification objective.
Conclusion
Interferometric optical profilers can achieve high lateral and
vertical resolution measurements over very large ranges. With a low-noise
system, the scattered light from steep or very rough surfaces may be collected
and used for accurate surface characterization. Slopes upwards of 70 degrees are
measurable and surfaces with roughness on the order of 10 microns with very high
local slopes can also be characterized. Flexible configurations and a variety of
objective magnifications and options enable these instruments to be configured
to best fit needs from research to full-scale production part qualification. In
terms of slope, speed, repeatability and accuracy, interferometric
optical profilers are the most flexible and effective metrology tools
available today.
About Bruker Nano Surfaces
Bruker Nano
provides Atomic Force Microscope/Scanning Probe Microscope (AFM/SPM) products
that stand out from other commercially available systems for their robust design
and ease-of-use, whilst maintaining the highest resolution. The NANOS measuring
head, which is part of all our instruments, employs a unique fiber-optic
interferometer for measuring the cantilever deflection, which makes the setup so
compact that it is no larger than a standard research microscope objective.
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Source: "Low-Noise Interferometry Enables Characterization of
Steep and Rough Surfaces" .
For more information on this source please visit Bruker Nano Surfaces.