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Modeling of interference microscopy beyond the linear regime

Matthew Thomas, Rong Su, N. I. Nikolaev, Jeremy Coupland, Richard Leach

2020Optical Engineering37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Coherence scanning interferometry (CSI), a type of interference microscopy, has found broad applications in the advanced manufacturing industry, providing high-accuracy surface topography measurement. Enhancement of the metrological capability of CSI for complex surfaces, such as those featuring high slopes and spatial frequencies and high aspect-ratio structures, requires advances in modeling of CSI. However, current linear CSI models relying on approximate surface scattering models cannot accurately predict the instrument response for surfaces with complex geometries that cause multiple scattering. A boundary elements method is used as a rigorous scattering model to calculate the scattered field at a distant boundary. Then, the CSI signal is calculated by considering the holographic recording and reconstruction of the scattered field. Through this approach, the optical response of a CSI system can be predicted for almost any arbitrary surface geometry.

Topics & Concepts

OpticsInterference microscopyInterference (communication)ScatteringHolographyCoherence (philosophical gambling strategy)InterferometryMicroscopyOptical engineeringSurface (topology)MetrologyComputer sciencePhysicsGeometryTelecommunicationsQuantum mechanicsMathematicsChannel (broadcasting)Surface Roughness and Optical MeasurementsNear-Field Optical MicroscopyOptical measurement and interference techniques
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