
Proceedings Paper
Fast and accurate line scanner based on white light interferometryFormat | Member Price | Non-Member Price |
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Paper Abstract
White-light interferometry is a highly accurate technology for 3D measurements. The principle is widely utilized in
surface metrology instruments but rarely adopted for in-line inspection systems. The main challenges for rolling out
inspection systems based on white-light interferometry to the production floor are its sensitivity to environmental
vibrations and relatively long measurement times: a large quantity of data needs to be acquired and processed in order to obtain a single topographic measurement.
Heliotis developed a smart-pixel CMOS camera (lock-in camera) which is specially suited for white-light
interferometry. The demodulation of the interference signal is treated at the level of the pixel which typically reduces the
acquisition data by one orders of magnitude. Along with the high bandwidth of the dedicated lock-in camera, vertical
scan-speeds of more than 40mm/s are reachable. The high scan speed allows for the realization of inspection systems
that are rugged against external vibrations as present on the production floor.
For many industrial applications such as the inspection of wafer-bumps, surface of mechanical parts and solar-panel,
large areas need to be measured. In this case either the instrument or the sample are displaced laterally and several
measurements are stitched together. The cycle time of such a system is mostly limited by the stepping time for multiple
lateral displacements.
A line-scanner based on white light interferometry would eliminate most of the stepping time while maintaining
robustness and accuracy. A. Olszak proposed a simple geometry to realize such a lateral scanning interferometer. We
demonstrate that such inclined interferometers can benefit significantly from the fast in-pixel demodulation capabilities
of the lock-in camera. One drawback of an inclined observation perspective is that its application is limited to objects
with scattering surfaces. We therefore propose an alternate geometry where the incident light is normal to the object
surface and where an inclined grating is used as reference mirror.
Paper Details
Date Published: 13 May 2013
PDF: 9 pages
Proc. SPIE 8788, Optical Measurement Systems for Industrial Inspection VIII, 87880Q (13 May 2013); doi: 10.1117/12.2020617
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 8788:
Optical Measurement Systems for Industrial Inspection VIII
Peter H. Lehmann; Wolfgang Osten; Armando Albertazzi, Editor(s)
PDF: 9 pages
Proc. SPIE 8788, Optical Measurement Systems for Industrial Inspection VIII, 87880Q (13 May 2013); doi: 10.1117/12.2020617
Show Author Affiliations
Patrick Lambelet, Heliotis AG (Switzerland)
Rudolf Moosburger, Heliotis AG (Switzerland)
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 8788:
Optical Measurement Systems for Industrial Inspection VIII
Peter H. Lehmann; Wolfgang Osten; Armando Albertazzi, Editor(s)
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