For
makers of computers, disk drives and other sophisticated
technologies, a guiding principle is the smoother
the surfaces of chips and other components, the better
these devices and the products, themselves, will
function.
So, some manufacturers might be surprised to learn
that a fast and increasingly popular method for measuring
surface texture can yield misleading results. As
reported at recent conferences and in an upcoming
issue of Applied Optics ,* a team of National Institute
of Standards and Technology researchers has found
that roughness measurements made with white light
interferometric microscopes, introduced in the early
1990s, differed by as much as 80 percent from those
obtained with two other surface-profiling methods.
Interferometric
microscopes are used to measure surface heights,
lengths and spaces by analyzing the interference
patterns created by two light beams—one
reflected by a reference specimen and the other by
the object of interest.
To date, the team has evaluated a total of five
white light instruments from three different vendors.
They compared roughness measurements of gratings
with both wavelike surfaces and random surfaces.
White
light interferometers were compared with “phase
shifting" interferometers, which use specialized
single-color light sources, and with accurate, but
sometimes destructive, stylus profiling instruments
that trace a sharp probe over a surface. The latter
two tools were in agreement across the spectrum of
test samples within the expected measurement range
of the phase shift interferometers. For measurements
of relatively rough surfaces, white light interferometers
also yielded results that corresponded closely. But
for measurements of surfaces with an average roughness
between 50 and 300 nanometers, results diverged significantly,
peaking at about 100 nanometers.
“The discrepancy seems to be unrelated to the specific
white light instrument used or to the randomness
of the surface profile,” explains Ted Vorburger,
head of NIST's Surface and Microform Metrology Group.
The comparative study was carried out as part of
an effort to develop international standards for
three-dimensional measurements of surface texture.
NIST researchers are now evaluating theoretical explanations
for the observed discrepancies.
H.G. Rhee, T.V. Vorburger, J.W. Lee and J. Fu, Discrepancies
between roughness measurements obtained with phase
shifting interferometry and white-light interferometry.
Applied Optics , 2005.
Media Contact: Mark Bello, mark.bello@nist.gov ,
(301) 975-3776
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