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A practical guide to surface metrology

This book offers a genuinely practical introduction to the most commonly encountered optical and non-optical systems used for the metrology and characterization of surfaces, including guidance on best practice, calibration, advantages and disadvantages, and interpretation of results. It enables the...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Quinten, Michael
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Springer 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-29454-0
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2706764
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author Quinten, Michael
author_facet Quinten, Michael
author_sort Quinten, Michael
collection CERN
description This book offers a genuinely practical introduction to the most commonly encountered optical and non-optical systems used for the metrology and characterization of surfaces, including guidance on best practice, calibration, advantages and disadvantages, and interpretation of results. It enables the user to select the best approach in a given context. Most methods in surface metrology are based upon the interaction of light or electromagnetic radiation (UV, NIR, IR), and different optical effects are utilized to get a certain optical response from the surface; some of them record only the intensity reflected or scattered by the surface, others use interference of EM waves to obtain a characteristic response from the surface. The book covers techniques ranging from microscopy (including confocal, SNOM and digital holographic microscopy) through interferometry (including white light, multi-wavelength, grazing incidence and shearing) to spectral reflectometry and ellipsometry. The non-optical methods comprise tactile methods (stylus tip, AFM) as well as capacitive and inductive methods (capacitive sensors, eddy current sensors). The book provides: Overview of the working principles Description of advantages and disadvantages Currently achievable numbers for resolutions, repeatability, and reproducibility Examples of real-world applications A final chapter discusses examples where the combination of different surface metrology techniques in a multi-sensor system can reasonably contribute to a better understanding of surface properties as well as a faster characterization of surfaces in industrial applications. The book is aimed at scientists and engineers who use such methods for the measurement and characterization of surfaces across a wide range of fields and industries, including electronics, energy, automotive and medical engineering.
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spelling cern-27067642021-04-21T18:11:45Zdoi:10.1007/978-3-030-29454-0http://cds.cern.ch/record/2706764engQuinten, MichaelA practical guide to surface metrologyMathematical Physics and MathematicsThis book offers a genuinely practical introduction to the most commonly encountered optical and non-optical systems used for the metrology and characterization of surfaces, including guidance on best practice, calibration, advantages and disadvantages, and interpretation of results. It enables the user to select the best approach in a given context. Most methods in surface metrology are based upon the interaction of light or electromagnetic radiation (UV, NIR, IR), and different optical effects are utilized to get a certain optical response from the surface; some of them record only the intensity reflected or scattered by the surface, others use interference of EM waves to obtain a characteristic response from the surface. The book covers techniques ranging from microscopy (including confocal, SNOM and digital holographic microscopy) through interferometry (including white light, multi-wavelength, grazing incidence and shearing) to spectral reflectometry and ellipsometry. The non-optical methods comprise tactile methods (stylus tip, AFM) as well as capacitive and inductive methods (capacitive sensors, eddy current sensors). The book provides: Overview of the working principles Description of advantages and disadvantages Currently achievable numbers for resolutions, repeatability, and reproducibility Examples of real-world applications A final chapter discusses examples where the combination of different surface metrology techniques in a multi-sensor system can reasonably contribute to a better understanding of surface properties as well as a faster characterization of surfaces in industrial applications. The book is aimed at scientists and engineers who use such methods for the measurement and characterization of surfaces across a wide range of fields and industries, including electronics, energy, automotive and medical engineering.Springeroai:cds.cern.ch:27067642019
spellingShingle Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
Quinten, Michael
A practical guide to surface metrology
title A practical guide to surface metrology
title_full A practical guide to surface metrology
title_fullStr A practical guide to surface metrology
title_full_unstemmed A practical guide to surface metrology
title_short A practical guide to surface metrology
title_sort practical guide to surface metrology
topic Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-29454-0
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2706764
work_keys_str_mv AT quintenmichael apracticalguidetosurfacemetrology
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