Method and system for measuring geometric parameters of through holes
11774233 · 2023-10-03
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B60R2001/1253
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B60R1/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method of measuring geometric parameters of through holes in a thin substrate includes acquiring images of select sub-volumes of the substrate using an optical system having a field of depth greater than a thickness of the substrate. The acquired images are processed to determine the desired geometric parameters.
Claims
1. A method of measuring geometric parameters of through holes in a substrate, comprising: positioning a camera comprising an image sensor and a lens having a depth of field greater than a thickness of the substrate at a measuring station, the image sensor having a pixel count of at least 10 megapixels and a pixel size of 1.7 microns or less; positioning a select sub-volume of the substrate within a field of view of the camera and within the depth of field, the select sub-volume having a front side, a back side, and at least one through hole, and the at least one through hole having a first side at the front side of the select sub-volume and a second at the back side of the select sub-volume; illuminating the select sub-volume with a light source; capturing an image of the select sub-volume on the image sensor; and processing the image to determine at least a minimum transverse dimension of the at least one through hole along a length of the through hole, the minimum transverse dimension of the through hole being between the first side and the second side of the through hole, wherein the light source and the camera are arranged on a same side of the substrate.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein illuminating the select sub-volume with the light source further comprises reflecting light from the light source into the select sub-volume using a mirror.
3. The method of claim 2, further comprising moving the mirror with the substrate.
4. The method of claim 2, wherein the light source and the camera are disposed on the front side of the select sub-volume and the mirror is disposed on the on a back side of the select sub-volume.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the light source is a coaxial light source.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the substrate has a thickness of 1 mm or less.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the lens is a telecentric lens.
8. The method of claim 1, further comprising effecting a lateral relative motion between the camera and the substrate to position another sub-volume of the substrate within the field of view of the camera and within the depth of field.
9. The method of claim 8, further comprising illuminating the another sub-volume with light, capturing an image of the another sub-volume on the image sensor, and processing the image of the another sub-volume to determine at least one geometric parameter of at least one hole in the another sub-volume.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein illuminating the another sub-volume comprises effecting a lateral relative motion between the light source and the substrate such that the another sub-volume is within an illumination volume of the light.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein processing the image comprises detecting changes in contrast in the image.
12. A system for measuring geometric parameters of through holes in a substrate, comprising: a camera comprising an image sensor and a lens having a depth of field greater than a thickness of the substrate, the image sensor having a pixel count of at least 10 megapixels and a pixel size of 1.7 microns or less, and the camera positioned at a select working distance relative to the substrate such that a select sub-volume of the substrate is within a field of view of the camera and within the depth of field, the select-sub volume having a front side, a back side, and at least one through hole, and the at least one through hole having a first side at the front side of the select sub-volume and a second at the back side of the select sub-volume; a light source for illuminating the select sub-volume; and a processor configured to receive image data from the camera and determine from the image data at least a minimum transverse dimension of the least one through hole along a length of the through hole, the minimum transverse dimension of the through hole being between the first side and the second side of the through hole, wherein the light source and the camera are arranged on a same side of the substrate.
13. The system of claim 12, further comprising a mirror configured to reflect light from the light source into the select sub-volume.
14. The system of claim 13, wherein the mirror is moveable with the substrate.
15. The system of claim 13, wherein the light source and the camera are disposed on the front side of the select sub-volume and the mirror is disposed on the back side of the select sub-volume.
16. The system of claim 12, wherein the light source is a coaxial light source.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1) The following is a description of the figures in the accompanying drawings. The figures are not necessarily to scale, and certain figures and certain views of the figures may be shown exaggerated in scale or in schematic in the interest of clarity and conciseness.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(12) To provide a context for the method and system disclosed herein,
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(14) In one embodiment, the imaging apparatus 104 includes a camera 106 and a backlight illuminator 108 arranged on opposite sides of the substrate 100, and particularly on opposite sides of a target sub-volume 109 of the substrate 100. The target sub-volume 109 includes one or more through holes 102 whose geometric parameters are to be measured. In one embodiment, the camera 106 includes an image sensor 110 and an objective lens 112 optically coupled to the image sensor 110. In one embodiment, the image sensor 110 has a pixel count of at least 10 megapixels (MP), allowing the camera 106 to capture high resolution images. However, the size of the image sensor 110 will generally be dictated by the desired accuracy of the measurement. For example, if a 100 micron geometric feature is to be measured with 1 micron accuracy, the image pixel size should be close to 1 micron. Image pixel size is a function of the physical size of the image sensor pixel and the magnification of the objective lens. In some embodiments, the objective lens 112 is a telecentric lens. Reasons for selecting a telecentric lens as the objective lens 112 are discussed below.
(15) Conventional lenses have angular fields of view, which means that as the distance between the lens and object increases, the magnification decreases. This angular field of view results in parallax error, also known as perspective error. Telecentric lenses eliminate this parallax error by having a constant, non-angular field of view. With telecentric lenses, magnification remains constant with object displacement, provided the object stays within the telecentric range. The term “telecentric range” or “telecentric depth” or “depth of field (DOF)”, as used with telecentric lenses, refers to the total distance above and below an object that remains in focus and at constant magnification. Telecentric range may be defined as a range of axial displacements causing a variation in image size of less than 1 micron. The telecentric range (or telecentric depth or DOF) of a telecentric lens can be obtained from the lens manufacturer or may be included in the specification of the telecentric lens.
(16) By using a telecentric lens as the objective lens 112, according to one embodiment, virtually distortion free images can be acquired and used to accurately determine the desired geometric parameters of the through holes in the substrate 100. In one embodiment, the telecentric objective lens 112 has a telecentric range (TR in
(17) In one embodiment, the backlight illuminator 108 is used to produce a sharp silhouetted image of the holes to be measured. For the telecentric lens 112, the backlight illuminator 108 can be a telecentric illuminator, which is a collimated illuminator that is designed to work specifically with telecentric lenses. Telecentric illuminators are available commercially (for example, from Opto Engineering). The telecentric illuminator 108 will uniformly illuminate the target sub-volume 109 of the substrate 100 with a collimated light beam. The illumination volume must be the size of the target sub-volume 109 or bigger to assure illumination of the entire field of view. For the arrangement shown in
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(20) Both the lighting arrangements shown in
(21) Returning to
(22) A controller 140 may be coupled to the camera 106 (106′ in
(23) Table 1 below shows examples of telecentric lens options for acquiring images of through holes in thin substrates.
(24) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Tele- centric Lens range or Field Pixel Magnifica- DOF Camera of View Size Option tion (mm) Array (mm) (microns) 1 1X 0.9 3840 × 2748 6.4 × 4.8 1.7 2 1.33X 0.5 3840 × 2748 4.8 × 3.6 1.3 3 2X 0.2 3840 × 2748 3.2 × 2.4 0.85
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(26) A procedure for measuring one or more geometric parameters of through holes in a substrate may include selecting the lens objective for a particular substrate thickness. Examples of lens objectives are given in Table 1. After the lens objective has been selected, the desired geometric parameters, such as clear aperture size, of holes in the substrate can be measured quickly in a few simple steps, as outlined below.
(27) The substrate is moved in between the backlight illuminator 108 and the camera 106 for the system shown in
(28) The target sub-volume is illuminated, and an image of the illuminated target sub-volume is acquired.
(29) The acquired image is processed to determine at least one geometric parameter of each through hole in the target sub-volume. Processing involves detecting changes in light levels, or contrast, in the acquired image. Changes in contrast can define boundaries, or lines, within the image. These lines can be extended to create objects like segments, circles, ellipses, and the like, and then parameters such as diameter or distance can be extracted. The acquired image is typically processed on a computer using commercially available image analysis software. Examples of suitable commercial imaging processing software packages include, but are not limited to, HALCON by MVTec Software GmbH, MATLAB by MathWorks, Matrox Inspector with Matrox Imaging Library by Matrox, and NI Vision by National Instrument.
(30) The geometric parameter values for each hole are recorded. The acquired image may be discarded after recording the geometric parameter values to save storage space since the high-resolution images can be quite large.
(31) The substrate is then translated relative to the camera and lighting arrangement to place another target sub-volume of the substrate in the field of view of the camera and within the illumination volume provided by the lighting arrangement. The acquiring of the image of the target sub-volume, processing of the image, and recording of geometric parameter values for each hole in the target sub-volume are repeated for the new target sub-volume.
(32) The procedure described above can be automated to scan an entire substrate or a small area within the substrate. The duration of a measurement run is determined predominantly by how fast the substrate can be translated and how fast the images can be acquired and processed and not by the number of holes in the field of view. A substrate with holes ranging from hundreds to thousands can be quickly measured using an automated procedure and any of the setups described in
(33) While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art of, having benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate that other embodiments can be devised which do not depart from the scope of the invention as disclosed herein. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be limited only by the accompanying claims.