Single-step interferometric radius-of-curvature measurements utilizing short-coherence sources
09857169 ยท 2018-01-02
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01B2290/15
PHYSICS
G01B9/02065
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
An interferometer includes a short-coherence source and an internal path-matching assembly contained within its housing. Because path matching occurs within the housing of the interferometer, it is removed from external environmental factors that affect measurements. Therefore, a single cateye measurement of an exemplary surface can be performed in advance and stored as a calibration for subsequent radius-of-curvature measurements. In one embodiment, a path-matching stage is incorporated into a dynamic interferometer where orthogonally polarized test and reference beams are fed to a dynamic imaging system. In another embodiment, orthogonal linearly polarized test and reference beams are injected into a remote dynamic interferometer by means of one single-mode polarization-maintaining optical fiber.
Claims
1. A method for measuring a radius of curvature of a test sample with a single confocal measurement, the method comprising the following steps: providing an interferometer comprising a path-matching assembly for minimizing an optical path difference between short-coherence test and reference beams by shifting a mirror along an optical axis of the interferometer, said assembly being housed internally within the interferometer; and an encoder in the path-matching assembly configured to detect a position of said mirror; measuring an exemplary test surface at a cateye position; determining a corresponding cateye position of the mirror in the path matching assembly; storing said cateye position of the mirror in the path-matching assembly as a reference cateye position; measuring a different test surface at a confocal position; determining a corresponding confocal position of the mirror in the path-matching assembly; and obtaining the radius of curvature of said different test surface from said reference cateye position and said confocal position of the mirror in the path-matching assembly.
2. The method of claim 1, further including the step of repeating the steps of measuring a different test surface, determining a corresponding confocal position of the mirror, and obtaining the radius of curvature of said different test surface.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein said interferometer further comprises: a short-coherence light source producing said test and reference beams; an interferometric setup adapted to receive the test and reference beams; a light sensor detecting interferograms produced by the interferometric set up; and a processor programmed to perform an interferometric measurement of a test surface based on said interferograms.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein said test and reference beams are orthogonally polarized and said interferometric setup and light sensor are included in a dynamic imaging system for carrying out dynamic interferometry.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein said interferometric setup is a Fizeau configuration, said test and reference beams are orthogonally polarized by a polarizing beam splitter and respective quarter-wave plates, and said dynamic imaging system includes a pixelated phase-mask sensor.
6. The method of claim 3, wherein said interferometric setup and light sensor are included in a separate interferometric module, said test and reference beams are orthogonal and linearly polarized and are injected into the module via a single-mode polarization-maintaining optical fiber by aligning one of said beams with a slow-axis of the optical fiber and another of said beams with a fast-axis of the optical fiber.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein said interferometric setup is a Fizeau configuration, said test and reference beams are orthogonal and linearly polarized by a polarizing beam splitter and respective quarter-wave plates, and said separate interferometric module includes a dynamic imaging system for carrying out dynamic interferometry.
8. The interferometer of claim 7, wherein said dynamic imaging system includes a pixelated phase-mask sensor.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein said interferometer is a Twyman-Green interferometer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(7) For the purposes of this specification of the invention, as described and claimed, short-coherence of a light source refers to light that has a full-width-half-max coherence length of 1 millimeter or less. The term orthogonal polarizer is used to describe any optical device that produces an output of two orthogonally polarized beams. Such beams are preferably, but not necessarily, achromatic. For instance, without limitation, cycloidal diffractive waveplates, birefringent prism pairs such as Wollaston, or interferometers like Fizeau or Twyman-Green with a polarizing beam-splitter coupled to quarter-wave plates, are hereby defined as orthogonal polarizers when configured to produce such output. The terms dynamic interferometry and dynamic interferometer are defined and used to include any interferometric method and corresponding apparatus where at least three phase-shifted interferograms can be produced simultaneously from two orthogonally polarized beams. The term dynamic imaging system is used herein to refer to suitable optical elements used to image said at least three phase-shifted interferograms either on multiple cameras or on a single camera with different sets of pixels configured to detect respective interferograms. For example, the use of a pixelated phase-mask sensor, as described below, is ideal for implementing a dynamic imaging system. The term path-matching assembly or stage is used to refer to any shifting mechanism adopted to move a mirror along the optical axis of an interferometric beam to introduce a delay in the path traveled by the beam and includes an encoder to detect the position of the mirror along that path. A shifting mechanism refers to any device used in the illumination path to produce such delay with a corresponding temporal phase shift in the resulting fringes detected at the output of the interferometer. The terms fringes, fringe pattern and interferogram may be used interchangeably in this description of the invention as referring to the wavefront produced by interfering light beams. Finally, as normally done in the art, it is understood that the term detector is used generically to refer to, and is intended to encompass, any device capable of sensing and quantitatively measuring an optical signal impinging on it, such as cameras and charge-coupled devices (CCDs).
(8) According to the invention, an interferometer is configured with internal path matching in conjunction with a short-coherence source. In order to perform repetitive ROC measurements, a single cateye measurement is first carried out and stored as a calibration reference. Subsequent ROC measurements then only require a single measurement of the sample at the confocal position, from which the radius of curvature is calculated with reference to the stored cateye measurement.
(9) By placing the path-matching feature of the interferometer internally, the null-position detection and measurement are rendered independent of external mechanical perturbations such as thermal expansion or shifts in the detection mechanism. The interferometer can be designed such that the cateye path-match position remains constant over a wide range of temperature. Therefore, it can be assumed constant in time and stored as a reference measurement obtained by calibration. Accordingly, it is envisioned that a user will perform periodic calibrations on a daily-to-weekly time period, depending upon the environment. In addition, moving the detection internal to the interferometer reduces the complexity of the test setup by eliminating external components.
(10) An example of a short coherence interferometer that can be used to measure the distance between two surfaces external to the interferometer using an internal path-match assembly with an incorporated encoder is illustrated schematically in
(11) According to the invention, the path-matching stage 12 includes a shifting mechanism 27 coupled to the mirror 20 and an encoder 28 configured to detect the exact position of the mirror along the optical path of the longer-path beam. By moving the mirror 20 along that optical path, a time delay is introduced in the longer-path beam. When the shorter-path and longer-path beams are recombined at the splitter 16 and launched into the Fizeau interferometer, they both reflect off the test and reference surfaces and return to the camera. Due to the longer optical path to the test beam, the two beams that reflect off the test surface experience a relative time delay when compared to the beams that reflect off the reference surface. Only the beams that experience the same effective time of flight will interfere at the camera. As a result, a peak in the fringe modulation on the camera is achieved only when the delay created in the path-matching arm matches the delay in the test path of the interferometer (the so-called zero optical path difference positionzero OPD). There is a one to one correlation between the relative position of the adjustable mirror 20 in the path-matching stage of the interferometer and the position of the test article when the path-matching stage is adjusted for peak fringe modulation. Consequently, the relative position of the test article can be determined very accurately. As an extension, this can be used to determine the relative position of the test surface at the cateye and confocal positions, from which the radius of curvature is determined, as illustrated in the figure by the distance between the two positions of the mirror 20 (shown in broken line in the position corresponding to the confocal null fringe).
(12) 4D Technology's Fizcam 2000 interferometer (U.S. Pat. No. 7,230,718) is an example of a short coherence interferometer that can be used to measure the distance between two surfaces external to the interferometer using an internal path-matching assembly with an incorporated encoder. Referring to
(13) Referring back to
(14) For industrial ROC-measurement applications, it is often imperative to utilize small interferometers to save valuable production line space, to provide flexibility where the interferometer is mounted, and to provide easy access for servicing the interferometer's laser source. One key method for minimizing the size of an interferometer is to remove the light source from the main housing and feed the light into the interferometer by way of a single-mode polarization-maintaining fiber. This implementation is used in cases where a single linearly polarized beam is launched from the fiber and the test and reference beams are separated inside the main interferometer head.
(15) However, in some interferometer configurations, such as illustrated in
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(17) Thus, a simple approach has been described to measure the radius of curvature of a surface of known geometry for testing purposes inline in a process for manufacturing copies of the same article. A single periodic measurement of the cateye null-fringe position of the article serves as a reference parameter for comparison with the confocal null-fringe position determined in subsequent measurements of the articles being produced. In each case, the ROC of the measured surface in an article is readily obtained from the difference between the confocal position and the reference parameter.
(18) The invention has been shown and described herein in what is believed to be the most practical and preferred embodiments, but it is recognized that departures can be made therefrom. For example, while helpful, polarization is not required for incorporating the path-matching stage into the interferometer for the purpose of locating the relative positions of the test surface at cateye and confocal locations. Also, the invention has been described using a Fizeau configuration, but path matching can easily be incorporated into other interferometer configurations such as, for example, the Twyman[n]-Green interferometer. For example, it is anticipated that the invention could be practiced as well with interferometers configured as an unpolarized Twyman-Green, an unpolarized Twyman-Green with spatial carrier phase-shifting, a polarized Twynman-Green with a pixelated sensor, a Twyman-Green with a fiber-coupled path-matching assembly, and an unpolarized Fizeau with spatial carrier phase-shifting. Therefore, the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed details but is to be accorded the full scope of the claims to embrace any and all equivalent apparatus and methods.