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2002
Journal Article
Title
Surface characterization techniques for determining the root-mean-square roughness and power spectral densities of optical components
Abstract
Surface topography and light scattering were measured on 15 samples ranging from those having smooth surfaces to others with ground surfaces. The measurement techniques included an atomic force microscope, mechanical and optical profilers, confocal laser scanning microscope, angle-resolved scattering, and total scattering. The samples included polished and ground fused silica, silicon carbide, sapphire, electroplated gold, and diamond-turned brass. The measurement instruments and techniques had different surface spatial wavelength band limits, so the measured roughnesses were not directly comparable. Two- dimensional power spectral density (PSD) functions were calculated from the digitized measurement data, and we obtained rms roughnesses by integrating areas under the PSD curves between fixed upper and lower band limits. In this way, roughnesses measured with different instruments and techniques could be directly compared. Although smaller differences between measurement techniques remained in the calculated roughnesses, these could be explained mostly by surface topographical features such as isolated particles that affected the instruments in different ways.
Keyword(s)
surface characterization technique
root-mean-square roughness
power spectral density
optical component
light scattering
surface topography
atomic force microscope
mechanical profiler
optical profiler
Confocal laserscanning microscopy
angle resolved scattering
total scattering
ground fused silica
silicon carbide
sapphire
electroplated gold
diamond-turned brass
measurement instrument
surface spatial wavelength band limit
power spectral density
rms roughnesses
integrating area
surface topographical feature
Au
SiC