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Design of a dual wavelength digital holographic imaging system for the examination of layered structures

Authors :
Ting Chean Khoo
John C. McFarland
Alexander Khmaladze
Anna Sharikova
Source :
Optical Design and Engineering VII.
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
SPIE, 2018.

Abstract

Digital holographic microscopy uses interference patterns produced by the object and reference waves to computationally reconstruct both amplitude and phase of light reflected from a sample under study. The phase information recorded for each pixel can be converted to a height profile map, yielding a three-dimension image of the sample. Holographic imaging of layered structures, where layers are separated from one another by the axial distances exceeding the wavelength of imaging light, is challenging. Software based 2π phase discontinuity unwrapping, which relies on the gradients produced by the slowly varying sloped surfaces in the sample, is generally impossible. Additionally, dual wavelength phase unwrapping is complicated by the fact that if the layers are not sufficiently reflective, the unwrapping based on the comparison of two single wavelength phase images is unreliable. We present the design of a simultaneous dual wavelength digital holographic microscope, where the phase imaging of each individual layer is performed by a single wavelength, and then the axial distance between all layers is determined based on the comparison between the phase maps produced by each wavelength. By combining two interferometers within one setup, we could acquire two phase profiles simultaneously, enabling fast measurements. We demonstrate that this method is particularly well-suited for imaging of multilayered electrode structures embedded in glass, which contain both high and low reflectivity features.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Optical Design and Engineering VII
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7fed9cb3aa27439235f49f8d32b847fb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2312274