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Top-down Determination of Fluctuations in Topographic Measurements.

Julie LemesleClement MoreauRaphael DeltombeFrançois BlateyronJoseph MartinMaxence BigerelleChristopher A Brown
Published in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
A top-down method is presented and studied for quantifying topographic map height ( z ) fluctuations directly from measurements on surfaces of interest. Contrary to bottom-up methods used in dimensional metrology, this method does not require knowledge of transfer functions and fluctuations of an instrument. Fluctuations are considered here to be indicative of some kinds of uncertainties. Multiple ( n ), successive topographic measurements ( z = z ( x , y )) are made at one location without moving the measurand relative to the measurement instrument. The measured heights ( z ) at each position ( x , y ) are analyzed statistically. Fluctuation maps are generated from the calculated variances. Three surfaces were measured with two interferometric measuring microscopes (Bruker ContourGT™ and Zygo NewView™ 7300). These surfaces included an anisotropic, turned surface; an isotropic, sandblasted surface; and an abraded, heterogeneous, multilayer surface having different, complex, multiscale morphologies. In demonstrating the method, it was found that few non-measured points persisted for all 100 measurements at any location. The distributions of uncertainties are similar to those of certain features on topographic maps at the same locations, suggesting that topographic features can augment measurement fluctuations. This was especially observed on the abraded ophthalmic lens; a scratch divides the topographic map into two zones with different uncertainty values. The distributions of fluctuations can be non-Gaussian. Additionally, they can vary between regions within some measurements.
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