表面微加工
机械加工
光学
材料科学
激光加工
激光器
激光烧蚀
光学相干层析成像
连贯性(哲学赌博策略)
计量学
光电子学
物理
激光束
替代医学
冶金
病理
制作
医学
量子力学
作者
Paul J. L. Webster,Joe Yu,Benjamin Leung,Logan G. Wright,Kevin D. Mortimer,James M. Fraser
标识
DOI:10.1109/isot.2010.5687305
摘要
In applications ranging from noncontact microsurgery to semiconductor blind hole drilling, precise depth control of laser processing is a major challenge. Even expensive a priori characterization cannot compensate for material heterogeneity and stochasticity inherent to the ablation process. Here we use in situ depth imaging to guide the machining process in real time. W e image along the machining beam axis at high speeds (up to 300 kHz) to provide real-time feedback, even in high aspect ratio holes. The in situ metrology is based on coherent imaging (similar to optical coherence tomography) and is practical for a wide-range of light sources and machining processes (e.g., thermal cutting or ultrafast nonlinear ablation). Coherent imaging has a high dynamic range (>; 60 dB) and strongly rejects incoherent signals allowing weak features to be observed in the presence of intense machining light and plasmas. High axial resolution (~10 μm) requires broadband imaging light but the center wavelength can be chosen appropriate to the application. Infrared light (wavelength: 1320 ± 35 nm) allows simultaneous monitoring of both surface and subsurface interfaces in non-absorbing materials like tissue and semiconductors. By contrast, silicon based detector technology can be used with near infrared imaging light (805 ± 25 nm) enabling high speed acquisition and low cost implementation.
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