| Literature DB >> 27877428 |
Yiu Wai Lai1, Michael Krause2, Alan Savan2, Sigurd Thienhaus2, Nektarios Koukourakis3, Martin R Hofmann4, Alfred Ludwig1.
Abstract
A high-throughput characterization technique based on digital holography for mapping film thickness in thin-film materials libraries was developed. Digital holographic microscopy is used for fully automatic measurements of the thickness of patterned films with nanometer resolution. The method has several significant advantages over conventional stylus profilometry: it is contactless and fast, substrate bending is compensated, and the experimental setup is simple. Patterned films prepared by different combinatorial thin-film approaches were characterized to investigate and demonstrate this method. The results show that this technique is valuable for the quick, reliable and high-throughput determination of the film thickness distribution in combinatorial materials research. Importantly, it can also be applied to thin films that have been structured by shadow masking.Keywords: combinatorial materials science; high-throughput characterization; optical methods; thin films
Year: 2011 PMID: 27877428 PMCID: PMC5074422 DOI: 10.1088/1468-6996/12/5/054201
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Technol Adv Mater ISSN: 1468-6996 Impact factor: 8.090