Microlenses are used in many applications, from coupling light into fiber optics and improving light source uniformity in microdisplays to focusing light onto imaging sensors in mobile phone cameras. White Light Interferometry (WLI) platforms can be used to achieve accurate and efficient characterization of microlenses, especially those that are aspherical.
This application note discusses the use of Bruker white light interferometry (WLI) platforms for characterizing microlenses. A brief overview of lens development and WLI separately leads into an examination of how WLI can best be utilized to advance microlens research and QA/QC. A number of Bruker's hardware and software innovations that are especially beneficial for analyzing microlenses are also described.
KEYWORDS: White Light Interferometry; Microlens; Zernike Lens; Fresnel Lens; Free-Form Optics; Spiral Stitching; Application Note
Microlenses are now widely used in imaging applications, such as mobile phones, automobiles, and virtual reality goggles. The simplest microlens, a spherical lens, has a fixed radius of curvature. Spherical lenses tend to be replaced by more complex aspheric shapes for sharper focusing, less distortion, and astigmatism correction. Aspheric lenses do not have a constant spherical shape, which can make characterization more challenging. Fresnel microlenses introduce new diffraction effects but can be used to minimize chromatic aberration. Free-form optics are even more complex in design but enable improved performance and new functionality while potentially reducing size, weight, and cost. All of these lens types are typically fabricated by etching or molding glass, silicon, infrared crystals, or plastic substrates to create an array of microlenses like that in Figure 1.
Optimal microlens shape and high surface quality are critical for focusing light correctly and efficiently onto an intended surface, e.g., a camera array. Radius of curvature (ROC) is the most critical of the shape parameters, defining whether the lens is convex, plano, or concave, and determining the optical path length of the rays. High lens surface quality helps to avoid light diffraction while maintaining the highest modulation transfer function (MTF), a quantification of an imaging system’s contrast and resolution performance. Some of the common defects that lower surface quality are scratches, pits, digs, bubbles, and inclusions. To understand or predict the performance of a microlens, both the radius of curvature and the defect architecture must be fully characterized.
WLI, also known as coherence scanning interferometry, uses an optical microscope with special interferometric objectives that create moiré fringes based on the constructive and destructive interference of a split light beam. The pattern of these moiré fringes is used to determine sample height. A schematic of a typical white light interferometer is given in Figure 2. To obtain complete topographical information, image stacks are generated by either (a) scanning optics through focus to create a fringe envelope (VSI/USI measurement modes) or (b) phase-shifting fringes by 90° (PSI measurement mode).
With a large field of view, sub-nanometer height resolution at any magnification, and micronlevel lateral resolution, WLI is an ideal technique for non-contact, 3D surface shape and roughness measurements of microlenses and other optical components.
As compared in Figure 3, there are three different WLI measurement modes that can be used for microlenses, each with different strengths:
If the microlens does not fit into a single field of view, multiple images can be stitched together. Instead of a using standard rectangular grid, the stitched image for a microlens is collected by starting at the apex of the lens then stepping down, spiraling down around the lens. Along with the spiral stitching, Bruker has introduced numerous other speed improvements for data acquisition, including:
Radius of curvature (ROC) can vary across a microlens array due to uneven photoresist thickness, changes in the reactive ion beam etching process, etc. When ROC tolerances are tight, even slight process variability can lead to substrate failure. Analysis of ROC on a microlens array is fast and easy with WLI using this areal technique with a large field of view.
The simplest analysis for performing ROC is to remove the spherical shape and report the ROC removed. More advanced is Bruker’s SureVision analysis package, which can automatically detect, align, and analyze the microlens and output the ROC, height, and diameter of that microlens. Figure 4 shows the SureVision analysis result outputs of ROC, surface finish, and conic parameters.
Microlens arrays contain multiple lenses formed in a one-dimensional or two-dimensional array on a supporting substrate. Pitch, diameter, and height are critical measurements for a microlens array. Multiple Region (MR) analysis can automatically detect and analyze up to 42 different relevant array parameters (including pitch, diameter, and height) on the detected microlenses. An example microlens array measurement is given in Figure 5, showing individual analysis for each lens as well as overall values for the whole array of measured lenses.
Once the form of the microlens is properly removed using one of the many algorithms built into Bruker’s Vision64® software, MR analysis can be used to look for defects. MR can be set to automatically detect abnormalities on the surface. A depth and/or height threshold can be set that will trigger the detection of those features exceeding the threshold, and results for each detected defect are given with a variety of relevant parameters, including those seen in Figure 6.
Fully characterizing microlenses can enable predictions of functionality, leading to improved designs and increased reliability. White-light interferometry is an accurate and efficient 3D non-contact optical profiling technique that can be used to quantify and visualize microlens shape and surface texture. Evaluating microlenses is particularly easy and user independant with Bruker’s improvements to the measurement and analysis workflows, including multiple measurement modes, spiral stitching, SureVision, Multiple Region analysis, and specialized lens analyses. With a wide range of tool types available—from benchtop to self-calibrating and fully automated systems—Bruker WLI-based profiler configurations offer a solution for every microlens characterization need.
AUTHORS:
©2023 Bruker Corporation. All rights reserved. ContourX, NPFLEX, Vision, Vision64, and Wyko are trademarks of Bruker Corporation. All other trademarks are the property of their respective companies. AN155, Rev. A0.