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A high resolution, multi-purpose scanning I/Q-interferometer scheme for material diagnostics
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Journal of Material Sciences & Engineering

ISSN: 2169-0022

Open Access

A high resolution, multi-purpose scanning I/Q-interferometer scheme for material diagnostics


9th World Congress on Materials Science and Engineering

June 12-14, 2017 Rome, Italy

Kyuman Cho

Sogang University, South Korea

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Material Sci Eng

Abstract :

An I/Q-interferometer (IQI) scheme is ideal for both macro and micro-resolution diagnostics of various materials and devices, because it can measure the amplitude and phase change induced on the probe beam (PB) by the linear or nonlinear interaction with the sample under test. We recently proposed the new IQI scheme in which the PB and the reference beam (RB) in the interferometer are geometrically balanced as shown in the image. This arrangement is particularly advantageous in the application of the scanning microscopy because the IQI is not susceptible to any noise caused by lateral and transverse motions of the stage during the scanning. Various applications of the scanning IQI on the material diagnostics have been studied. The interferometer can provide the map of the local variations of the complex reflectance of the surface if the sample is reflective while the map of the local variations of the complex refractive indices can be obtained if the sample is transparent. In the latter case, the sample is mounted on a mirror which reflects the PB back into the interferometer. In the case of reflection measurements, images representing variations of the local topography and material inhomogeneity of the surface under test can be obtained by mapping point-to-point changes of the phase and amplitude values of the PB during the scanning. In the case of transmission measurements, the analysis may be more complicated, but, in principle, the amplitude and phase of the PB are determined by the absorption coefficient and optical thickness of the sample under test. In this presentation, details about the scanning IQI and its applications will be discussed.

Biography :

Kyuman Cho has expertise in precision measurements using various interferometer schemes. He has been performing extensive researches in developing interferometric approaches in many high sensitivity applications sensors such as a scanning microscopy for characterization of optical properties of surfaces and materials, readout sensor for reaction monitoring on a biochip, long range vibrometer, and many other applications. He has been also working on diagnostics of the magnetically confined plasma in KSTAR, the fusion reactor project in South Korea. He is a Professor of Physics at Sogang University since 1992. He has been a Visiting Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Maryland, USA and at the Institute of Cosmic Ray and Radiation, University of Tokyo, Japan. He is a Collaborator for KAGRA, a cryogenic gravitational wave antenna, being built in Kamioka, Japan.

Email: kcho@sogang.ac.kr

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Citations: 3677

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