A Moiré fringe approach is developed to identify simultaneously the global and local distortions in hot-embossed polymeric samples. A square grid pattern with a pitch of 63.5 microm is hot-embossed on the polymer substrate. When a reference grid, a polymeric film with the same pattern, is placed on top of the sample, a Moiré fringe pattern is observed and recorded by a document scanner. The deviation of the intersections of the fringes from their ideal positions presents the residual distortion in the sample. With different sample-reference rotation angles eight images are acquired for the same sample to achieve the optimal result by a data fitting technique. The validity of this method is proved by the self-consistency of the results from the eight images. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time distortion quantification has been achieved both in a large area up to that of a scanner and with a high resolution at the level of 1 microm. Furthermore, we do not use any expensive instrument, nor need to measure the sample-reference rotation angle or position the sample precisely, and the process is run automatically by a computer instead of manual operation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OE.17.018394 | DOI Listing |
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