Device and method for optically inspecting a surface

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 7577353
  • Patent Number
    7,577,353
  • Date Filed
    Friday, December 22, 2006
    19 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, August 18, 2009
    16 years ago
Abstract
The invention generally relates to a compact, inexpensive-to-manufacture, device of few components for optically inspecting a surface and a method for same employing the device. The section of the surface to be investigated is illuminated by a semitransparent mirror and a field lens, employing a telecentric beam path, and at least part of the light reflected or scattered by the surface is imaged onto the entrance pupil of the optics of an electronic camera by the field lens, via the semitransparent mirror. All optical and electronic components, along with a light- and dust-tight housing, are carried on a specially configured mounting block such that they are self-aligning. The method for inspecting a surface involves automatically recording a series of images of the surface under various types of illumination situations. Those images are assembled into an image of the entire section of the surface to be investigated and analyzed using known image-processing methods.
Description
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This Application claims the benefit of German Application DE 10 2005 061 834.0 filed Dec. 23, 2005, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention


This invention relates generally to a device and a method for optically inspecting a surface.


2. Description of the Related Art


Image recording devices for imaging defects on a planar, reflective surface are known in the art. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,870,949 discloses such a device where the section of a surface to be investigated is imaged by a camera, employing a telecentric beam path, and the dark-field illumination of the surface is provided by an annular light source arranged coaxially with respect to the camera's optical axis. It also provides that light from the light source employed for illuminating the surface is normally reflected to the camera's optical axis by a semitransparent mirror, in which case, a bright-field illumination of the surface might also be implemented. The image of the surface to be investigated is thus imaged onto the camera's optics by the field lens and the beam path transits the plane-parallel substrate of the semitransparent mirror, which in turn will likely create image-degrading astigmatism, particularly in cases where the beam has a large divergence angle, such as where the field lens has a short focal length.


U.S. Pat. No. 4,561,722 discloses a beamsplitter for an illuminator-and-sensor-side telecentric beam path that provides for at least a transparent masking of the semitransparent mirror in order to prevent stray-light effects due to the presence of contamination.


Japanese Published Patent Application JP08172506A discloses a manuscript reading device having a camera and nearly on-axis, dark-field illumination, where the same telecentric optics are employed for illumination and configuring the camera's beam path. The nearly on-axis, dark-field illumination yields benefits in terms of the better legibilities of characters, particularly in the case of manuscripts printed on glossy paper.


U.S. Pat. No. 6,870,949 and Japanese Published Patent Application JP 08172506A disclose arrangements involving a camera whose lens lies on the optical axis of the telecentric field lens. These arrangements have the disadvantage that the overall heights of the arrangements, measured along the optical axis of the field lens, increase the focal length of the field lens by an amount equaling the overall length of the camera and its lens.


German Patent DE2354141A1 discloses a device and a method for investigating the planarities of reflective surfaces, where a single point light source is arranged on the optical axis of a field lens. A camera creates an image from which the inclination of the normal vector to the surface to be investigated relative to the optical axis of the field lens is derived. In cases where textures and/or symbols on a reflective surface are to be measured, the device having a point light source has the disadvantage that the illumination will be highly inhomogeneously distributed over the surveyed field for extremely slight inclinations of the optical axis of the path of the illuminating beam relative to the normal to the surface to be investigated, and detection of the textures and/or symbols involved will be severely impaired.


U.S. Pat. No. 4,241,389A discloses a device that creates a number of virtual light sources in the focal plane of a telecentric beam path for the purpose of illuminating a projection mask, employing the Köhler method.


It is an object of the present invention to overcome or ameliorate at least one of the disadvantages of the prior art, or to provide a useful alternative.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

One of the problems addressed by the invention is creating both a compact and inexpensively manufactured device of few components for optically inspecting essentially rectangular sections of diffusely or specularly reflecting surfaces and employing a telecentric beam path. The invention also addresses a method for inspecting such surfaces employing such a compact inspection device, where the dimensions of that device should be substantially minimal, particularly as measured along the optical axis of the field lens. In particular, the term “optically inspecting” is a broad term and shall have its ordinary meaning and shall include, but not be limited to, both detection of surface-texture quality and/or flaws and recognition of symbols and/or encodings.


The preferred embodiments of the device and method of the present invention have several features, no single one of which is solely responsible for their desirable attributes. Without limiting the scope of this invention, its more prominent features will now be discussed briefly. However, not all of the following features are necessary to achieve the advantages of the device and method. Therefore, none of the following features should be viewed as limiting. After considering this discussion, and particularly after reading the section entitled “Detailed Description of the Preferred Embodiments,” one will understand how the features of the preferred embodiments provide advantages over prior art devices.


In one aspect, the preferred embodiments of the present invention provide a device for optically inspecting a substantially rectangular investigated section of a specularly or diffusedly reflecting surface having at least one light source for providing bright-field illumination that is imaged onto the investigated section employing a telecentric beam path, an electronic camera having a lens that receives part of the light coming from within the investigated section of the surface via a telecentric beam path and transmits the images obtained to a processor, and an electronic controller for controlling the illumination of the investigated section and the operation of the camera, characterized in that the camera-and-illuminator-side beam path has an aspherical field lens whose focal length is less than twice the maximum dimension of the investigated section, and whose projection on the surface to be investigated at least just barely covers the investigated section, wherein the investigated section is imaged onto the entrance pupil of the lens of the camera by a beam splitter arranged at an angle of about 45° to the optical axis of the field lens and a light source, other than a point source, whose minimum dimension in the focal plane of the field lens equals two to ten times the diameter of the entrance pupil of the lens of the camera is arranged in the focal plane, which is penetrated by the optical axis of the field lens.


In one embodiment, the device is characterized in that the light source that is other than a point source is configured in the form of a ground-glass plate arranged in the focal plane, symmetrically disposed about the optical axis of the field lens, that is illuminated by a lamp arranged behind the focal plane so as to be arranged on that side thereof that faces away from the field lens. In another embodiment, the device is characterized in that the lamp is configured from at least one light-emitting, semiconductor diode. In yet another embodiment, the device is characterized in that the lamp is configured from three LEDs that emit in the red, green, and blue spectral ranges, respectively, and are independently controllable by the controller such that light of various colors may be generated by additive color mixing.


In yet another embodiment, the device is characterized in that at least one additional light source in the form of a linear LED-array is arranged on the illuminator side of the field lens, in the vicinity of the optical axis of the field lens, wherein every such light source is situated behind, as viewed from the field lens, the focal plane, at a distance therefrom equaling at least 15% of the focal length of the field lens, and wherein said light source is controllable by a controller and may be optionally operated either independently of, or jointly with, the light source employed for generating the bright-field illumination.


In another aspect, the preferred embodiments of the present invention provide a method for optically inspecting a substantially rectangular investigated section of a specularly of diffusedly reflecting surface, employing a device having numerous, substantially identical light sources situated in the focal plane of a field lens that are imaged onto the investigated section, employing a telecentric beam path, an electronic camera having a lens that receives part of the light coming from within the investigated section of the surface via telecentric beam path and a beam splitter and transmits the images obtained to a processor, along with an electronic controller for controlling the light sources situated in the focal plane of the field lens and the operation of the camera and a frame buffer and processing circuitry, characterized by the following processing steps: preparing a series of recorded images and storing the recorded images in a frame buffer, wherein each recorded image is characterized by illumination by a group of light sources comprising a fixed number of individual, neighboring light sources from among the numerous light sources, and the light sources have been independently activated and deactivated in sequence, processing individual recorded images stored in the frame buffer and processing circuitry such that the recorded image having the best average brightness will be determined and the associated group of light sources defined as the central bright-field light source for the particular set of investigative conditions involved. The process further includes classifying the groups of light sources into bright-field light sources that include at least the central bright-field light source and, optionally, light sources that are immediately adjacent thereto, and dark-field light sources that are arranged about the bright-field light sources, at distances therefrom equaling at least the lateral dimension of a light source, recording a series of images of the investigative section, wherein the respective illumination conditions employed in recording the images involved range from strictly bright-field illumination, through combined bright-field/dark-field illumination, to strictly dark-field illumination, and processing the recorded images of the investigated section using software that will allow automatically accomplishing the inspection task involved.


In one embodiment, the present invention provides a method for optically inspecting an essentially rectangular investigated section of a specularly or diffusely reflection surface, employing a device according to the preferred embodiments of the present invention, characterized by the following processing steps: preparing a series of recorded images and storing the recorded images in a frame buffer, wherein each recorded image is characterized by differing, intense illumination by the light source that is other than a point source, processing the individual recorded images stored in the frame buffer and processing circuitry such that, from among those recorded images, exclusively those respective portions of the images of the investigative section that have adequate brightness and contrast will be selected for further processing and assembled into a single, processable image, and processing the assembled image of the investigated section, employing software that will automatically accomplish the inspection task involved.


In another embodiment, the present invention provides a method for optically inspecting an essentially rectangular investigative section of a specularly or diffusely reflection surface, employing a device according to the preferred embodiments, characterized by the following processing steps: preparing a series of recorded images and storing those recorded images in a frame buffer, wherein each recorded image is characterized by illumination of the investigated section employing the LED as the light source that is other than a point source and the linear LED-array, and by differing ratios of the intensity of the LED to the intensities of the linear arrays, processing the individual recorded images stored in the frame buffer and processing circuitry such that, from among those recorded images, exclusively those respective portions of the images of the investigative section that have adequate brightness and contrast will be selected for further processing and assembled into a single, processable image, processing the assembled image of the investigated section, employing software that will automatically accomplish the inspection task involved.


In yet another embodiment, the present invention provides a method for aligning a device according to certain preferred embodiments characterized in that the intensity of the LED employed as the light source that is not a point source is set to its maximum tolerated value and the user sets up the device, under visual control, such that the section of the surface that is brightly illuminated by the LED encompasses the investigated section in order to mechanically align the device on the essentially rectangular investigated section.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 provides a schematic view of an optical inspection system of one preferred embodiment of the present invention, as viewed normal to the optical axes of the camera lens and field lens;



FIG. 2 provides a schematic view of the system of FIG. 1 from a direction orthogonal thereto;



FIG. 3 provides a sectional view of the mechanical layout of a device according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, where the section is taken along the plane containing the optical axes of the camera and the field lens; and



FIG. 4 illustrates a method for optically inspecting a surface employing a device according to one preferred embodiment of the present invention.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

Certain preferred embodiments of the present invention provide a system for optically inspecting an investigated section of a specularly or diffusely reflecting surface. As it will be described in greater detail below, light leaving the surface to be investigated is imaged onto the entrance pupil of the lens of an electronic camera by an aspherical field lens having a short focal length via a semitransparent mirror. In the case of bright-field illumination, the surface is illuminated by a light source, other than a point source, arranged in the focal plane of the field lens, in the vicinity of the field lens' optical axis, which is preferably configured in the form of a ground-glass plate irradiated by a tunable, multicolor, semiconductor light source.



FIG. 1 schematically illustrates an optical inspection system 100 of one preferred embodiment of the present invention. The system 100 generally includes a camera 11, an aspherical field lens 4, a beamsplitter 6 having a semi-transparent, reflective coating 7, and a light source 23, 24, 25. The system 100 is positioned above an investigated section 3 on an upper surface 2 of a substrate 1. When viewed along the optical axis 5, the field lens 4, which is shown sectioned, has a rectangular cross-section whose dimensions preferably exceed those of the investigated section 3 by a few percent, such as between 1% to 10%, along all axes. A unique feature of the telecentric beam path is that the field lens 4 yields a collimated beam on the side facing the investigated section 3, which means that its projection along the optical axis thus encompasses the investigated section 3. The resultant telecentric imaging optics images the textures of the investigated section 3 at constant magnification, regardless of the distance between the field lens 4 and the surface 2. Telecentric imaging optics are thus preferably employed in optical metrology. In order to arrive at a short overall length, measured along the optical axis 5 of the field lens 4, the divergence angle of the telecentric beam is preferably chosen to be as large as feasible. Since large divergence angles can cause severe imaging errors in the case of optical trains containing spherical optical components, it is contemplated that the field lens 4 be configured in the form of an aspherical lens. In one embodiment, the field lens 4 is ground from glass such that it has at least one aspherical surface and then edged to yield a rectangular shape. It is also contemplated that the field lens 4 can be fabricated by injection molding a plastic material, where at least one surface of the injection-molding die for the field lens 4 is aspherical. In practice, it has been found that aspherical single lenses whose figures have been computed for one wavelength yield sufficiently good imaging properties of the entire system. Light transmitted by the investigated section 3 parallel to the optical axis 5 of the field lens 4 is imaged onto the focal plane 10 of the field lens 4 by the beamsplitter 6 that is arranged at about 45° angle to the optical axis of the field lens 4 and has a semitransparent, reflective coating 7. The entrance pupil 13 of the lens 12 of the camera 11 is arranged in the focal plane 10 such that an object point on the surface 2 lying on the optical axis 5 of the field lens will be imaged onto the center of the entrance pupil 13. The camera 11 employed is preferably an electronic camera having a CCD or CMOS focal-plane device that is arranged on a camera board 14. The camera board 14 preferably contains an electronic circuit for controlling the camera 11, in particular, for controlling image-recording and image-readout operations.


The light source for the bright-field illumination of the investigated section 3 is arranged in the focal plane 20 of the field lens 4, on the extended optical axis 5 of the field lens 4. In one embodiment, the light source has a lateral extension of about 3 mm to 10 mm relative to the optical axis 5 of the field lens 4, and is thus significantly larger than a point source. It is contemplated that a ground-glass plate 22 that is illuminated by a lamp from that side thereof that faces away from the field lens 4 be arranged in the focal plane 20. The lamp employed is preferably a tunable, multicolor, light-emitting diode (LED). Having a light source that is significantly larger than a point source in the focal plane 20 yields the benefit that the condition for bright-field illumination will still be met even when, in the case of a specularly reflecting surface 2, the optical axis 5 of the field lens 4 fails to coincide with the normals to the surface 2, because, for example, the substrate 1 has either not been accurately aligned on the device, or the substrate 1 exhibits departures from planarity.



FIG. 2 schematically depicts a view of the system from a direction orthogonal to FIG. 1. As shown in FIGS. 1 and 2, the illuminator beam path images an area on the substrate 1 that is slightly larger than the projection of the field lens 4 on the substrate 1, which will be particularly beneficial when aligning the device, since the investigated section 3 may usually be positioned within the illuminated, bright field by an operator, under visual control, without employing any other alignment aids, and without need for operating the camera 11. In one implementation, if the surface 2 involved is perfectly reflective, it may be necessary to arrange a sheet of a weakly scattering medium, for example, a scattering foil, on the investigated section 3 of the substrate 1 for alignment purposes.


The LED 23 employed for bright-field illumination is arranged on an illuminator board 21 that is schematically depicted in FIGS. 1 and 2. That illuminator board 21 preferably contains other light sources, such as the pair of linear LED-arrays 24, 25, each of which is configured from at least three, collinearly arranged LEDs and may be employed for providing nearly on-axis, dark-field illumination of the investigated section 3.


Those linear LED-arrays 24, 25 are arranged such that their light-emitting surfaces are situated far, in the geometric-optics sense, from the focal plane 20 of the field lens 4, on the side that faces away from the field lens 4, at a distance therefrom that is at least 15% of the focal length of the field lens 4. This preferably yields an imaging geometry where the object-side beam paths of the light sources 24, 25 are no longer parallel, but will be slightly convergent, provided that the surface 2 is situated in front of the image points of the linear LED-arrays 24, 25. In practice, it has been found that a convergent beam path and the associated variations in the angle of incidence on the surface 2 will necessitate a slight realignment of the optical axis 5 relative to the surface 2, assuming that the angle between the optical axis 5 and the surface 2 need not be precisely 90°.


Since both of the linear LED-arrays 24, 25 will be imaged onto the substrate 1 such that their images thereon will be slightly displaced relative to the investigated section 3, it has been contemplated that the linear LED-arrays 24, 25 be arranged on either side of the LED 23. The linear LED-arrays 24, 25 are preferably arranged on the illuminator board 21, and thus outside the focal plane 20 of the field lens 4, without employing any scatter plates. Both the individual LEDs of the linear LED-arrays 24, 25 and the LED 23 are preferably tunable, multicolor LEDs, in particular, so-called RGB-LEDs that incorporate three individual LEDs emitting in the red, green, and blue within a single housing.


The intensities and admixed colors of the emitted light of all LEDs may be tuned by an illumination controller known in the art and will not be described in further detail here. The color of the light emitted by individual LEDs of given linear LED-arrays may vary with their locations in the arrays and with time. However, it is contemplated that, for certain metrological tasks, lookup tables of colorimetric coordinates representing standard illumination conditions be stored in an illumination controller, which will allow more rapid implementation of satisfactory illumination when preparing to record images of the investigated section 3 than would be the case if iterative methods were employed.


The illumination and image-recording beam paths shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 yield the benefit that no astigmatism due to the reflection of the highly divergent beam at the semitransparent, reflective surface 7 of the beamsplitter 6 similar to that which would occur when the beam transits a plane-parallel plate occurs in the camera beam path. Although astigmatism in the camera beam path could be avoidable if the camera's optical axis were to coincide with the optical axis 5 of the field lens and that a beamsplitter cube, instead of a beamsplitter plate, were employed as beamsplitter. In that case, however, color fringes due to chromatic aberration would occur within the beamsplitter cube. Furthermore, the field lens' focal plane would be shifted away from the field lens by approximately the width of the beamsplitter cube, and would thus increase the length of the entire arrangement, as measured along the normal to the surface 2.



FIG. 3 depicts a sectional view of the mechanical layout of the system according to certain preferred embodiments of the invention, where the section has been taken along a plane containing the optical axes of the camera 11 and the field lens 4. As it will be described in greater detail below, the layout provides the benefit that mechanical alignment of the optical components involved is largely unnecessary, since precision assembly of the entire system has been preordained by substantially minimizing the manufacturing tolerances of the few mechanical parts of the mounts and holders employed. In the case of the embodiment shown in FIG. 3, a front panel 30 supports an optics mount 40, a beamsplitter holder 50, and a housing 60. Although the front panel 30, optics mount 40, and beamsplitter holder 50 are preferably machined from an aluminum alloy, it may be provided that those components 30, 40, 50 are injection molded from plastic materials, which would yield a higher degree of component integration than that of the sample embodiment shown in FIG. 3.


The front panel 30 has a receptacle for the field lens 4, where the mounting surface 31 for the field lens accurately conforms to the contour of its surface that faces the substrate. That mounting surface may be either machined into the front panel 30 or molded onto an injection-molded, monolithic, plastic part. In certain embodiments, it is contemplated that the field lens be cemented thereto in order to mechanically secure it in place. No alignment thereof is necessary. In addition, the front panel 30 has a pair of channels running along the lateral surfaces of the field lens 4, in which a pair of linear LED-arrays 36, 37 in the form of linear light sources situated on an illuminator board 34 are arranged. The sides of the channels that face the substrate are terminated by ground-glass plates 32, 33. The pair of ground-glass plates 32, 33 are intended for the purpose of providing off-axis, dark-field illumination, where the angle between the illumination axis and the optical axis 5 of the field lens 4 exceeds that for the nearly on-axis, dark-field illumination employing the linear LED-arrays 24, 25. The illuminator board 34 is arranged in a recess on the optics mount 40 and held in place thereon by an elastic support. The front panel 30 has an abutment surface 35, on which the optics mount 40 is precisely located employing suitable means known in the art and held in place by fasteners such that it is removable.


The optics mount 40 has a receptacle 41 for the lens 12 of the camera 11. The camera, which is not shown here, is preferably arranged on a camera board 14 that is capable of supporting a schematically depicted heat sink 61, which is in good thermal contact with the outer surface of the housing 60. In the event that temperatures at the installation site require cooling of the camera chip in order to suppress noise, it may be cooled from outside a hermetically sealed and, in particular, dust-tight, housing 60. Adapters that allow assembly without need for alignment are provided on the optics mount 40 and beamsplitter holder 50. These adapters are merely schematically depicted by a pin 51 that accurately aligns the drilled holes in the optics mount 40 and beamsplitter holder 50 visible in FIG. 3 on one another. Mechanical fastening is preferably by means of screws. In one embodiment, the beamsplitter 6 can be either cemented to a mating surface on the beamsplitter holder 50 or spring-loaded against that mating surface by hardware known in the art that are shown here.


Grooves that locate a plurality of baffles 27, 28 and the holder for the ground-glass plate 22 are provided in the beamsplitter holder 50. The linear LED-arrays 24, 25 and LED 23 are arranged on an illuminator board 21 that is held in place by the beamsplitter holder 50. An aperture that allows unimpeded transmission of light rays coming from the light sources 23, 24, 25 and partially reflected by the rear surface of the beamsplitter 6 to a beam stop 61 arranged on the housing 60 is provided on that side of the beamsplitter holder 50 that is situated opposite the receptacle 41 for the camera 11. The beam stop 61 is configured such that very little stray light therefrom reaches the camera 11 arranged in the receptacle 41. Since certain preferred embodiments of the invention contemplate that the beamsplitter is to be mounted in a hermetically sealed, dust-tight housing 60, there is no need in these embodiments for providing means for preventing scattered light from the rear surface of the beamsplitter due to the presence of contaminants thereon, as is contemplated in U.S. Pat. No. 4,561,722A.


In one embodiment, the housing 60 has an electrical feedthrough known in the art that is also preferably dust-tight. The lamps on the illuminator boards 21, 34 and the camera 11 on the camera board 14 are controlled by a central controller that controls all operations related to the illumination of the investigated section 3 and the recording of images, or series of images.



FIG. 4 illustrates a method 80 for optically inspecting a surface employing the optical inspection system according to one preferred embodiment of the invention as described above. The method 80 begins with Step 82 in which the investigated section is aligned on device for inspection and continues with Step 84 in which the illumination conditions are determined. In one embodiment, the illumination conditions generally include the spatial arrangements of the light sources, their intensities and/or spectral distributions, and the exposure times. These conditions may be varied from shot to shot. The method 80 further includes Step 86 in which an image is recorded using the camera and Step 88 in which Steps 84 and 86 are repeated until a series of images are recorded under different illumination conditions. In one implementation, the light source used is a LED source that is other than a point source.


In a preferred embodiment, the recorded images are stored in a frame buffer, where each recorded image is characterized by illumination by a group of light sources comprising a fixed number of individual, neighboring light sources from among the numerous light sources, and the light sources have been independently activated and deactivated in sequence. The images are subsequently processed and assembled into an image of the entire investigative section in Step 90 and data is extracted from the resulting image in Step 92. In one implementation, the individual recorded images are processed such that the recorded image having the optimal average brightness will be determined and the associated group of light sources defined as the central bright-field light source for the particular set of investigative conditions involved. In another implementation, processing the images comprises processing exclusively those respective portions of the images of the investigated section that have adequate brightness and contrast. These images are assembled into a single, processable image.


Generally, the method for optically inspecting a surface according to one preferred embodiment is characterized by the fact that one or more images may be recorded employing the camera once the investigated section has been aligned on the device or field lens, where the illumination conditions may be varied from shot to shot, where either a controller executes a stored control program or the illumination conditions and camera settings to be employed are taken from a lookup table by an operator. In some cases, it might happen that only part of the investigated section will be illuminated such that the signal to noise ratios needed for the metrological task at hand and high spatial frequencies will be attained, in spite of the extensive range of illumination conditions available. A series of recorded images should be acquired under differing, respective, illumination conditions and exclusively the processable portions of images filtered out, evaluated, and assembled into an image of the entire investigated section in such cases. Such images that have been assembled from individual partial images in that manner may be processed in order to extract data related to surface textures and/or character recognition employing image-processing software, if demanded by the metrological task involved.


It is provided that the controller of the image-processing computer will receive a signal once the current metrological task has been concluded, or whenever certain characters cannot be unambiguously recognized. In the latter case, it might be provided that the controller will cause the metrological operations involved to be repeated under differing illumination conditions and with the employment of differing image-recording software, until such time as either all characters involved have been unambiguously recognized or one or more characters have been classified as “unrecognizable.”


Another method according to the invention for inspecting a surface contemplates that a series of images are recorded by the camera 11 for differing, respective, spatial arrangements of the light sources involved in the focal plane 20 of the field lens 4 and analyzed respecting their overall brightnesses. If the substrate 1 involved has a specularly reflecting surface 2, the arrangement of light sources in the focal plane 20 correlated to the brightest image is specified as “bright-field illumination.” The dark-field illumination correlated to that bright-field illumination is composed of an arrangement of light sources that excludes at least those light sources responsible for the bright-field illumination. A light source consisting of numerous, independently controllable, light sources is employed in order to carry out the method. Such light sources could be either an arrangement of numerous LEDs, a micromirror array illuminated by a single light source, or an electro-optical spatial light modulator, for example, a controllable, backlit, positive-image, LCD.


Although the foregoing description of the preferred embodiments of the present invention has shown, described and pointed out the fundamental novel features of the invention, it will be understood that various omissions, substitutions, and changes in the form of the detail of the invention as illustrated as well as the uses thereof, may be made by those skilled in the art, without departing from the spirit of the invention. Particularly, it will be appreciated that the preferred embodiments of the invention may manifest itself in other shapes and configurations as appropriate for the end use of the article made thereby.

Claims
  • 1. A device for optically inspecting an investigated section of a specularly or diffusely reflecting surface having at least one light source for providing bright-field illumination that is imaged onto the investigated section employing a telecentric beam path, an electronic camera having a lens that receives part of the light coming from within the investigated section of the surface via a telecentric beam path and transmits the images obtained to a processor, and an electronic controller for controlling the illumination of the investigated section and the operation of the camera, characterized in that the camera-and-illuminator-side beam path has an aspherical field lens whose focal length is less than twice the maximum dimension of the investigated section, and whose projection on the surface to be investigated at least just barely covers the investigated section, where the investigated section is imaged onto the entrance pupil of the lens of the camera by a beamsplitter arranged at an angle of about 45° to the optical axis of the field lens and a light source, other than a point source, whose minimum dimension in the focal plane of the field lens substantially equals twice to ten-times the diameter of the entrance pupil of the lens of the camera is arranged in the focal plane, which is penetrated by the optical axis of the field lens.
  • 2. A device according to claim 1, characterized in that the light source that is other than a point source is configured in the form of a ground-glass plate arranged in the focal plane, symmetrically disposed about the optical axis of the field lens, that is illuminated by a lamp arranged behind the focal plane on that side thereof that faces away from the field lens.
  • 3. A device according to claim 2, characterized in that the lamp is configured from at least one light-emitting, semiconductor diode.
  • 4. A device according to claim 2, characterized in that the lamp comprises three LEDs that emit in the red, green, and blue spectral ranges, respectively, and are independently controllable by the controller such that light of various colors may be generated by additive color mixing.
  • 5. A device according to claim 1, characterized in that at least one, additional, light source in the form of a linear LED-array is arranged on the illuminator side of the field lens, in the vicinity of the optical axis of the field lens, where each such light source is situated behind, as viewed from the field lens, the focal plane, at a distance therefrom equaling at least 15% of the focal length of the field lens, and where said light source is/are controllable by a controller and may be optionally operated either independently of, or jointly with, the light source employed for generating the bright-field illumination.
  • 6. A method for optically inspecting an essentially rectangular investigated section of a specularly or diffusely reflecting surface, employing a device according claim 1, that characterized by the following processing steps: preparing a series of recorded images and storing the recorded images in a frame buffer, where every recorded image is characterized by differing, intense illumination by the light source that is other than a point source;processing the individual recorded images stored in the frame buffer and processing circuitry such that, from among those recorded images, exclusively those respective portions of the images of the investigated section that have adequate brightness and contrast will be selected for further processing and assembled into a single, processable image; andprocessing the assembled image of the investigated section, employing software that will automatically accomplish the inspection task involved.
  • 7. A method for optically inspecting an essentially rectangular investigated section of a specularly or diffusely reflection surface, employing a device according to claim 1, characterized by the following processing steps: preparing a series of recorded images and storing those recorded images in a frame buffer, where each recorded image is characterized by illumination of the investigated section employing the LED as the light source that is other than a point source and the linear LED-arrays, and by differing ratios of the intensity of the LED to the intensities of the linear LED-arrays;processing the individual recorded images stored in the frame buffer and processing circuitry such that, from among those recorded images, exclusively those respective portions of the images of the investigated section that have adequate brightness and contrast will be selected for further processing and assembled into a single, processable image; andprocessing the assembled image of the investigated section, employing software that will automatically accomplish the inspection task involved.
  • 8. A method for aligning a device according to claim 3, characterized in that the intensity of the LED employed as the light source that is not a point source is set to its maximum tolerated value and the user sets up the device, under visual control, such that the section of the surface that is brightly illuminated by the LED encompasses the investigated section in order to mechanically align the device on an essentially rectangular investigated section.
  • 9. A method for aligning a device according to claim 4, characterized in that the intensity of the LED employed as the light source that is not a point source is set to its maximum tolerated value and the user sets up the device, under visual control, such that the section of the surface that is brightly illuminated by the LED encompasses the investigated section in order to mechanically align the device on an essentially rectangular investigated section.
  • 10. A method for aligning a device according to claim 5, characterized in that the intensity of the LED employed as the light source that is not a point source is set to its maximum tolerated value and the user sets up the device, under visual control, such that the section of the surface that is brightly illuminated by the LED encompasses the investigated section in order to mechanically align the device on an essentially rectangular investigated section.
  • 11. A method for optically inspecting an investigated section of a specularly or diffusely reflecting surface, employing a device having numerous, identical, light sources situated in the focal plane of a field lens that are imaged onto the investigated section, employing a telecentric beam path, an electronic camera having a lens that receives part of the light coming from within the investigated section of the surface via a telecentric beam path and a beamsplitter and transmits the images obtained to a processor, along with an electronic controller for controlling the light sources situated in the focal plane of the field lens and the operation of the camera, and a frame buffer and processing circuitry, characterized by the following processing steps: preparing a series of recorded images and storing the recorded images in a frame buffer, where each recorded image is characterized by illumination by a group of light sources comprising a fixed number of individual, neighboring, light sources from among the numerous light sources, and the light sources have been independently activated and deactivated in sequence;processing individual recorded images stored in the frame buffer with processing circuitry such that recorded image having an optimal average brightness will be determined and the associated group of light sources defined as the central bright-field light source for the particular set of investigative conditions involved;classifying the groups of light sources into bright-field light sources that include at least the central bright-field light source and, optionally, light sources that are immediately adjacent thereto, and dark-field light sources that are arranged about the bright-field light sources, at distances therefrom equaling at least the lateral dimension of a light source;recording a series of images of the investigated section, where the respective illumination conditions employed in recording the images involved range from strictly bright-field illumination, through combined bright-field/dark-field illumination, to strictly dark-field illumination; andprocessing the recorded images of the investigated section using software that will allow automatically accomplishing the inspection task involved.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
10 2005 061 834 Dec 2005 DE national
US Referenced Citations (77)
Number Name Date Kind
2369741 Jones et al. Feb 1945 A
2418107 Simmon et al. Mar 1947 A
3176306 Burns Mar 1965 A
3227509 Baker Jan 1966 A
3508066 Agar Apr 1970 A
3597045 Mathisen Aug 1971 A
3709579 Mokosch Jan 1973 A
3772507 Hills Nov 1973 A
3815998 Tietze Jun 1974 A
3917399 Buzawa et al. Nov 1975 A
3963354 Feldman et al. Jun 1976 A
4010355 Roehrman et al. Mar 1977 A
4019026 Nakanishi et al. Apr 1977 A
4062623 Suzuki et al. Dec 1977 A
4167677 Suzki Sep 1979 A
4171871 Dill et al. Oct 1979 A
4215939 Miller et al. Aug 1980 A
4241389 Heimer Dec 1980 A
4315201 Suzuki et al. Feb 1982 A
4352016 Duffy et al. Sep 1982 A
4412720 Costa Nov 1983 A
4419013 Heimer Dec 1983 A
4422755 Phillips Dec 1983 A
4435732 Hyatt Mar 1984 A
4471385 Hyatt Sep 1984 A
4510673 Shils et al. Apr 1985 A
4547073 Kugimiya Oct 1985 A
4560865 Bergstrom Dec 1985 A
4561722 Smetana Dec 1985 A
4600936 Khoury et al. Jul 1986 A
4603976 Fetzer et al. Aug 1986 A
4618938 Sandland et al. Oct 1986 A
4659220 Bronte et al. Apr 1987 A
4672184 Fujiwara et al. Jun 1987 A
4687304 Piller et al. Aug 1987 A
4688939 Ray Aug 1987 A
4790027 Scherl Dec 1988 A
4872052 Liudzius et al. Oct 1989 A
4972093 Cochran et al. Nov 1990 A
5231536 Wild et al. Jul 1993 A
5265170 Hine et al. Nov 1993 A
5351150 Lichtman et al. Sep 1994 A
5379266 Russell Jan 1995 A
5386481 Hines et al. Jan 1995 A
5469294 Wilt et al. Nov 1995 A
5483348 Komatsu et al. Jan 1996 A
5497234 Haga Mar 1996 A
5515452 Penkethman et al. May 1996 A
5715050 Haga Feb 1998 A
5737122 Wilt et al. Apr 1998 A
5741395 Mozelack et al. Apr 1998 A
5751853 Michael May 1998 A
5764874 White Jun 1998 A
5825913 Rostami et al. Oct 1998 A
5831738 Hine Nov 1998 A
5842060 White et al. Nov 1998 A
5877899 Stern et al. Mar 1999 A
5880848 Basler et al. Mar 1999 A
5894348 Bacchi et al. Apr 1999 A
5923020 Kurokawa et al. Jul 1999 A
5933521 Pasic Aug 1999 A
6039254 Froese-Peeck et al. Mar 2000 A
6075883 Stern et al. Jun 2000 A
6148120 Sussman Nov 2000 A
6239869 Heuft et al. May 2001 B1
6265684 Wu Jul 2001 B1
6330059 Ishiguro et al. Dec 2001 B1
6633375 Veith et al. Oct 2003 B1
6661521 Stern Dec 2003 B1
6697116 Kurokawa et al. Feb 2004 B1
6862147 Sonstroem Mar 2005 B1
6867424 Kurosawa et al. Mar 2005 B2
6870949 Baldwin Mar 2005 B2
7469056 Ramm et al. Dec 2008 B2
20050122509 Backhauss Jun 2005 A1
20050213795 Sawamura Sep 2005 A1
20060164649 Rosengaus Jul 2006 A1
Foreign Referenced Citations (120)
Number Date Country
602066 Aug 1934 DE
678166 Mar 1935 DE
1 653 975 Feb 1971 DE
2 023 404 Dec 1971 DE
2 354 141 May 1974 DE
26 15 084 Oct 1976 DE
25 54 086 Jun 1977 DE
28 02 286 Jul 1978 DE
27 18 040 Oct 1978 DE
28 11 707 Feb 1979 DE
28 50 957 May 1979 DE
28 51 750 Mar 1980 DE
30 21 448 A 1 Jun 1980 DE
28 55 799 Jul 1980 DE
29 31 668 Feb 1981 DE
30 29 827 Feb 1981 DE
30 33 260 Mar 1981 DE
30 2 1448 Dec 1981 DE
31 26 197 Jan 1983 DE
32 31 265 Feb 1984 DE
32 42 219 Feb 1984 DE
G 84 01 016.9 Apr 1984 DE
33 18 011 Nov 1984 DE
34 01 527 Aug 1985 DE
34 05 634 Aug 1985 DE
34 22 143 Dec 1985 DE
35 12 615 Oct 1986 DE
35 17 070 Nov 1986 DE
36 37 477 May 1988 DE
36 41 258 Jun 1988 DE
38 26 317 Aug 1988 DE
37 07 979 Sep 1988 DE
37 09 500 Oct 1988 DE
37 17 274 Dec 1988 DE
291 153 Jun 1991 DE
38 87 578 May 1994 DE
37 50 174 Nov 1994 DE
690 10 318 Jan 1995 DE
44 34 699 Apr 1996 DE
195 11 195 Oct 1996 DE
195 11 196 Oct 1996 DE
195 11 197 Oct 1996 DE
197 41 545 Mar 1999 DE
198 50 144 May 2000 DE
199 03 486 Aug 2000 DE
199 17 082 Nov 2000 DE
100 30 772 Oct 2001 DE
100 45 245 Mar 2002 DE
101 24 347 Oct 2002 DE
696 26 851 Sep 2003 DE
102 37 477 Nov 2003 DE
102 32 781 Feb 2004 DE
696 31 342 Nov 2004 DE
103 23 139 Dec 2004 DE
103 24 474 Dec 2004 DE
103 30 003 Feb 2005 DE
103 59 723 Jul 2005 DE
0 031 973 Jul 1981 EP
0 183 946 Jun 1986 EP
0 217 118 Apr 1987 EP
0 240 078 Oct 1987 EP
0 275 469 Jul 1988 EP
0 312 298 Apr 1989 EP
0 510 108 Oct 1992 EP
0 685 140 Dec 1995 EP
0 689 700 Jan 1996 EP
0 704 693 Apr 1996 EP
0 735 361 Oct 1996 EP
0 924 748 Jun 1999 EP
0 933 953 Aug 1999 EP
1 235 268 Aug 2002 EP
1 291 900 Mar 2003 EP
1 494 017 Jan 2005 EP
9 81 431 Jan 1965 GB
1 047 603 Nov 1966 GB
1 129 311 Oct 1968 GB
1 129 312 Oct 1968 GB
1 135 983 Dec 1968 GB
1 413 723 Nov 1975 GB
1 552 013 Sep 1979 GB
1 559 666 Jan 1980 GB
2 039 030 Jul 1980 GB
1 575 165 Sep 1980 GB
2 065 914 Jul 1981 GB
2 139 753 Nov 1984 GB
2 147 411 May 1985 GB
2 150 314 Jun 1985 GB
2 361 086 Oct 2001 GB
2 413 859 Nov 2005 GB
5616804 Feb 1981 JP
56 126749 Oct 1981 JP
57-112036 Jul 1982 JP
2 198347 Aug 1990 JP
5-227468 Sep 1993 JP
8-172506 Jul 1996 JP
2002 67275 Mar 2002 JP
WO 8401024 Mar 1984 WO
WO 8401212 Mar 1984 WO
WO 8403142 Aug 1984 WO
WO 9110968 Jul 1991 WO
WO 9313529 Jul 1993 WO
WO 9419908 Sep 1994 WO
WO 9519012 Jul 1995 WO
WO 9535506 Dec 1995 WO
WO 9719416 May 1997 WO
WO 9724607 Jul 1997 WO
WO 9729593 Aug 1997 WO
WO 9739416 Oct 1997 WO
WO 9810366 Mar 1998 WO
WO 9852088 Nov 1998 WO
WO 9859313 Dec 1998 WO
WO 9962263 Dec 1999 WO
WO 0240976 May 2002 WO
WO 03027630 Apr 2003 WO
WO 03027630 Apr 2003 WO
WO 2004010114 Jan 2004 WO
WO 2004072629 Aug 2004 WO
WO 2004072629 Aug 2004 WO
WO 2004077336 Sep 2004 WO
WO 2004077336 Sep 2004 WO
Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20070147821 A1 Jun 2007 US