Moiré Method: Wei-Chih Wang University of Washington ME 557
Moiré Method: Wei-Chih Wang University of Washington ME 557
Wei-Chih Wang
University of Washington
ME 557
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Moiré Methods
Moiré = The French name fro a fabric called “ water silk”, fabric
Exhibits patterns of light/dark bands
- in plane displacement
- out of plane
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Geometric Moiré
Superimposed Gratings
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Application of Geometric Moiré
• Specimen attaches to specimen surface ( “specimen grating”)
• Specimen viewed through a fixed grating (“reference grating”)
• Specimen loaded, causing deformation/rotation of specimen
grating -> Moiré fringe pattern develops.
1. Geometric Moiré
Fringes patterns can be interfered based strictly on
“geometry”
- in-plane Moiré – in-plane displacement
- shadow Moiré – out of plane displacement
- out of plane Moiré
2. Moiré interferometry
Interference of fringes seen required consideration of
diffraction effects. (grating frequency is higher than
geometric moiré)
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Wop Pitch, p
(inches/lines)
“secondary
Wtr direction”
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Sub-micron Lithography
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E-beam process
Problem- difficult to achieve accurate pattern placement
Large area patterns are formed by stitching together mosaic of small fields
or stripes. Are within each field is accessed by deflecting the focus beam,
while successive fields are written by moving the substrate.
Solution- spatial phase locked e beam lithography, pre exposed film with
interference pattern which generates a spatial reference pattern
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Lithographic Techniques for gratings
Interference Lithography:
Traditional Ar ion laser (488nm), AZ1350, az1512– long exposure
He-Cd laser(325nm), TOK, THMR, Shipley Ultra-123
Thin oxide layer and ARC are needed to prevent reflection from the substrate
Honeywell has some ARC materials (free)
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Generating and recording fringe
pattern
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Intensity distribution is due to
superposition of two gratings:
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Moiré Fringe Pattern
Case 1. Uniform deformation in primary direction (assume compression)
p
d = p/2
reference
specimen
p’
average
hyperphysics
dsinθ = mλ 2
Nkd
sin sin θ
y ~mλD/d 2
I = I0
sin kd sin θ Where N = 2
2
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Slit separation ~ slit width
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Strain Measurement
p
+x
Tensile
reference load
n fringes
grating
lg Appear over
Length lg
specimen
grating, p’
compressive
reference load
n fringes
grating
lg Appear over
Length lg
specimen
Grating, p’
Gage length is lg
Figure 11.2b
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Moiré Fringe Pattern
Case 2: Specimen grating experience pure rotation (θ) with
Respect to reference grating (p = same for both)
im en )/2 φ
s pec -θ θ0
8 180-θ
(1
master Dark fringes
* Fringes bisect the obtuse angle between master and specimen gratings
* Let φ = angle between (secondary direction of master grating) and (moiré
fringes) φ = θ +(180−θ)/2 ----> φ = 90+θ/2
specimen
φ
180-φ
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Example
Figure 11.3)
pure rotation
Find φ solve θ
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Moiré Fringe Pattern
Case 3. Specimen grating
experiences an unknown
deformation
(p -> p’) and unknown
rotation (θ) causing fringe
pattern
Picture
Figure 6-2
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Superimposed gratings
y
(having initial displacement and rotation)
x p’
1st Family of lines along x direction
l= 012345
θ x = lp
2 3
Where l = integer
01
p= pitch for specimen grating
in x direction
N =
2nd Family of lines at a small angle θ
2 3 45 p
01 xcosθ = mp’ –ysinθ
m=
Where m = integer number
m – l = N (moiré fringe number) p’ = pitch of the reference
grating
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Small angle rotation and approximation approach
Or
x(p-p’)/p + θy = Np’
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(p-p’)/p = length change/ original length = εx (strain in x direction)
εx x + θy = Np’
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Moiré Fringe Patterns
* Two approaches: “geometric approach” and “calculus approach”
(also called “displacement field” approach)
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In-plane displacement field using Moiré fringe analysis
(exact solution)
Geometrical approach (point by point measurement):
(uses measurement of fringe spacing and inclination at points of interested to
determine strain)
1. Define x-y coordinate system, with x-axis = primary direction
2. Reference (master) grating thought as a “family” of lines given by;
x = lp '
(1)
l is integer increasing in +θ direction, order number
of each line
3. Specimen grating thought of as 2nd “family” of straight lines, given by,
l-m = N (3)
Combine equation 1 to 3,
This is the form of a third family of straight lines, of the general form:
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In-plane displacement field using Moiré fringe analysis
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Pitch Mismatch
Difference of pitch between the model and master grills will cause
Moiré fringes to form even though the model is unstrained.
Becomes p + δp − p ′
( ) x = Np '
p
p − p′ δp
[( ) + ( )]x = Np '
p p
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εx
ρ + ε x x = Np '
Np '
εx = −ρ
x
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Pitch mismatch
Creating more fringes
For same displacement
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Whole field analysis
-moiré fringes will vary in a complicated but continuous way over the extend of
the field
-At any point , the fringe order will indicate appropriate mixture of displacement
and rotation
-it is not essential the fringes be numbered beginning from zero because only the
spacing of the fringes (the partial derivative with respect to position) is of any
consequence
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Moiré basically just another transformation from Cartesian
Coordinate into another coordinate. A and B are transformation
Factor d is resulting magnitude and f is the resulting angle
(i,e. Z t or Fourier transformation…)
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Calculus Approach
In theory of elasticity, strain is relate to displacement ux and uy as,
∂u x ∂u y
ε xx = ε yy = (strain in x and y direction)
∂x ∂y
∂u x ∂u y
ε xy = + shear strain
∂y ∂x
1 ∂u x ∂u y
ω xy = ( − ) (average rotation of the x and y
2 ∂y ∂x
Coordinates)
Above equations can be used
- when load is small and rotations are neglected
or – where Cartesian coordinates need to be reorient where there
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w.wang rigid body rotation due to the load
General form of strain displacement relation
∂u x ∂u x 2 ∂u y 2
ε xx = 1 + 2 +( ) +( ) −1
∂x ∂x ∂x
∂u y ∂u y 2 ∂u x 2
ε yy = 1 + 2 +( ) + ( ) −1
∂y ∂y ∂y
∂u x ∂u y ∂u x ∂u x ∂u y ∂u y
+ + +
∂y ∂x ∂x ∂y ∂x ∂y (radians)
ε xy = arcsin
(1 + ε xx )(1 + ε yy )
1
ε1, 2 = [ε xx + ε yy ± (ε xx − ε yy ) 2 + ε xy
2
]
2
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Calculus Approach to Displacement Measurement
To apply ‘calculus approach’:
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b) Plot fringes versus position
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c) Take the slope of the plot at each point at which strain is
required ∂N x etc…
∂x
∂u y ∂u y 2 ∂u x 2
ε yy = 1 + 2 +( ) + ( ) −1
∂y ∂y ∂y
∂u x ∂u y ∂u x ∂u x ∂u y ∂u y
+ + +
∂y ∂x ∂x ∂y ∂x ∂y
ε xy = arcsin
(1 + ε xx )(1 + ε yy )
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Problem in displacement field approach
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Solutions to shear-strain error
1. To eliminate shear-strain error by using crossed gratings
on both the specimen and master to obtain simultaneous
displays of the u and v displacement fields.
( rotation misalignment is then equal for the two fields,
It contribution to the cross derivatives is equal in magnitude
But opposite in sign and thus cancels in the shear-strain
Determination)
Use slightly different pitches on the specimen and master (see Figure
on page 36)
∂u x N ∂u y N yx
= p xx =o
∂x s xx ∂x s yx
∂u x N xy ∂u y N yy
=p =p
∂y s xy ∂y s yy
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Sharpening and Multiplication
• Fringe pattern is sharpen by using
complementary grating (where opaque part
and transparent spaces are not equal width
i.e. different intensity in interference)
• Using diffraction effect from the line pattern
to increase resolution
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In plane Moiré summary
Basically an interferometer…. Using shadow
Advantages:
Simple concept, white light (broad band ) source
Disadvantages:
Unwanted fringes due to slight mismatch gratings
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Applications
Creep
Residual stress
Fracture
Dynamic loading
Thermal deformation in electronic packaging
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Applications
Rubber 53
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Applications
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metal
Applications
Dynamic measurement
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Out of plane Moiré
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Techniques for using geometric moiré to measure
out of plane displacement and slope
Shadow Moiré – utilizes superimposition of a reference grating and its own shadow.
the fringes are loci of points of constant out of plane elevation, so they are
essentially a contour map of the object being studied.
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Reflection Moiré – Superposition of shift in the reflected grating due to a
bend on the specimen, thereby producing a moiré pattern.
Example of applications:
Quantify the movement of the scapular (shoulder area)
Flow field mapping
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Projection Moiré – Out-of-plane displacement measurement or contour
mapping involves projection of reference grating on the specimen by
means of a slide projector.
Application:
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Shadow Moiré
Setup: Figure 9.1 (cloud)
δ = ω tanα 60
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The shadow of mth order lines are spread over the expanse of m+1th lines of grating,
Let ω be the z distance between the master and specimen over the same expanse,
If there are N moiré fringes between the same expanse, where fringes are
observed at normal incidence,
w = Np/tanα
Α more general form where viewing angle (β) is other than the normal,
w = Np/(tanα − tanβ)
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tuttle
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Examples
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Examples
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Examples
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Reflection Moiré
Ez 1 1
σx = ( + ν )
1 −ν ρ x
2
ρy
Ez 1 1
σy = ( + ν )
1 −ν ρ y
2
ρx
Where 1/ρx and 1/ρy are curvatures with respect to x and y axes
The deflections are related to the curvatures by,
1 ∂2w
=− 2
ρx ∂x
1 ∂2w
=− 2
ρy ∂y ∂w
Ligtenberg has developed a moiré method for measuring the partial slopes of
∂w ∂x
and which allows a more accurate approximation of curvature
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Moiré Method measuring out-of-plane slopes
1. First exposure is made with specimen at its initial state which taken at unloaded position.
Grating Q is reflected from point P
2. Plate is then deformed, now point P on plate has moved to point P’, which approximately
the same location on the film as point P.Because of the curvature, grating element Q’ is
now superimposed on this image point in the second exposure.
The moiré pattern formed by superposition of the two images provide a measure of the shift. The
shift in terms of local slope of the plate is given as,
s = 2θd
Where s = magnitude of shift
θ = local slope of plate at P’
d= distance between plate and grating
N = 2θd/ρ or θ = Np/2d
d should be large to minimize the effects of out-of-plane displacement w on the shift distance s
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Real –time reflection moiré analysis of slope
Mirror
plate camera
Reference grating
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Projection Moiré
Similar to
Projecting interference
Pattern in Moiré
Figure 9.4 interferometer
P undergoes axial movement w, it moves across the projected grating by the amount
δ = wsinα, where α is incident angle of the projected grating,
The fringe order at point P in final moiré will be N= δ/p, where p is grating pitch
The axial displacement w is therefore,
Np
w=
sin α
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Projection Technique
The essence of the method is that a grating is projected onto an object and an image is formed in the
plane of some reference grating.
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Project Moiré
Np 2w Np x s
wd = wo + [(1 − cos α − )− ( cos α − cos 2a )]
sin α s s tan α s sin α d
The image then interferes with the reference grating to form Moiré fringe contour
patterns which appear as dark and light stripes. Analysis of the patterns then gives
accurate descriptions of changes in depth and hence shape.
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Moiré Fringe Contouring
The use of moiré fringes to acquire 3D surface shape information is well
established. Their application to the measurement of areas of the human body
began with the work of Hiroshi Takasaki as early as 1973
University of
Glasgow
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