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OP

What Is Optical Profilometry (OP)?

Optical Profilometry (OP) is a non-contact surface metrology technique that measures 3D surface topography using optical methods (commonly interferometry-based). It generates 2D/3D surface maps, calculates roughness parameters, and can quantify step heights and feature dimensions—all without physically touching the surface.

Key advantages

  • Non-contact & non-destructive for most samples

  • Produces 3D topography plus roughness and dimensional metrics

  • Well-suited for coatings, thin films, wear scars, and delicate surfaces (project-dependent)

What OP Is Used For

Optical Profilometry is commonly used to evaluate:

  • Surface roughness & texture (Ra, Rq, Sa, Sq, etc.—reported per project need)

  • Step height and film/coating thickness variation (uniformity checks)

  • Flatness, waviness, curvature (metrology and process monitoring)

  • Wear volume / wear scar geometry in tribology studies (project-dependent)

  • Defects such as pits, scratches, orange peel, and local surface damage (project-dependent)

Why Optical Profilometry (vs. Stylus/Contact Methods)?

Compared with contact profilometers, OP can offer:

  • No tip-induced damage on soft or delicate materials

  • Faster area mapping (surface scans over defined fields of view)

  • True 3D information (not only a single line profile)

  • Helpful for soft polymers, thin coatings, and microfeatures where contact methods may distort results (project-dependent)

Sample Types We Support

OP is commonly applied to (project-dependent):

  • Coatings & thin films: paint, hard coatings, protective layers, functional films

  • Metals & alloys: machined surfaces, corrosion attack morphology, surface treatments

  • Polymers & plastics: molded parts, films, textured surfaces

  • Semiconductors & electronics: wafers/coupons, film steps, process marks (project-dependent)

  • Tribology samples: wear tracks, bearings, counterface scars (project-dependent)

Typical Workflows

Roughness & Texture Characterization

Best for: process control, surface finish qualification

  • Define scan area(s) and roughness parameters

  • Report roughness metrics + 3D maps

  • Optional: multiple locations for uniformity (project-dependent)

Step Height / Feature Measurement

Best for: coating steps, etched features, wear depth

  • Step height and profile extraction

  • Feature width/geometry measurements (where applicable)

Comparative Study (“What Changed?”)

Best for: supplier/process changes, before/after aging or treatment

  • Same scan plan on reference vs suspect samples

  • Side-by-side comparison of maps and key metrics

  • Practical summary of statistically meaningful differences (project-dependent)

What You Receive

  • 3D surface maps (and selected 2D profiles)

  • Roughness parameter table and measurement settings

  • Feature/step height results (if included)

  • Clear conclusions for: pass/fail, trend, or comparison (depending on your goal)

Sample Submission Guidelines

Please provide

  • Material type and surface description (coating? polished? textured?)

  • Your goal: roughness, step height, wear volume, defect characterization, comparison

  • Any spec limits (target Ra/Sa, step height tolerance, etc.)

  • If comparison-based: reference/control sample is strongly recommended

Packaging tips

  • Protect surfaces from fingerprints, rubbing, and dust (gloves + clean bags)

  • Mark areas of interest and orientation (top/bottom, flow direction, etc.)

  • For wear tracks, label contact direction and test conditions (if available)

FAQs

Generally non-destructive because it does not touch the surface, but the sample may still require handling/fixturing.

OP can measure step height or thickness variation when there is a measurable step/edge or exposed substrate reference (project-dependent).

 

AFM offers very high-resolution nanoscale scans over smaller areas; OP typically covers larger areas faster with excellent vertical sensitivity (project-dependent choice based on your feature size and throughput needs).

Often yes for defined wear scars/tracks by integrating the 3D geometry (project-dependent).

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