Abstract

The manufacturing of micro-structured components with varying geometries and materials requires precise and versatile applicable geometry measurement techniques. Optical measurement approaches enable high-precision measurements, but they rely on cooperative surfaces. To overcome the dependency on the optical surface response, the surface of a measured object is determined indirectly using an aerosol flow with fluorescent particles and a confocal fluorescence microscope. To precisely extract the surface position from the scanned fluorescence signal of the particles in the surrounding air, a model-based signal processing is proposed. To assess the measurement capabilities and the influence of the aerosol supply flow, geometry and flow measurements are performed on a flat plate geometry and a step geometry. As a result, a measurement uncertainty of ▪ with no systematic error was achieved for the flat plate experiment, despite the different boundary layer flows at the different measurement positions. In contrast to this, a significant systematic measurement error occurred in the wake flow region of the step geometry because of flow separation and, thus, no detectable particles directly behind the step. In summary, the findings clarify an in principle achievable sub-micrometre resolution with improved optics and a large number of detected particles, but also emphasise the necessity of a sufficient particle supply for enabling indirect optical geometry measurements.

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