Hi
I am new to this forum and not an expert on lasers, but I have an idea to measure roughness or profile on a surface.
I don´t know if it will work but maybe you have some ideas about it.
I don´t need to get a value or something I just want to see if their are changes in the surface.
My idea is to put a laser in a angle to the surface and measure the reflection.
I might add that the surface is not smooth in fact it has small small grains on it that are 5-6µm and would like to detect differences in that surface. Let´s say that we have a grain that is the double 10-12µm.
Feel free to have opinions about my project and tell me what kind of tools I could use to test my theory.
Thanks
M
				
			I am new to this forum and not an expert on lasers, but I have an idea to measure roughness or profile on a surface.
I don´t know if it will work but maybe you have some ideas about it.
I don´t need to get a value or something I just want to see if their are changes in the surface.
My idea is to put a laser in a angle to the surface and measure the reflection.
I might add that the surface is not smooth in fact it has small small grains on it that are 5-6µm and would like to detect differences in that surface. Let´s say that we have a grain that is the double 10-12µm.
Feel free to have opinions about my project and tell me what kind of tools I could use to test my theory.
Thanks
M
 
 
	

 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 ).  The very simplest way would be to simply take a low power laser pointer (405nm works well) and focus it to a small point  on the object a few inches from the apeture then hold up a sheet of paper behind it so that the reflection is visible on the paper.  if you focus the dot on the object to 0.1 mm and the spot on the paper is 100mm then it is pretty much a 1000x magnifier.  You will of course need a holder for the laser so it wont wobble, and the resulting image wont be 3D but should be adequate to see the difference between the grain of the surface.  The surface would also need to be reasonably reflective for this to work, it is really cool to use this to look at the topography of CDs just as long as you dont accidentally use a too powerful laser and corrupt some of the data on it.
 ).  The very simplest way would be to simply take a low power laser pointer (405nm works well) and focus it to a small point  on the object a few inches from the apeture then hold up a sheet of paper behind it so that the reflection is visible on the paper.  if you focus the dot on the object to 0.1 mm and the spot on the paper is 100mm then it is pretty much a 1000x magnifier.  You will of course need a holder for the laser so it wont wobble, and the resulting image wont be 3D but should be adequate to see the difference between the grain of the surface.  The surface would also need to be reasonably reflective for this to work, it is really cool to use this to look at the topography of CDs just as long as you dont accidentally use a too powerful laser and corrupt some of the data on it.