2021
DOI: 10.3390/s21103340
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Continuous In-Line Chromium Coating Thickness Measurement Methodologies: An Investigation of Current and Potential Technology

Abstract: Coatings or films are applied to a substrate for several applications, such as waterproofing, corrosion resistance, adhesion performance, cosmetic effects, and optical coatings. When applying a coating to a substrate, it is vital to monitor the coating thickness during the coating process to achieve a product to the desired specification via real time production control. There are several different coating thickness measurement methods that can be used, either in-line or off-line, which can determine the coati… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Methods of large‐area thin‐film characterization have been summarized. According to other studies, [ 2 ] only optical methods are capable of a high‐speed, high‐sensitivity, and nondestructive characterization of thin films over large surfaces (although some potential future candidates have also been mentioned, such as the thermoelectric method with a magnetic readout approach, THz‐TDS, CCM, infrared thermography, as well as XRR or XRF). In case of optical methods, we discussed techniques including spectroscopic reflectometry, transmission, scattering, speckle imaging, and SE in all cases when the areas under study were larger than the wavelength of light.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Methods of large‐area thin‐film characterization have been summarized. According to other studies, [ 2 ] only optical methods are capable of a high‐speed, high‐sensitivity, and nondestructive characterization of thin films over large surfaces (although some potential future candidates have also been mentioned, such as the thermoelectric method with a magnetic readout approach, THz‐TDS, CCM, infrared thermography, as well as XRR or XRF). In case of optical methods, we discussed techniques including spectroscopic reflectometry, transmission, scattering, speckle imaging, and SE in all cases when the areas under study were larger than the wavelength of light.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Three main groups of the approaches have been identified: 1) depth profiling by sputtering (e.g., secondary ion mass spectrometry [SIMS], secondary neutral mass spectrometry [SNMS], X‐ray photoelectron spectrometry [XPS], Auger electron spectrometry [AES], glow‐discharge optical emission spectrometry [GD‐OES], glow discharge mass spectrometry [GD‐MS], Raman depth profiling), 2) nondestructive techniques (e.g., spectroscopic ellipsometry [SE], Rutherford backscattering spectrometry [RBS], elastic recoil detection analysis [ERDA], X‐ray diffraction [XRD], angle‐dependent X‐ray emission spectroscopy [AXES]), and 3) cross‐section micro(nano)mapping (e.g., scanning transmission electron microscopy [TEM], its combination with energy‐dispersive X‐ray analysis [EDX], scanning Auger electron microscopy, Raman mapping, time‐of‐flight SIMS [TOF‐SIMS]). The tools that are capable of the determination of coating thickness are reviewed by Jones et al [ 2 ] sorting the methods in traditional (coulometry, beta‐particle backscattering, eddy current, magnetic induction, X‐ray fluorescence [XRF], X‐ray reflectometry [XRR], ultrasonic detection), offline (XPS, scanning electron microscopy [SEM], atomic force microscopy [AFM], GD‐OES) and in‐line (thermoelectric method, terahertz time‐domain spectroscopy [THz‐TDS], reflectometry, interferometry, ellipsometry, stimulated Brillouin scattering [SBS], self‐mixing interferometry [SMI], chromatic confocal microscopy [CCM], infrared thermography) categories with the conclusion of reflectometry, interferometry, and ellipsometry being the most suitable methods for in‐line characterization.…”
Section: Methods Of Thin‐film Characterizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Ref. [ 12 ] is a careful review of the conventional and innovative coating thickness methodologies for application to chromium coatings on a ferromagnetic steel substrate and determines their advantages and limitations regarding in-line measurements. The X-ray Fluorescence (XRF) method is the most common in-line coating thickness measurement method employed in the steel packaging industry, but it is expensive and is characterized by health and safety concerns due to its ionizing radiation.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%