Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
801469 | Precision Engineering | 2007 | 7 Pages |
This paper describes the measurement and compensation of error motions of a diamond turning machine for nanofabrication of large sinusoidal metrology grids. The diamond turning machine has a T-base design, which consists of a spindle with its rotation axis along the Z-direction and a cross-slide with its movement direction along the X-direction. A fast-tool-servo (FTS) unit is mounted on the X-slide to generate sinusoidal microstructures on a flat workpiece surface mounted on the spindle. The error motions of the X-slide and the spindle, which introduce Z-directional profile errors (out-of-flatness) on the grid surface, are measured and compensated. The out-of-straightness of the X-slide is measured to be approximately 60 nm over a travel of 80 mm by using the reversal method. It is also confirmed that the out-of-straightness of the X-slide has a 10-nm periodic component with a period of 11 mm corresponding to the diameter of the needles used in the roller bearing of the X-slide. The angular motion of the spindle is measured to be approximately 0.3″ by using an autocollimator, which can cause a 73-nm out-of-flatness over a workpiece 100 mm in diameter. The axial motion of the spindle is measured to be approximately 5 nm, which is the smallest error motion. The out-of-flatness of the workpiece is reduced from 0.27 to 0.12 μm through compensating for the error motions by utilizing the FTS unit based on the measurement results of error motions.