This article describes a position sensitive interferometer with closed-loop control of the reference mirror. A calibrated nanopositioner is used to lock the interferometer phase to the most sensitive point in the interferogram. In this configuration, large low-frequency movements of the sensor mirror can be detected from the control signal applied to the nanopositioner and high-frequency short-range signals can be measured directly from the photodiode. It is demonstrated that these two signals are complementary and can be summed to find the total displacement. The resulting interferometer has a number of desirable characteristics: it is optically simple, does not require polarization or modulation to detect the direction of motion, does not require fringe-counting or interpolation electronics, and has a bandwidth equal to that of the photodiode. Experimental results demonstrate the frequency response analysis of a high-speed positioning stage. The proposed instrument is ideal for measuring the frequency response of nanopositioners, electro-optical components, MEMs devices, ultrasonic devices, and sensors such as surface acoustic wave detectors.
History
Journal title
Review of Scientific Instruments
Volume
86
Issue
11
Publisher
AIP Publishing
Language
en, English
College/Research Centre
Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment
School
School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Rights statement
The following article appeared as Andrew J. Fleming and Ben S. Routley "A closed-loop phase-locked interferometer for wide bandwidth position sensing" in Review of Scientific Instruments 2015 86:11 and may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4935469. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and AIP Publishing.