How to Select the Four Different Light Paths

BF)-The First Choice for Routine Metallographic Observation.

  • Observing the overall macroscopic morphology of samples and routine metallographic structures (e.g., grain size, grain boundaries, phase distribution, surface roughness, coating thickness).
  • Routine metallographic grading of metallic materials (e.g., grain size grading, inclusion grading, observation of heat-treated microstructures).
  • Rapid screening of batch samples and routine quality inspection.

DF)-Specialized Observation of Micro Defects / Transparent Inclusions

  • Observing micro defects in metallic materials (blowholes, inclusions, cracks, porosity, pinholes).
  • Identifying transparent/translucent inclusions (e.g., oxides, sulfides, silicates) and distinguishing inclusion types.
  • Observing surface scratches, micro pits, coating pinholes and other details that are difficult to distinguish under bright field .

PL)-Specialized for Anisotropic Materials / Phase Differentiation

  • Observing anisotropic materials (e.g., non-metallic inclusions, liquid crystals, minerals, crystal orientations, and anisotropic metals such as magnesium/titanium alloys).
  • Distinguishing different metallographic phases (e.g., ferrite/cementite in steel, secondary phases in aluminum alloys).
  • Observing stress birefringence, crystal texture, and the morphology of anisotropic microstructures.

(DIC)-Observation of Tiny Height Differences / 3D Topography.

  • Observing tiny height differences on the sample surface (e.g., grain boundaries, phase boundaries, surface scratches, micro steps, film thickness variations).
  • Observing soft materials, etch-sensitive samples, semiconductor wafers, biological samples and other samples unsuitable for etching.
  • Observing fine microstructures and surface undulations with insufficient contrast under bright field.