Guys above have provided enough information. I believe stylus profilometers are easiest way to do the job. Just to add one more potential way to measure the metal thickness: I know someone in my lab test the sheet resistance of the metal layer, and then with the resistivity, you can calculate the thickness. I am not very sure about the accuracy. 2009/2/17, Albert Henning: > Just to clarify about optical means: > > Ellipsometers and reflectometers measure blanket (unpatterned) films. > They cannot provide useful thickness or composition information for > thicknesses above about 50 nm. > > Optical interferometers (Wyko, or Zygo) can be used to measure patterned > films, either single steps (using e.g. the already-suggest Kapton-tape > approach), or multiple steps/trenches (patterned lithographically, or > with a shadow mask). Calibration is essential, and unless you have > access to a well-maintained system, with a trained operator, it will > take quite a bit of time to get a useful measurement. But, the > technique is sound and successful, whether you're measuring a single > step in a field of perhaps only a few microns square, or many steps > simultaneously across an entire wafer. > > In my experience, stylus profilometers are faster and simpler, and just > as accurate, as compared to optical interferometry, if all you want is a > couple of measurements on a wafer. > > Albert K. Henning, PhD