Modeling Inverse Ellipsometry Problem via Flow Matching with a Large-Scale Dataset

Abstract

Inverse ellipsometry, i.e., reconstructing optical constants and film thickness from the measured phase difference and amplitude ratio , is a fundamentally ill-posed problem. Traditional solutions rely on slow, expert-driven iterative fitting, while the development of machine learning approaches has been severely limited by the lack of large-scale, physically consistent datasets. To address this gap, we introduce EllipBench, a comprehensive benchmark comprising over 8 million high-precision samples spanning 98 thin-film materials and 5 substrates. Building upon this benchmark, we conduct a systematic evaluation of a broad spectrum of methods, including traditional machine learning models, deep neural networks, and Physics-Informed Neural Networks, and show that existing paradigms consistently struggle to fully resolve the inverse ellipsometry task. To better capture its inherent ambiguity, we further propose a novel Decoupled Conditional Flow Matching (DCFM) framework. Rather than formulating the problem as deterministic point-to-point regression, DCFM explicitly decouples geometric film thickness and incorporates it as a robust physical condition to guide a continuous vector field for modeling the inverse probability distribution of wavelength-dependent optical constants. Combined with a gradient detachment strategy and physics-based constraints, our joint architecture effectively mitigates intrinsic physical ambiguities and delivers a robust and accurate solution for inverse ellipsometry.

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