DocumentCode :
3786409
Title :
Gimbal-less monolithic silicon actuators for tip-tilt-piston micromirror applications
Author :
V. Milanovic;G.A. Matus;D.T. McCormick
Author_Institution :
Adriatic Res. Inst., Berkeley, CA, USA
Volume :
10
Issue :
3
fYear :
2004
Firstpage :
462
Lastpage :
471
Abstract :
In this paper, fully monolithic silicon optical scanners are demonstrated with large static optical beam deflection. The main advantage of the scanners is their high speed of operation for both axes: namely, the actuators allow static two-axis rotation in addition to pistoning of a micromirror without the need for gimbals or specialized isolation technologies. The basic device is actuated by four orthogonally arranged vertical comb-drive rotators etched in the device layer of an silicon-on-insulator wafer, which are coupled by mechanical linkages and mechanical rotation transformers to a central micromirror. The transformers allow larger static rotations of the micromirror from the comb-drive stroke limited rotation of the actuators, with a magnification of up to 3/spl times/ angle demonstrated. A variety of one-axis and two-axis devices have been successfully fabricated and tested, in all cases with 600-/spl mu/m-diameter micromirrors. One-axis micromirrors achieve static optical beam deflections of >20/spl deg/ and peak-to-peak resonant scanning of >50/spl deg/ in one example at a resonant frequency of 4447 Hz. Many two-axis devices utilizing four rotators were tested, and exhibit >18/spl deg/ of static optical deflection at <150 V, while their lowest resonant frequencies are above 4.5 kHz for both axes. A device which utilizes only three bidirectional rotators for tip-tilt-piston actuation achieves -10/spl deg/ to 10/spl deg/ of optical deflection in all axes, and exhibits minimum resonant frequencies of 4096 and 1890 Hz for rotation and pistoning, respectively. Finally, we discuss the preliminary results in scaling tip-tilt-piston devices down to 0.4 /spl times/ 0.4 mm on a side for high fill-factor optical phased arrays. These array elements include bonded low-inertia micromirrors which fully cover the actuators to achieve high fill-factor.
Keywords :
"Silicon","Actuators","Micromirrors","High speed optical techniques","Resonant frequency","Optical devices","Optical beams","Transformers","Testing","Phased arrays"
Journal_Title :
IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1077-260X
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JSTQE.2004.829205
Filename :
1323049
Link To Document :
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