• DocumentCode
    9303
  • Title

    Optical MEMS: From Micromirrors to Complex Systems

  • Author

    Solgaard, Olav ; Godil, Asif A. ; Howe, R.T. ; Lee, L.P. ; Peter, Yves-Alain ; Zappe, H.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electr. Eng., Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA, USA
  • Volume
    23
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    Jun-14
  • Firstpage
    517
  • Lastpage
    538
  • Abstract
    Microelectromechanical system (MEMS) technology, and surface micromachining in particular, have led to the development of miniaturized optical devices with a substantial impact in a large number of application areas. The reason is the unique MEMS characteristics that are advantageous in fabrication, systems integration, and operation of micro-optical systems. The precision mechanics of MEMS, microfabrication techniques, and optical functionality all make possible a wide variety of movable and tunable mirrors, lenses, filters, and other optical structures. In these systems, electrostatic, magnetic, thermal, and pneumatic actuators provide mechanical precision and control. The large number of electromagnetic modes that can be accommodated by beam-steering micromirrors and diffractive optical MEMS, combined with the precision of these types of elements, is utilized in fiber-optical switches and filters, including dispersion compensators. The potential to integrate optics with electronics and mechanics is a great advantage in biomedical instrumentation, where the integration of miniaturized optical detection systems with microfluidics enables smaller, faster, more-functional, and cheaper systems. The precise dimensions and alignment of MEMS devices, combined with the mechanical stability that comes with miniaturization, make optical MEMS sensors well suited to a variety of challenging measurements. Micro-optical systems also benefit from the addition of nanostructures to the MEMS toolbox. Photonic crystals and microcavities, which represent the ultimate in miniaturized optical components, enable further scaling of optical MEMS.
  • Keywords
    beam steering; bioMEMS; biomedical equipment; diffractive optical elements; electrostatic actuators; integrated optics; integrated optoelectronics; lenses; magnetic actuators; micro-optomechanical devices; microcavities; microfluidics; micromachining; micromirrors; microsensors; nanophotonics; optical fabrication; optical fibre filters; optical sensors; optical switches; photonic crystals; pneumatic actuators; MEMS toolbox; beam-steering micromirrors; biomedical instrumentation; complex systems; diffractive optical MEMS; dispersion compensators; electromagnetic modes; electrostatic actuators; fiber-optical filters; fiber-optical switches; lenses; magnetic actuators; mechanical control; mechanical precision; mechanical stability; microcavities; microelectromechanical system; microfabrication; microfluidics; miniaturized optical devices; movable mirrors; nanostructures; optical MEMS sensors; optical functionality; photonic crystals; pneumatic actuators; surface micromachining; systems integration; thermal actuators; tunable mirrors; Biomedical optical imaging; Lenses; Micromechanical devices; Optical device fabrication; Optical sensors; Silicon; Micro-optics; microcavities; microcavities.; microlenses; micromirrors; optofluidics; photonic crystals; tunable optics;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Microelectromechanical Systems, Journal of
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1057-7157
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JMEMS.2014.2319266
  • Filename
    6817527