TY - JOUR
T1 - A high-fill-factor electrothermally-actuated analog micromirror array with hidden actuators and optimized interconnects for light projection
AU - Zhang, Wenchao
AU - Jiao, Wenlong
AU - Ni, Jihui
AU - Yang, Hengzhang
AU - Peng, Zhe
AU - Zhang, Xinchao
AU - Xiang, Yang
AU - Tang, Yue
AU - Xie, Huikai
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 Elsevier B.V. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
PY - 2026/7/1
Y1 - 2026/7/1
N2 - Electrothermally-actuated analog micromirror arrays (ET-AMAs) offer large displacement, low driving voltage, and ease of scaling to large optical apertures, making them promising for analog light projection with a wide and variable field of view (FOV). However, achieving high optical efficiency and high‑contrast projection requires arrays with high fill factor and flat mirror surfaces, which conventional ET-AMA designs struggle to provide. To address these limitations, we present a 4 × 4 ET-AMA with a hidden‑actuator configuration and a dual‑conductive‑layer stacked interconnect scheme, enabling fill factors as high as 84%. To improve the mirror surface quality, the fabrication process employs a tailored deep‑silicon‑etch sidewall profile to form easily removable silicon sacrificial layers, together with highly selective isotropic etching gases. This technique significantly enhances the microstructure release efficiency and minimizes damage to the mirror-supporting silicon frames. The fabricated ET-AMAs exhibit an average radius of curvature of the mirror surfaces as large as 94.5 cm. The micromirrors achieve an optical scanning range of ±9° under a low DC voltage of 2.72 V, meeting the FOV requirements for applications such as automotive head-up displays. Demonstrations of block‑wise multimodal actuation and 16‑pixel pattern generation further highlight the ET-AMA’s strong beam‑modulation capability and its flexible, efficient variable‑FOV light projection potential.
AB - Electrothermally-actuated analog micromirror arrays (ET-AMAs) offer large displacement, low driving voltage, and ease of scaling to large optical apertures, making them promising for analog light projection with a wide and variable field of view (FOV). However, achieving high optical efficiency and high‑contrast projection requires arrays with high fill factor and flat mirror surfaces, which conventional ET-AMA designs struggle to provide. To address these limitations, we present a 4 × 4 ET-AMA with a hidden‑actuator configuration and a dual‑conductive‑layer stacked interconnect scheme, enabling fill factors as high as 84%. To improve the mirror surface quality, the fabrication process employs a tailored deep‑silicon‑etch sidewall profile to form easily removable silicon sacrificial layers, together with highly selective isotropic etching gases. This technique significantly enhances the microstructure release efficiency and minimizes damage to the mirror-supporting silicon frames. The fabricated ET-AMAs exhibit an average radius of curvature of the mirror surfaces as large as 94.5 cm. The micromirrors achieve an optical scanning range of ±9° under a low DC voltage of 2.72 V, meeting the FOV requirements for applications such as automotive head-up displays. Demonstrations of block‑wise multimodal actuation and 16‑pixel pattern generation further highlight the ET-AMA’s strong beam‑modulation capability and its flexible, efficient variable‑FOV light projection potential.
KW - Analog light projection
KW - Analog micromirror array
KW - Electrothermal actuator
KW - Hidden actuator
KW - High fill factor
KW - Variable field of view
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105034618143
U2 - 10.1016/j.sna.2026.117724
DO - 10.1016/j.sna.2026.117724
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105034618143
SN - 0924-4247
VL - 404
JO - Sensors and Actuators A: Physical
JF - Sensors and Actuators A: Physical
M1 - 117724
ER -