A transparent microactuator from a single piece of glass. The allure of combining optics and mechanics is strong, with applications in displays, adaptive optics, and many other technologies. But as devices continue to shrink, their fabrication becomes ever more complicated. Working at Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands, Yves Bellouard and Bo Lenssen have developed a relatively simple method to manufacture a complex actuator out of a single glass substrate. First they use low-power femtosecond pulses, applied in a predetermined pattern, to selectively and simultaneously change both the glass’s refractive index and its susceptibility to chemical etching. And because the transparent material is affected only at the focal point and only when the laser exceeds a certain power threshold, regions below the glass surface can be altered with pinpoint accuracy. Next, they etch the device in a chemical bath, which erodes the glass an order of magnitude faster in...
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1 November 2012
November 01 2012
A transparent microactuator from a single piece of glass
Physics Today 65 (11), 21 (2012);
Citation
Stephen G. Benka; A transparent microactuator from a single piece of glass. Physics Today 1 November 2012; 65 (11): 21. https://doi.org/10.1063/PT.3.1780
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