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Cornell Researchers Test Carbon Fiber
to Make Tiny, Cheap Video Displays
Engineers who develop microelectromechanical
systems (MEMS) like to make their tiny machines out
of silicon because it is cheap, plentiful and can be
worked on with the tools already developed for making
microelectronic circuits. There is just one problem:
Silicon breaks too easily.
For decades, researchers have been trying to make video
displays using tiny mirrors mounted on silicon oscillators.
But silicon won't oscillate fast enough and bend far
enough.
"You need something incredibly stiff to oscillate
at a resonant frequency of 60,000 times a second (the
line-scanning rate of most video displays), but it also
needs to bend a lot for adequate image size," explained
Shahyaan Desai, a Cornell graduate student who has been
working for more than three years to create a practical
MEMS video display device.
So Desai and his Cornell colleagues have turned to carbon
fiber, the same material used to reinforce auto and
aircraft body parts, bicycle frames and fishing rods.
Carbon fiber rods supporting this tiny
mirror can be made to bend up to 90 degrees millions
of times without showing fatigue. The technology could
be used to create a video projector on a chip. (Thompson
Lab/Cornell University)
"Carbon fiber is twice as stiff as
silicon but 10 times more flexible," said Desai.
He is first author of a paper with Michael Thompson,
Cornell associate professor of materials science and
engineering, and Anil Netravali, Cornell professor of
fiber science, on using carbon fibers in MEMS, published
in the July issue of the Journal of Micromechanics and
Microengineering.
Carbon fibers are made of thin, narrow sheets of graphite
that roll up and clump together to form fibers. For
industrial uses the fibers are embedded in plastic to
form composite materials that are stronger than steel,
yet lighter. Desai's MEMS are made with the raw fibers.
Desai first showed that micrometer-scale carbon fibers
can bend like tiny fishing rods by more than 90 degrees
and can be made to vibrate billions of times without
breaking down. "This is, to our knowledge, the
first material to even approach such large deformation
at high frequencies without observable fatigue,"
the researchers wrote in their paper.
"Carbon is normally a brittle material," Desai
said, "but in the fiber form it resists breakage.
We have some data implying that if it lasts three and
a half days it's going to last forever."
Desai then built an optical scanner consisting of a
tiny rectangular mirror measuring 400 by 500 microns,
supported by two carbon-fiber hinges about 55 microns
across. Made to oscillate at 2.5 kHz, the tiny mirror
caused a laser beam to scan across a range of up to
180 degrees, corresponding to a 90-degree bend by the
carbon fibers.
An oscillating mirror could be used to scan a laser
beam across a screen, and an array of mirrors, one for
each horizontal line, could produce an image in the
same way that a moving electron beam creates an image
on a television screen.
"It would be an incredibly cheap display,"
Desai said. And the entire device would be small enough
to build into a cell phone to project an image on a
wall.
Besides serving as oscillators, the researchers said,
carbon fibers could be made into clock springs that
either unwind slowly to power a micromachine over a
period of time or unwind rapidly to provide a sudden
burst of power, or used as micro-sized pendulums that
could harvest energy from motion like a mechanical self-winding
watch to make cell phones, PDAs and even watches that
are powered by the user's movement.
Visit www.cornell.edu

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