Optomechanical uncooled infrared imaging system: Design, microfabrication, and performance

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Abstract

This paper presents the design, fabrication and performance of an uncooled micro-optomechanical infrared (IR) imaging system consisting of a focal-plane array (FPA) containing bi-material cantilever pixels made of silicon nitride (SiNx) and gold (Au), which serve as infrared absorbers and thermomechanical transducers. Based on wave optics, a visible optical readout system is designed to simultaneously measure the deflections of all the cantilever beams in the FPA and project the visible deflection map onto a visible charge-coupled device (CCD) imager. The IR imaging results suggest that the detection resolution of current design is 3-5 K, whereas noise analysis indicates the current resolution to be around 1 K. The noise analysis also shows that the theoretical noise-equivalent temperature difference (NETD) of the system can be below 3 mK.

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Zhao, Y., Mao, M., Horowitz, R., Majumdar, A., Varesi, J., Norton, P., & Kitching, J. (2002). Optomechanical uncooled infrared imaging system: Design, microfabrication, and performance. Journal of Microelectromechanical Systems, 11(2), 136–146. https://doi.org/10.1109/84.993448

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