The design, fabrication and evaluation of an electrothermally actuated micromachined beam steering device for use in a free-space optical communication system intended for use on micro-and nanospacecraft in kilometer-sized formations are presented. SU-8 confined in v-grooves is heated to create bending movement in two orthogonal directions for two-axial steering with large static bending angles and low actuation voltages. Standard MEMS processing is used to fabricate the devices with square mirror side lengths of 1, 3.5 and 5 mm. In addition, a method to prevent thermal damage to SU-8 during deep reactive ion etching has been successfully developed. Characterization shows optical scan ranges larger than 40 • in both directions with the maximum driving voltage of 16 V corresponding to a total power consumption of 1.14 W. Infrared imaging is used to investigate thermal cross-talk between actuators for the two scanning directions. It is found that a silicon backbone on the joint backside is crucial for device performance. Differences from expected performance are believed to arise from the SU-8 curing process and excessive heating during fabrication. A finite element method simulation is used to find the eigenfrequencies of the structures, and these are in good agreement with the measured frequency response.
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