MEMS 阵列芯片可以投影出如沙粒大小的视频。
MEMS Array Chip Can Project Video the Size of a Grain of Sand

原始链接: https://spectrum.ieee.org/mems-photonics

## 革命性芯片为量子计算及其他领域带来光明 来自MITRE、麻省理工学院和其他机构的科学家们开发出一种突破性的光子芯片,有望彻底改变量子计算、成像等领域。该芯片最初是为了解决控制数百万量子比特——量子计算机的构建模块——的难题而设计的,它每秒可以投射出惊人的6860万个独立光点,超过当前技术五十倍。 该芯片小于两个卵细胞,利用微小的“跳台”阵列——微悬臂梁,以惊人的精度引导光束。这使得能够用更少的激光器高效地控制大量的量子比特,这是实现可扩展量子计算机的关键一步。 然而,这项创新远不止于量子计算。其高速扫描能力有望推动增强现实、3D打印(可能将扫描时间从数小时缩短至数分钟)和生物医学成像等领域的进步,甚至能够实现用于药物开发的“芯片实验室”设备。研究人员已经在探索独特的悬臂梁形状,例如螺旋结构,以进一步拓展其应用。

Hacker News新 | 过去 | 评论 | 提问 | 展示 | 工作 | 提交登录 MEMS 阵列芯片可以将视频投射到一粒沙子大小的区域 (ieee.org) 13 分,bookofjoe 发表于 2 小时前 | 隐藏 | 过去 | 收藏 | 4 条评论 帮助 dmitrygr 发表于 29 分钟前 | 下一个 [–] 这是给蚂蚁看的电影院吗?回复 m3kw9 发表于 1 分钟前 | 父评论 | 下一个 [–] 我们终于可以对这个问题说“是”了回复 darfo 发表于 1 小时前 | 上一个 | 下一个 [–] 哦,等等。它确实有正确的标题。我的果蝇在欢呼。回复 darfo 发表于 1 小时前 | 上一个 [–] 太酷了。现在我可以给我的果蝇看视频了!/s 说真的,标题应该是“MEMS 阵列芯片可以将视频投射到一粒沙子大小的区域”,而不是“MEMS 阵列芯片可以将视频投射到一粒沙子大小”。回复 指南 | 常见问题 | 列表 | API | 安全 | 法律 | 申请 YC | 联系 搜索:
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原文

By many estimates, quantum computers will need millions of qubits to realize their potential applications in cybersecurity, drug development, and other industries. The problem is, anyone who has wanted to simultaneously control millions of a certain kind of qubits has run into the problem of trying to control millions of laser beams.

That’s exactly the challenge that was faced by scientists working on the MITRE Quantum Moonshot project, which brought together scientists from MITRE, MIT, the University of Colorado at Boulder, and Sandia National Laboratories. The solution they developed came in the form of an image projection technology that they realized could also be the fix for a host of other challenges in augmented reality, biomedical imaging, and elsewhere. The device is a one-square-millimeter photonic chip capable of projecting the Mona Lisa onto an area smaller than the size of two human egg cells.

“When we started, we certainly never would have anticipated that we would be making a technology that might revolutionize imaging,” says Matt Eichenfield, one of the leaders of the Quantum Moonshot project, a collaborative research effort focused on developing a scalable diamond-based quantum computer, and a professor of quantum engineering at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Each second, their chip is capable of projecting 68.6 million individual spots of light—called scannable pixels to differentiate them from physical pixels. That’s more than fifty times the capability of previous technology, such as micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) micromirror arrays.

“We have now made a scannable pixel that is at the absolute limit of what diffraction allows,” says Henry Wen, a visiting researcher at MIT and a photonics engineer at QuEra Computing.

The chip’s distinguishing feature is an array of tiny micro-scale cantilevers, which curve away from the plane of the chip in response to voltage and act as miniature “ski-jumps” for light. Light is channeled along the length of each cantilever via a waveguide, and exits at its tip. The cantilevers contain a thin layer of aluminum nitride, a piezoelectric which expands or contracts under voltage, thus moving the micromachine up and down and enabling the array to scan beams of light over a two-dimensional area.

Despite the magnitude of the team’s achievement, Eichenfield says that the process of engineering the cantilevers was “pretty smooth.” Each cantilever is composed of a stack of several submicrometer layers of material and curls approximately 90 degrees out of the plane at rest. To achieve such a high curvature, the team took advantage of differences in the contraction and expansion of individual layers caused by physical stresses in the material resulting from the fabrication process. The materials are first deposited flat onto the chip. Then, a layer in the chip below the cantilever is removed, allowing the material stresses to take effect, releasing the cantilever from the chip and allowing it to curl out. The top layer of each cantilever also features a series of silicon dioxide bars running perpendicular to the waveguide, which keep the cantilever from curling along its width while also improving its length-wise curvature.

A micro-cantilever wiggles and waggles to project light in the right place.Matt Saha, Y. Henry Wen, et al.

What was more of a challenge than engineering the chip itself was figuring out the details of actually making the chip project images and videos. Working out the process of synchronizing and timing the cantilevers’ motion and light beams to generate the right colors at the right time was a substantial effort, according to Andy Greenspon, a researcher at MITRE who also worked on the project. Now, the team has successfully projected a variety of videos from a single cantilever, including clips from the movie A Charlie Brown Christmas.

A warped projection of the Mona Lisa. The chip projected a roughly 125-micrometer image of the Mona Lisa.Matt Saha, Y. Henry Wen, et al.

Because the chip can project so many more spots in any given time interval than any previous beam scanners, it could also be used to control many more qubits in quantum computers. The Quantum Moonshot program’s mission is to build a quantum computer that can be scaled to millions of qubits. So clearly, it needs a scalable way of controlling each one, explains Wen. Instead of using one laser per qubit, the team realized that not every qubit needed to be controlled at every given moment. The chip’s ability to move light beams over a two-dimensional area, would allow them to control all of the qubits with many fewer lasers.

Another process that Wen thinks the chip could improve is scanning objects for 3D printing. Today, that typically involves using a single laser to scan over the entire surface of an object. The new chip, however, could potentially employ thousands of laser beams. “I think now you can take a process that would have taken hours and maybe bring it down to minutes,” says Wen.

Wen is also excited to explore the potential of different cantilever shapes. By changing the orientations of the bars perpendicular to the waveguide, the team has been able to make the cantilevers curl into helixes. Wen says that such unusual shapes could be useful in making a lab-on-a-chip for cell biology or drug development. “A lot of this stuff is imaging, scanning a laser across something, either to image it or to stimulate some response. And so we could have one of these ski jumps curl not just up, but actually curl back around, and then move around and scan over a sample,” Wen explains. “If you can imagine a structure that will be useful for you, we should try it.”

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