Capacitive Sensing for 2-D Electrostatic MEMS Scanner in a Clinical Endomicroscope

IEEE Sens J. 2022 Dec 15;22(24):24493-24503. doi: 10.1109/jsen.2022.3216502. Epub 2022 Oct 27.

Abstract

A flexible fiber-coupled confocal laser endomicroscope has been developed using an electrostatic micro-electromechanical system (MEMS) scanner located in at distal optics to collect in vivo images in human subjects. Long transmission lines are required that deliver drive and sense signals with limited bandwidth. Phase shifts have been observed between orthogonal X and Y scanner axes from environmental perturbations, which impede image reconstruction. Image processing algorithms used for correction depend on image content and quality, while scanner calibration in the clinic can be limited by potential patient exposure to lasers. We demonstrate a capacitive sensing method to track the motion of the electrostatically driven two-dimensional MEMS scanner and to extract phase information needed for image reconstruction. This circuit uses an amplitude modulation envelope detection method on shared drive and sensing electrodes of the scanner. Circuit parameters were optimized for performance given high scan frequencies, transmission line effects, and substantial parasitic coupling of drive signal to circuit output. Extraction of phase information further leverages nonlinear dynamics of the MEMS scanner. The sensing circuit was verified by comparing with data from a position sensing detector measurement. The phase estimation showed an accuracy of 2.18° and 0.79° in X and Y axes for motion sensing, respectively. The results indicate that the sensing circuit can be implemented with feedback control for pre-calibration of the scanner in clinical MEMS-based imaging systems.

Keywords: Capacitive sensing; Endomicroscopy; Imaging systems; Microelectromechanical Systems (MEMS); Mirror; Phase correction; Scanner.