A packaged liquid lens driven by the dielectric force was demonstrated. The liquid lens consisted of a low dielectric constant droplet and a high dielectric constant sealing liquid. The two non-conductive liquids were sealed in a chamber under the condition of iso-density. Focal length of a liquid lens with an aperture of 3mm changed from 34mm to 12mm in the range of 0-200V. Hysteresis was observed in the liquid lens, with a maximum value measured of 12.5 degrees at 120 volts in terms of droplet's contact angle. The focal spot size measured approximately 80mum. Rise and fall times were 650ms and 300ms, respectively. The lens consumed 1mW of power when applying a 200 volt, 1 kHz signal. The longitudinal and transverse spherical aberrations were estimated to be nearly invariant when the focal length exceeded 20mm.
A liquid crystal droplet lens driven by the dielectrophoresis (DEP) force was demonstrated. The liquid crystal droplet lens was deformed by the DEP forces under non-uniform AC electric fields. Focal length, hysteresis and electrode design were studied. The focal length varied from 1.6mm to 2.6mm in the range of 0-200V at 1 kHz for electrode spacing of 5 0mum; that is, the tuning ratio of the focal length was about 60% in maximum. The hysteresis of contact angle was found to be less than 3 degrees and it vanished after 1 minute at the rest state. As the electrode spacing over 200 mum, the tuning ratios of the focal length dropped below 5%. The liquid crystal droplet lens that had numerical aperture of about 0.5 consumed power of about 0.1mW. Its response time was measured to be about 220 ms.
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