Inside Innovation At Xerox: a Periodic Glimpse At Work in Progress; MOEMS May Light the Way to More Accurate Imaging at Lower Costs.Business/Photo Editors NOTE TO MEDIA: Multimedia assets available ROCHESTER, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug. 19, 2002 Imagine depositing four grains of salt, one precisely on top of the next, on a paper towel as it spins off the roll. That's the kind of challenge Xerox Corporation (NYSE NYSE See: New York Stock Exchange :XRX XRX Xerox Corporation (stock symbol) ) faces when it lays down yellow, cyan, magenta and black images onto a photoreceptor photoreceptor /pho·to·re·cep·tor/ (-re-sep´ter) a nerve end-organ or receptor sensitive to light. pho·to·re·cep·tor n. to make a color print or copy. It is even harder because the images must match up, or register, to within 1/12th the width of a human hair while the photoreceptor belt travels at up to 70 feet a minute. Xerox currently achieves accurate imaging in its high-end printers and publishers through high-cost, high-quality precision manufacturing techniques. But Xerox scientists are conducting advanced research to fabricate miniscule min·is·cule adj. Variant of minuscule. Adj. 1. miniscule - very small; "a minuscule kitchen"; "a minuscule amount of rain fell" minuscule electro-mechanical devices that will offer a lower-cost and even more accurate way to control image registration. The technology is also expected to have applications in optical switching for telecommunications and industrial automation. Incredibly small and extremely reliable, these devices called micro-opto-electro-mechanical systems (MOEMS See MEMS. ) integrate optical, electrical and mechanical elements in a package no bigger than a microchip. They contain intelligence that allows them to optically sense and then control what is going on around them by generating, modulating, guiding, switching and detecting light. "A photoreceptor belt can vibrate like a taut rubber band," said Joel Kubby of Xerox's Webster, N.Y.-based Wilson Center for Research and Technology. Instead of trying to hold the belt steady while the four colors comprising the image are laid down, Xerox scientists are investigating the use of MOEMS to detect the exact position of the belt and then to accommodate its movement by steering the laser beam to that position. "MOEMS will replace precision manufacturing with closed-loop feedback control," Kubby said. The result will be much more precise registration, which will give customers even better image quality at lower costs. Using MOEMS for image registration is just one of several Xerox MOEMS and MEMS (MicroElectroMechanical Systems) Tiny mechanical devices that are built onto semiconductor chips and are measured in micrometers. In the research labs since the 1980s, MEMS devices began to materialize as commercial products in the mid-1990s. (micro-electro-mechanical systems) research projects under way at the Wilson Center and the Palo Alto Research Center Palo Alto Research Center - XEROX PARC (PARC (Palo Alto Research Center Incorporated, Palo Alto, CA, www.parc.com) Founded in 1970, PARC is a Xerox subsidiary involved in high-tech research and development. Although Xerox's headquarters are in Stamford, Connecticut, and manufacturing and marketing are in Rochester, New York, PARC is ), a subsidiary of Xerox Corporation. Xerox research has resulted in the fabrication of MOEMS that require minimal interconnects, which increases reliability and also decreases manufacturing cost - both important factors to the continued adoption of MOEMS in biomedical, telecommunications, automotive and aerospace industries. Xerox also is a founding partner in New York State's recently announced Center for Excellence in Microsystems and Photonics, an advanced research and manufacturing facility that will help speed the transformation of this research into reality. In addition, Xerox is the lead partner in the MOEMS Manufacturing Consortium -- a $14 million Advanced Technology Program administered by the National Institute of Standards and Technology National Institute of Standards and Technology, governmental agency within the U.S. Dept. of Commerce with the mission of "working with industry to develop and apply technology, measurements, and standards" in the national interest. (NIST (National Institute of Standards & Technology, Washington, DC, www.nist.gov) The standards-defining agency of the U.S. government, formerly the National Bureau of Standards. It is one of three agencies that fall under the Technology Administration (www.technology. ) -- to develop a broadly enabling fabrication process for MOEMS. Xerox Corporation, one of the world's top technology innovators, spends about $1 billion annually on research and development. It operates six research and technology centers in the United States, Canada and Europe that conduct work in color science, computing, digital imaging, work practices, electromechanical systems, novel materials and other disciplines connected to Xerox's expertise in printing and document management. Xerox consistently builds its inventions into business by embedding them in superior Xerox products and solutions, using them as the foundation of new businesses, or licensing or selling them to other entities. NOTE TO EDITORS: For more information about Xerox, visit www.xerox.com/news. XEROX(R), The Document Company(R)and the digital X(R)are trademarks of XEROX CORPORATION. Note: A Photo is available at URL URL in full Uniform Resource Locator Address of a resource on the Internet. The resource can be any type of file stored on a server, such as a Web page, a text file, a graphics file, or an application program. : http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/photo.cgi?pw.081902/bb1 |
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