JOURNAL ARTICLE

Fault-tolerant drive electronics for a Xinetics deformable mirror at GeMS DM0

Michael J. Barberio

Year: 2016 Journal:   Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering/Proceedings of SPIE Vol: 9909 Pages: 990985-990985   Publisher: SPIE

Abstract

Gemini South is replacing one of the (3) CILAS DMs with a 349-actuator Xinetics DM in its GeMS MCAO system. Xinetics mirrors operate over a 40-100V dynamic range and require that inter-actuator stroke differences are limited to half-scale; each actuator must be within 30V of its neighbor to prevent mechanical stress and possible face sheet separation. A robust way to implement this protection is to use high power transient voltage suppressors (TVSs) as a 2D-mesh between the amplifiers and mirror, but this has system implications. A sustained clamp condition dissipates significant power in the devices, and if an actuator fails as short (which occurred once with the DM in a thermal chamber), the system is subject to a cascade failure event as multiple outputs drive the shorted actuator through the TVS network. This latter risk is readily resolved by using series fuses to the DM. In this third-generation driver, current sensing and logic inhibit amplifier outputs after a sustained TVS clamp condition or shorted output, and LED indicators show the location. Redundant thermal sensing is used on modular TVS row and column boards. A second 2D-mesh of high impedance resistors after the fuses will hold an unpowered channel to the average voltage of its neighbors, with a negligible influence function. A Failure Modes and Effects Analysis shows significant fault tolerance.

Keywords:
Actuator Computer science Amplifier Resistor Modular design Clamping Voltage Transient (computer programming) Fault (geology) Power (physics) Electrical engineering Engineering Physics Telecommunications

Metrics

0
Cited By
0.00
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
2
Refs
0.07
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Topics

Geophysics and Sensor Technology
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Ocean Engineering
Semiconductor materials and devices
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

Deformable mirror technologies at AOA Xinetics

Allan WirthJeffrey CavacoTheresa L. BrunoKevin Ezzo

Journal:   Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering/Proceedings of SPIE Year: 2013 Vol: 8780 Pages: 87800M-87800M
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Next-generation deformable mirror electronics

Michael J. BarberioKarl Wagner

Journal:   Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering/Proceedings of SPIE Year: 2004 Vol: 5490 Pages: 1579-1579
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Test results for an AOA-Xinetics grazing incidence x-ray deformable mirror

Charles F. LillieRichard G. EganFranklin M. LandersJeffrey CavacoKevin EzzoAli M. Khounsary

Journal:   Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering/Proceedings of SPIE Year: 2014 Vol: 9208 Pages: 92080C-92080C
JOURNAL ARTICLE

SWITCHED RELUCTANCE DRIVE AS FAULT TOLERANT DRIVE

M. BadrR. MostafaAmged S. El-Wakeel

Journal:   The International Conference on Electrical Engineering/The International Conference on Electrical Engineering Year: 1998 Vol: 1 (1)Pages: 246-258
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.