We investigate the influence of Casimir and electrostatic torques on double
beam torsional microelectromechanical systems with materials covering a broad
range of conductivities of more than three orders of magnitude. For the
frictionless autonomous systems, bifurcation and phase space analysis shows
that there is a significant difference between stable and unstable operating
regimes for equal and unequal applied voltages on both sides of the double
torsional system giving rise to heteroclinic and homoclinic orbits,
respectively. For equal applied voltages, only the position of a symmetric
unstable saddle equilibrium point is dependent on the material optical
properties and electrostatic effects, while in any other case there are stable
and unstable equilibrium points are dependent on both factors. For the
periodically driven system, a Melnikov function approach is used to show the
presence of chaotic motion rendering predictions of whether stiction or stable
actuation will take place over long times impossible. Chaotic behavior
introduces significant risk for stiction, and it is more prominent to occur for
the more conductive systems that experience stronger Casimir forces and
torques. Indeed, when unequal voltages are applied, the sensitive dependence of
chaotic motion on electrostatics is more pronounced for the highest
conductivity systems.Comment: 24 pages, 11 figure