Advanced Photonics, Volume. 5, Issue 4, 046009(2023)
Optical information transfer through random unknown diffusers using electronic encoding and diffractive decoding Author Presentation
Fig. 1. Pipeline of the hybrid electronic encoder and optical diffractive decoder for optical information transfer through random unknown diffusers. (a) Schematic drawing of the presented diffractive decoder, which all-optically decodes the encoded information distorted by random phase diffusers without the need for a digital computer. (b) Workflow of the hybrid electronic-optical model: the electronic neural network encodes the input objects into 2D phase patterns and the all-optical diffractive neural network decodes the information transmitted through random, unknown phase diffusers.
Fig. 2. Comparison between all-optical diffractive networks and the hybrid electronic-optical models for transferring optical information through random unknown diffusers. (a) Schematic of a four-layer diffractive network trained to all-optically reconstruct the amplitude images of input objects through random phase diffusers without electronic encoding. (b) Schematic of a four-layer diffractive decoder with an electronic encoder jointly trained to decode the encoded optical image through random unknown diffusers. (c) The information transmission fidelity (PCC) of the two approaches (all-optical versus hybrid) as a function of the Fresnel number (
Fig. 3. Optical information transfer through random phase diffusers using electronic encoding and diffractive decoding. (a) Random phase diffusers with a correlation length
Fig. 4. Simulation results of the hybrid electronic-optical model for optical information transmission through unknown random phase diffusers.
Fig. 5. Additional trainable diffractive layers (increasing
Fig. 6. The impact of the phase bit depth on the optical information transfer fidelity. (a) The joint model trained without any bit-depth limitations, i.e., 16-bit phase representation, and tested with restricted bit-depth phase patterns and decoder pairs. The average PCC value for 10,000 handwritten test digits transmitted through
Fig. 7. The electronic encoder and the diffractive decoder trained and tested with different levels of phase bit-depth. The average PCC values are listed for each case.
Fig. 8. Experimental demonstration of optical information transfer through an unknown random diffuser using a jointly trained pair of an electronic encoder and an optical decoder. (a) Schematic of the joint model for experimental demonstration. (b) Left: height profiles of a new random diffuser (never seen before) and the trained diffractive layers of the all-optical decoder. Right: the fabricated new random diffuser and the diffractive layers used in the experiment. (c) Schematic of the terahertz system. (d) Photograph of the experimental setup and the 3D-printed diffractive decoder.
Fig. 9. Experimental results of optical information transfer through an unknown random phase diffuser using the 3D-printed diffractive decoder with electronic encoding.
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Yuhang Li, Tianyi Gan, Bijie Bai, Çağatay Işıl, Mona Jarrahi, Aydogan Ozcan, "Optical information transfer through random unknown diffusers using electronic encoding and diffractive decoding," Adv. Photon. 5, 046009 (2023)
Category: Research Articles
Received: Mar. 30, 2023
Accepted: Jul. 13, 2023
Posted: Jul. 13, 2023
Published Online: Aug. 30, 2023
The Author Email: Ozcan Aydogan (ozcan@ucla.edu)