Advanced Photonics, Volume. 3, Issue 2, 024001(2021)
Light field on a chip: metasurface-based multicolor holograms
Fig. 1. Multicolor holograms that employ angular multiplexing. (a) Multicolor images generated by off-axis illumination of the metasurface hologram. The metasurface consists of nanoslits in a gold film. (b) Multicolor hologram that consists of nanoslits in an aluminum film. (c) Schematic of phase modulation by athermal photoreduction using a single fs pulse. A pulse passes through a parallel digitalization objective and generates a focal spot array with different intensities, which in turn leads to refractive-index modulation of the rGO composite. (d) Multicolor image generated by illuminating the metasurface with R, G, and B beams at different angles. The figures are reproduced with permission from (a) Ref. 70, (b) Ref. 71, (c), (d) Ref. 72.
Fig. 2. Multicolor holograms by the polarization multiplexing method. (a) Design process for the vectorial color holographic metasurface. (b) Schematic of 6-bit metasurface. Holographic images that result from the state (color and polarization) of the incident light as denoted by codes 010000, 001000, 000100, 000110, 000101, 000011, 111000, and 001110 are shown in the right panel of the image. Figures reproduced with permission from (a) Ref. 64 and (b) Ref. 75.
Fig. 3. Narrow band CP converters-based multicolor holograms. (a) Solid curves: simulated diffraction efficiency of three nanoblock types, denoted by
Fig. 4. Color printing and holography by the narrow band CP converters. (a) Schematic of a shallow plasmonic grating. (b) Printed image observed with the white light microscope. This chip would be used with a “decryption device” that ensures that the incident light and the detected light are both CP with the same helicity. (c) Holographic image generated when the chip is illuminated by R, G, and B laser beams. (d) Schematics of a nanoblock (right) and a nanoblock dimer (left), which make up the metasurface. (e) Optical microscope image of the hologram when viewed under white light illumination. (f) Two-color (R & G) holographic image. (g) Unit cell of the metasurface hologram, containing two crystalline silicon nanoblocks. (h) Color printed image (left) and reconstructed holographic image (right). The figures are reproduced with permission from: (a)–(c) Ref. 80; (d)–(f) Ref. 81; (g), (h) Ref. 82.
Fig. 5. Dispersion phase-based multicolor holograms. (a) Simulated reflectance spectra, with the nanorod length varied. (b) Simulated reflectance and phase at
Fig. 6. Detour phase-based metasurface consisting of color holograms encoded into color printed images. (a) Schematic of a
Fig. 7. Monolithically integrated metasurfaces that consist of a color filter layer and a phase-only hologram layer. (a) Schematic of the pixel that functions as both a color filter (via nanopillars) and as a phase plate (via thin film under the pillars). (b) Transmission optical micrograph of a color printed image. It contains six colors: red, green, blue, orange, yellow, and purple. (c)–(e) Holographic images produced by illumination with R, G, and B laser beams. (f) Schematic of a metasurface unit cell. The Ag-HSQ-Ag cavity serves as a transmission-type color filter. PMMA nanoholes control the phase of transmitted light. The PMMA layer is separated from the color filter by an HSQ layer. (g) Simulated and experimentally measured transmission spectra of R, G, and B color filters. These are optimized for operation at 450, 532, and 633 nm. The solid/dashed darker blue curves represent experimental/theoretical transmission spectra when the Ag layers (both top and bottom Ag layers in MIM filter) are 26 nm and the total filter height is 93 nm. The thickness of the Ag layer and the height of the structure are listed for the other cases:
Fig. 8. Multicolor holograms realized with binary/complex amplitude modulation. (a) Design process for a multicolor hologram consisting of circularly and elliptically shaped silver particles. (b) Two-color holographic image produced by illumination of a metasurface with red and blue laser beams. (c) Schematic of a metasurface waveguide system. R, G, and B laser beams are coupled into a waveguide by a grating coupler. (d) Holographic image produced by a metasurface waveguide system. R, G, and B light in waveguides is coupled out into free space by the grating-based metasurface to form the holographic image. (e) Unit cell of the device termed a “multifreedom metasurface” by Deng et al.95 Amplitude, phase, and polarization of the reflected light can be controlled by the parameters
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Dandan Wen, Jasper J. Cadusch, Jiajun Meng, Kenneth B. Crozier, "Light field on a chip: metasurface-based multicolor holograms," Adv. Photon. 3, 024001 (2021)
Category: Reviews
Received: Nov. 2, 2020
Accepted: Jan. 26, 2021
Posted: Jan. 27, 2021
Published Online: Mar. 4, 2021
The Author Email: Crozier Kenneth B. (kcrozier@unimelb.edu.au)