Dual Color Plasmonic Pixels Create a Polarization
Controlled Nano Color Palette
Version 2 2016-02-11, 16:16Version 2 2016-02-11, 16:16
Version 1 2016-02-11, 16:16Version 1 2016-02-11, 16:16
Posted on 2016-01-26 - 00:00
Color
filters based upon nanostructured metals have garnered significant
interest in recent years, having been positioned as alternatives to
the organic dye-based filters which provide color selectivity in image
sensors, as nonfading “printing” technologies for producing
images with nanometer pixel resolution, and as ultra-high-resolution,
small foot-print optical storage and encoding solutions. Here, we
demonstrate a plasmonic filter set with polarization-switchable color
properties, based upon arrays of asymmetric cross-shaped nanoapertures
in an aluminum thin-film. Acting as individual color-emitting nanopixels,
the plasmonic cavity-apertures have dual-color selectivity, transmitting
one of two visible colors, controlled by the polarization of the white
light incident on the rear of the pixel and tuned by varying the critical
dimensions of the geometry and periodicity of the array. This structural
approach to switchable optical filtering enables a single nanoaperture
to encode two information states within the same physical nanoaperture,
an attribute we use here to create micro image displays containing
duality in their optical information states.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCite
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Li, Zhibo; Clark, Alasdair W.; Cooper, Jonathan
M. (2016). Dual Color Plasmonic Pixels Create a Polarization
Controlled Nano Color Palette. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.5b05411