4.8 Article

Optical Fourier surfaces

Journal

NATURE
Volume 582, Issue 7813, Pages 506-+

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2390-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Program (FP/2007-2013)/ERC [339905]
  2. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research [Rubicon-680-50-1509, Veni-722.017.002, OCENW.KLEIN.008, Rubicon-680-50-1513]

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Gratings(1) and holograms(2) use patterned surfaces to tailor optical signals by diffraction. Despite their long history, variants with remarkable functionalities continue to be developed(3,4). Further advances could exploit Fourier optics(5), which specifies the surface pattern that generates a desired diffracted output through its Fourier transform. To shape the optical wavefront, the ideal surface profile should contain a precise sum of sinusoidal waves, each with a well defined amplitude, spatial frequency and phase. However, because fabrication techniques typically yield profiles with at most a few depth levels, complex 'wavy' surfaces cannot be obtained, limiting the straightforward mathematical design and implementation of sophisticated diffractive optics. Here we present a simple yet powerful approach to eliminate this design-fabrication mismatch by demonstrating optical surfaces that contain an arbitrary number of specified sinusoids. We combine thermal scanning-probe lithography(6-8) and templating(9) to create periodic and aperiodic surface patterns with continuous depth control and sub-wavelength spatial resolution. Multicomponent linear gratings allow precise manipulation of electromagnetic signals through Fourier-spectrum engineering(10). Consequently, we overcome a previous limitation in photonics by creating an ultrathin grating that simultaneously couples red, green and blue light at the same angle of incidence. More broadly, we analytically design and accurately replicate intricate two-dimensional moire patterns(11,12), quasicrystals(13,14) and holograms(15,16), demonstrating a variety of previously unattainable diffractive surfaces. This approach may find application in optical devices (biosensors(17), lasers(18,19), metasurfaces(4) and modulators(20)) and emerging areas in photonics (topological structures(21), transformation optics(22) and valleytronics(23)).

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