| Literature DB >> 28117346 |
Seung-Yeol Lee1,2, Yong-Hae Kim1,1, Seong-M Cho1,1, Gi Heon Kim1,1, Tae-Youb Kim1,1, Hojun Ryu1,1, Han Na Kim1,1, Han Byeol Kang1,1, Chi-Young Hwang1,1, Chi-Sun Hwang1,1.
Abstract
The development of digital holography is anticipated for the viewing of 3D images by reconstructing both the amplitude and phase information of the object. Compared to analog holograms written by a laser interference, digital hologram technology has the potential to realize a moving 3D image using a spatial light modulator. However, to ensure a high-resolution 3D image with a large viewing angle, the hologram panel requires a near-wavelength scale pixel pitch with a sufficient large numbers of pixels. In this manuscript, we demonstrate a digital hologram panel based on a chalcogenide phase-change material (PCM) which has a pixel pitch of 1 μm and a panel size of 1.6 × 1.6 cm2. A thin film of PCM encapsulated by dielectric layers can be used for the hologram panel by means of excimer laser lithography. By tuning the thicknesses of upper and lower dielectric layers, a color-selective diffraction panel is demonstrated since a thin film resonance caused by dielectric can affect to the absorption and diffraction spectrum of the proposed hologram panel. We also show reflection color of a small active region (1 μm × 4 μm) made by ultra-thin PCM layer can be electrically changed.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28117346 PMCID: PMC5259724 DOI: 10.1038/srep41152
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic of the proposed multi-layered GST-based sample and its hologram recording process.
Figure 2(a) Phase-change diagram of GST alloy by measuring its electrical resistivity in a temperature-controlled chamber. (b) Optical characteristics of the 20-nm GST alloy in the amorphous (blue solid) and crystalline (red dashed) states using an ellipsometer system.
Figure 3(a) Schematic diagram for illustrating the major variation of the optical spectrum when amorphous (or crystalline) thin GST film is inserted into ITO on a metal substrate. (b) Simulation (blue dash-dotted) and experimental (red solid) results of the reflection spectra to observe the effects of the GST thickness. (c) Reflectance and reflection phase of the IGI composite layer designed for broadband visible light diffraction (IGI 30/7/30 nm). The upper-right inset shows the abrupt phase difference of reflected light as measured by a Michelson interferometer experiment. (d) The upper-side plots show the experimental results of the reflection spectra for amorphous (solid lines) and crystalline (dashed lines) GST inserted panels designed for red, green, and blue color-selective diffraction. The lower-side plots show the numerical results of the reflection phase difference between the amorphous and crystalline GST insertion cases. The bottom images show the color of reflection panels and their IGI thickness conditions.
Figure 4Reconstructed hologram images from the proposed 1 μm pixel pitch GST-based CGH patterns to verify (a) the different depth information and (b) the full parallax characteristics. (c) Reconstructed hologram images to verify the color-selective diffraction panels. The Lower-side image of each hologram image shows a microscope view of each CGH pattern. (2 μm pixel pitch).
Figure 5(a) Fabricated structure for phase-changing of thin GST film with electric pulse. (b) SEM image of the active region that used in electric pulse experiment. (c) Microscope views of the active region and reference cells before and after the GST phase transition.