| Literature DB >> 33398120 |
Jongwon Oh1, Dahye Baek1, Tae Kyung Lee1,2, Dongwon Kang3, Hyeri Hwang1, Eun Min Go1, Inkyu Jeon1, Younghoon You1, Changil Son1, Dowon Kim1, Minji Whang3, Kibum Nam4, Moonjeong Jang5, Jung-Hoon Park4, Sang Kyu Kwak6, Jungwook Kim7, Jiseok Lee8.
Abstract
Polymeric materials have been used to realize optical systems that, through periodic variations of their structural or optical properties, interact with light-generating holographic signals. Complex holographic systems can also be dynamically controlled through exposure to external stimuli, yet they usually contain only a single type of holographic mode. Here, we report a conjugated organogel that reversibly displays three modes of holograms in a single architecture. Using dithering mask lithography, we realized two-dimensional patterns with varying cross-linking densities on a conjugated polydiacetylene. In protic solvents, the organogel contracts anisotropically to develop optical and structural heterogeneities along the third dimension, displaying holograms in the form of three-dimensional full parallax signals, both in fluorescence and bright-field microscopy imaging. In aprotic solvents, these heterogeneities diminish as organogels expand, recovering the two-dimensional periodicity to display a third hologram mode based on iridescent structural colours. Our study presents a next-generation hologram manufacturing method for multilevel encryption technologies.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33398120 DOI: 10.1038/s41563-020-00866-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841