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1.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 4340, 2019 09 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31554803

RESUMO

The coloration of some butterflies, Pachyrhynchus weevils, and many chameleons are notable examples of natural organisms employing photonic crystals to produce colorful patterns. Despite advances in nanotechnology, we still lack the ability to print arbitrary colors and shapes in all three dimensions at this microscopic length scale. Here, we introduce a heat-shrinking method to produce 3D-printed photonic crystals with a 5x reduction in lattice constants, achieving sub-100-nm features with a full range of colors. With these lattice structures as 3D color volumetric elements, we printed 3D microscopic scale objects, including the first multi-color microscopic model of the Eiffel Tower measuring only 39 µm tall with a color pixel size of 1.45 µm. The technology to print 3D structures in color at the microscopic scale promises the direct patterning and integration of spectrally selective devices, such as photonic crystal-based color filters, onto free-form optical elements and curved surfaces.

2.
ACS Nano ; 13(3): 3580-3588, 2019 Mar 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30735357

RESUMO

Unlike dye-based colorants, for which dilution results in a decrease in color saturation, a reduction of nanostructure density in plasmonic prints could increase color saturation instead. This interesting observation can be explained by the absorption cross-section of the nanostructure being larger than its physical cross-section. In this paper, we demonstrate the correlation between absorption cross-section and nanostructure density and use it to realize saturated colors by fabricating metal-insulator-metal aluminum nanostructures that support gap-surface plasmons (GSPs). We obtained structures with absorption cross-sections that exceed 10 times their physical cross-sections. The large absorption cross-sections of the GSP structures herald a color-mixing scheme where nanostructures of different hues are combined within subpixels at a constant pitch. The pitch is chosen such that the total absorption cross-section of individual constituents of the cell occupies the unit size area. Using a constant pitch of 320 nm, hence preserving the print resolution, our structures exhibit 45% coverage of the sRGB color space. By employing absorption cross-sections of the nanostructures, we produced black and saturated green pixels, which have been challenging to achieve in plasmonic color printing. The effects of square and hexagonal arrangements on color saturation are investigated, and point mixing effects are observed between individual nanostructures.

3.
ACS Nano ; 12(8): 8616-8624, 2018 Aug 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30048106

RESUMO

A hybrid metal-dielectric nanoantenna promises to harness the large Purcell factor of metallic nanostructures while taking advantage of the high scattering directivity and low dissipative losses of dielectric nanostructures. Here, we investigate a compact hybrid metal-dielectric nanoantenna that is inspired by the Yagi-Uda design. It comprises a metallic gold bowtie nanoantenna feed element and three silicon nanorod directors, exhibiting high unidirectional in-plane directivity and potential beam redirection capability in the visible spectral range. The entire device has a footprint of only 0.38 λ2, and its forward directivity is robust against fabrication imperfections. We use the photoluminescence from the gold bowtie nanoantenna itself as an elegant emitter to characterize the directivity of the device and experimentally demonstrate a directivity of ∼49.2. In addition, we demonstrate beam redirection with our device, achieving a 5° rotation of the main emission lobe with a feed element displacement of only 16 nm. These results are promising for various applications, including on-chip wireless communications, quantum computing, display technologies, and nanoscale alignment.

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