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Subwavelength Imaging using a Solid-Immersion Diffractive Optical Processor

Authors :
Hu, Jingtian
Liao, Kun
Dinc, Niyazi Ulas
Gigli, Carlo
Bai, Bijie
Gan, Tianyi
Li, Xurong
Chen, Hanlong
Yang, Xilin
Li, Yuhang
Isil, Cagatay
Rahman, Md Sadman Sakib
Li, Jingxi
Hu, Xiaoyong
Jarrahi, Mona
Psaltis, Demetri
Ozcan, Aydogan
Source :
eLight (2024)
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Phase imaging is widely used in biomedical imaging, sensing, and material characterization, among other fields. However, direct imaging of phase objects with subwavelength resolution remains a challenge. Here, we demonstrate subwavelength imaging of phase and amplitude objects based on all-optical diffractive encoding and decoding. To resolve subwavelength features of an object, the diffractive imager uses a thin, high-index solid-immersion layer to transmit high-frequency information of the object to a spatially-optimized diffractive encoder, which converts/encodes high-frequency information of the input into low-frequency spatial modes for transmission through air. The subsequent diffractive decoder layers (in air) are jointly designed with the encoder using deep-learning-based optimization, and communicate with the encoder layer to create magnified images of input objects at its output, revealing subwavelength features that would otherwise be washed away due to diffraction limit. We demonstrate that this all-optical collaboration between a diffractive solid-immersion encoder and the following decoder layers in air can resolve subwavelength phase and amplitude features of input objects in a highly compact design. To experimentally demonstrate its proof-of-concept, we used terahertz radiation and developed a fabrication method for creating monolithic multi-layer diffractive processors. Through these monolithically fabricated diffractive encoder-decoder pairs, we demonstrated phase-to-intensity transformations and all-optically reconstructed subwavelength phase features of input objects by directly transforming them into magnified intensity features at the output. This solid-immersion-based diffractive imager, with its compact and cost-effective design, can find wide-ranging applications in bioimaging, endoscopy, sensing and materials characterization.<br />Comment: 32 Pages, 9 Figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
eLight (2024)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2401.08923
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s43593-024-00067-5