Angular Multiplexing Nanoprinting with Independent Amplitude Encryption Based on Visible-Frequency Metasurfaces.
Jiao TangZhe LiShuai WanZejing WangChengwei WanChenjie DaiZhongyang LiPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2021)
Two-dimensional (2D) metasurfaces hold great promise to enable multiplexing and multifunctional optical devices due to their artificial freedom in design, device miniaturization, etc. Various multiplexing and multifunctional metasurfaces have been extensively studied, including polarization multiplexing, wavelength multiplexing, and orbit angular momentum (OAM) multiplexing. However, due to the lack of angular encoding freedom, angular multiplexing switchable nanoprinting has rarely been studied or demonstrated yet to the best of our knowledge. Here, we realize angular multiplexing switchable nanoprinting functionality with independent amplitude encryption based on visible-frequency metasurfaces. By screening a large number of structural designs and breaking the angular correlation, we eventually obtain optimal metasurface designs to realize dual-channel arbitrary image encryption. Furthermore, we illustrate that the proposed scheme would serve as an optical information concealment/retrieval strategy by combining the structural color and amplitude modulation. Overall, we believe that angular multiplexing metasurfaces would easily find promising applications, including optical information encryption/concealment, multifunctional switchable devices, and advanced eyeglass-free three-dimensional (3D) stereoscopic displays.