3D-architected gratings for polarization-sensitive, nature-inspired structural color
Structural coloration, a color-generation mechanism often found in nature, arises from light-matter interactions such as diffraction, interference and scattering, with micro- and nanostructured elements. Herein, we systematically study anisotropic, 3D-architected grating structures with polarization...
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Zusammenfassung: | Structural coloration, a color-generation mechanism often found in nature,
arises from light-matter interactions such as diffraction, interference and
scattering, with micro- and nanostructured elements. Herein, we systematically
study anisotropic, 3D-architected grating structures with polarization-tunable
optical properties, inspired by the vivid blue of Morpho butterfly wings. Using
two-photon lithography, we fabricate multilayered gratings, varying parameters
such as height (through scanning speed and laser power), periodicity, and
number of layers. In transmission, significant color transitions from blue to
brown were identified when varying structural parameters and incident light
polarization conditions (azimuthal angle and ellipticity). Based on thin film
diffraction efficiency theory in the Raman-Nath regime, optical
characterization results are analytically explained, evaluating the impact of
each parameter variation. Overall, these findings contribute to technological
implementations of polarization-sensitive, 3D-architected gratings for
structural color applications. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2411.13803 |