Femtosecond laser direct nanolithography of perovskite hydration for temporally programmable holograms

Modern nanofabrication technologies have propelled significant advancement of high-resolution and optically thin holograms. However, it remains a long-standing challenge to tune the complex hologram patterns at the nanoscale for temporal light field control. Here, we report femtosecond laser direct...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2024-08, Vol.15 (1), p.6661-9, Article 6661
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Yinan, Zhu, Shengting, Hu, Jinming, Gu, Min
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Modern nanofabrication technologies have propelled significant advancement of high-resolution and optically thin holograms. However, it remains a long-standing challenge to tune the complex hologram patterns at the nanoscale for temporal light field control. Here, we report femtosecond laser direct lithography of perovskites with nanoscale feature size and pixel-level temporal dynamics control for temporally programmable holograms. Specifically, under tightly focused laser irradiation, the organic molecules of layered perovskites (PEA) 2 PbI 4 can be exfoliated with nanometric thickness precision and subwavelength lateral size. This creates inorganic lead halide capping nanostructures that retard perovskite hydration, enabling tunable hydration time constant. Leveraging advanced inverse design methods, temporal holograms in which multiple independent images are multiplexed with low cross talk are demonstrated. Furthermore, cascaded holograms are constructed to form temporally holographic neural networks with programmable optical inference functionality. Our work opens up new opportunities for tunable photonic devices with broad impacts on holography display and storage, high-dimensional optical encryption and artificial intelligence. Here, authors report femtosecond laser direct lithography of perovskites system (PEA) 2 PbI 4 , achieving nanoscale feature size and pixel-level control over temporal dynamics for the creation of temporally programmable holograms. These holograms can multiplex multiple independent images with low crosstalk, showing great application potential in tunable photonic devices and holography displays.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-51148-5