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Publication | Open Access

Nanoscale liquid crystal polymer Bragg polarization gratings

64

Citations

37

References

2017

Year

Abstract

We experimentally demonstrate nearly ideal liquid crystal (LC) polymer Bragg polarization gratings (PGs) operating at a visible wavelength of 450 nm and with a sub-wavelength period of 335 nm. Bragg PGs employ the geometric (Pancharatnam-Berry) phase, and have many properties fundamentally different than their isotropic analog. However, until now Bragg PGs with nanoscale periods (e.g., < 800 nm) have not been realized. Using photo-alignment polymers and high-birefringence LC materials, we employ multiple thin sublayers to overcome the critical thickness threshold, and use chiral dopants to induce a helical twist that effectively generates a slanted grating. These LC polymer Bragg PGs manifest 85-99% first-order efficiency, 19-29° field-of-view, Q ≈ 17, 200 nm spectral bandwidth, 84° deflection angle in air (in one case), and efficient waveguide-coupling (in another case). Compared to surface-relief and volume-holographic gratings, they show high efficiency with larger angular/spectral bandwidths and potentially simpler fabrication. These nanoscale Bragg PGs manifest a 6π rad/μm phase gradient, the largest reported for a geometric-phase hologram while maintaining a first-order efficiency near 100%.

References

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