Publication | Closed Access
Printing Beyond sRGB Color Gamut by Mimicking Silicon Nanostructures in Free-Space
320
Citations
51
References
2017
Year
Localized optical resonances in metallic nanostructures have been increasingly used in color printing, demonstrating unprecedented resolution but limited in color gamut. Here, we introduce a new nanostructure design, which broadens the gamut while retaining print resolution. Instead of metals, silicon nanostructures that exhibit localized magnetic and electric dipole resonances were fabricated on a silicon substrate coated with a Si<sub>3</sub>N<sub>4</sub> index matching layer. Index matching allows a suppression of substrate effects, thus enabling Kerker's conditions to be met, that is, sharpened transitions in the reflectance spectra leading to saturated colors. This nanostructure design achieves a color gamut superior to sRGB, and is compatible with CMOS processes. The presented design could enable compact high-resolution color displays and filters, and the use of a Si<sub>3</sub>N<sub>4</sub> antireflection coating can be readily extended to designs with nanostructures fabricated using other high-index materials.
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