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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Color Filter Based on a Sub-wavelength Patterned Metal Grating

TLDR
It was confirmed the introduction of the index matching overlay led to an increase of ~15% in the transmission efficiency and helped combine double bands into a single dominant band as well, thereby improving the color selectivity of the filter.
Abstract
A color filter was demonstrated incorporating a patterned metal grating in a quartz substrate. The filter is created in a metal layer perforated with a symmetric two-dimensional array of circular holes, with the pitch smaller than the wavelength of the visible light. A finite-difference time-domain simulation was performed to analyze the device by investigating the effect of structural parameters like the grating height, the period, the hole size, and the refractive index of the hole-filling material on its performance. The device performance was especially optimized by controlling the refractive index of the material comprising the holes of the grating. And two different devices were fabricated by means of the e-beam direct writing with the following design parameters: the grating height of 50 nm, the two pitches of 340 nm for the red color and 260 nm for the green color. For the prepared device with the period of 340 nm, the center wavelength was 680 nm and the peak transmission 57%. And for the other device with the pitch of 260 nm, the center wavelength was 550 nm and the peak transmission was 50%. The filling of the hole with a material whose refractive index is matched to that of the substrate has led to an increase of in the transmission efficiency.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Plasmonic nanoresonators for high-resolution colour filtering and spectral imaging

TL;DR: This article uses selective conversion between free-space waves and spatially confined modes in plasmonic nanoresonators formed by subwavelength metal-insulator-metal stack arrays to show that the transmission spectra through such arrays can be well controlled by using simple design rules, and high-efficiency colour filters capable of transmitting arbitrary colours can be achieved.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plasmonic color filters for CMOS image sensor applications.

TL;DR: Analysis of hole array filter transmittance and crosstalk suggests that nearest neighbor hole-hole interactions rather than long-range interactions play the dominant role in the transmission properties of plasmonic hole array filters.
Journal ArticleDOI

Angle-Insensitive Structural Colours based on Metallic Nanocavities and Coloured Pixels beyond the Diffraction Limit

TL;DR: In this article, a color filter based on localized resonance in metallic nanoslits by light funneling was proposed, capable of wide color tunability across the entire visible band with pixel size beyond the diffraction limit.
Journal ArticleDOI

Photonic color filters integrated with organic solar cells for energy harvesting.

TL;DR: Photonic nanostructures incorporated with photovoltaics capable of producing desirable colors in the visible band and utilize the absorbed light to simultaneously generate electrical powers are shown.
Journal ArticleDOI

Color Imaging via Nearest Neighbor Hole Coupling in Plasmonic Color Filters Integrated onto a Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor Image Sensor

TL;DR: This work demonstrates that the transmission spectra of finite-size hole arrays can be accurately described by only accounting for up to the second nearest-neighbor scattering-absorption interactions of hole pairs, thus making hole arrays appealing for close-packed color filters for imaging applications.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Extraordinary optical transmission through sub-wavelength hole arrays

TL;DR: In this article, the optical properties of submicrometre cylindrical cavities in metallic films were explored and it was shown that arrays of such holes display highly unusual zero-order transmission spectra at wavelengths larger than the array period, beyond which no diffraction occurs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical properties of the metals Al, Co, Cu, Au, Fe, Pb, Ni, Pd, Pt, Ag, Ti, and W in the infrared and far infrared

TL;DR: The data for the noble metals and Al, Pb, and W can be reasonably fit using the Drude model and it is shown that -epsilon1(omegas) = epsilon2(omega) approximately omega(2)(p)/(2omega( 2)(tau) at the damping frequency omega = omega(tau), where the plasma frequency is omega(p).
Journal ArticleDOI

Theory of extraordinary optical transmission through subwavelength hole arrays.

TL;DR: A fully three-dimensional theoretical study of the extraordinary transmission of light through subwavelength hole arrays in optically thick metal films shows that the enhancement of transmission is due to tunneling through surface plasmons formed on each metal-dielectric interface.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transmission Resonances on Metallic Gratings with Very Narrow Slits

TL;DR: In this paper, a transfer matrix formalism and a quasianalytical model based on a modal expansion were used to transfer light from the upper surface to the lower one.
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