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Plasmonic ommatidia for lensless compound-eye vision

Engineering and Technology

Plasmonic ommatidia for lensless compound-eye vision

L. C. Kogos, Y. Li, et al.

Discover the innovation behind a lensless planar architecture for a compound-eye camera that employs plasmonic nanostructures for directional photodetection. This groundbreaking research by Leonard C. Kogos, Yunzhe Li, Jianing Liu, Yuyu Li, Lei Tian, and Roberto Paiella reveals techniques for reconstructing high-quality images, paving the way for ultrathin cameras with expansive fields of view.... show more
Abstract
The vision system of arthropods such as insects and crustaceans is based on the compound-eye architecture, consisting of a dense array of individual imaging elements (ommatidia) pointing along different directions. This arrangement is particularly attractive for imaging applications requiring extreme size miniaturization, wide-angle fields of view, and high sensitivity to motion. However, the implementation of cameras directly mimicking the eyes of common arthropods is complicated by their curved geometry. Here, we describe a lensless planar architecture, where each pixel of a standard image-sensor array is coated with an ensemble of metallic plasmonic nanostructures that only transmits light incident along a small geometrically-tunable distribution of angles. A set of near-infrared devices providing directional photodetection peaked at different angles is designed, fabricated, and tested. Computational imaging techniques are then employed to demonstrate the ability of these devices to reconstruct high-quality images of relatively complex objects.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Apr 02, 2020
Authors
Leonard C. Kogos, Yunzhe Li, Jianing Liu, Yuyu Li, Lei Tian, Roberto Paiella
Tags
lensless camera
compound-eye
plasmonic nanostructures
photodetection
computational imaging
ultrathin
high-quality images
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