• Advanced Photonics Nexus
  • Vol. 2, Issue 3, 036006 (2023)
Nicolas Barré1、2、3, Ravi Shivaraman4, Simon Moser1, Patrick Salter4, Michael Schmidt2、3, Martin J. Booth3、4, and Alexander Jesacher1、3、*
Author Affiliations
  • 1Medical University of Innsbruck, Institute of Biomedical Physics, Innsbruck, Austria
  • 2Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nürnberg, Institute of Photonic Technologies, Erlangen, Germany
  • 3Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen Graduate School in Advanced Optical Technologies, Erlangen, Germany
  • 4University of Oxford, Department of Engineering Science, Oxford, United Kingdom
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    DOI: 10.1117/1.APN.2.3.036006 Cite this Article Set citation alerts
    Nicolas Barré, Ravi Shivaraman, Simon Moser, Patrick Salter, Michael Schmidt, Martin J. Booth, Alexander Jesacher. Direct laser-written aperiodic photonic volume elements for complex light shaping with high efficiency: inverse design and fabrication[J]. Advanced Photonics Nexus, 2023, 2(3): 036006 Copy Citation Text show less

    Abstract

    Light plays a central role in many applications. The key to unlocking its versatility lies in shaping it into the most appropriate form for the task at hand. Specifically tailored refractive index modifications, directly manufactured inside glass using a short pulsed laser, enable an almost arbitrary control of the light flow. However, the stringent requirements for quantitative knowledge of these modifications, as well as for fabrication precision, have so far prevented the fabrication of light-efficient aperiodic photonic volume elements (APVEs). Here, we present a powerful approach to the design and manufacturing of light-efficient APVEs. We optimize application-specific three-dimensional arrangements of hundreds of thousands of microscopic voxels and manufacture them using femtosecond direct laser writing inside millimeter-sized glass volumes. We experimentally achieve unprecedented diffraction efficiencies up to 80%, which is enabled by precise voxel characterization and adaptive optics during fabrication. We demonstrate APVEs with various functionalities, including a spatial mode converter and combined intensity shaping and wavelength multiplexing. Our elements can be freely designed and are efficient, compact, and robust. Our approach is not limited to borosilicate glass but is potentially extendable to other substrates, including birefringent and nonlinear materials, giving a preview of even broader functionalities, including polarization modulation and dynamic elements.

    1 Introduction

    Light has become an indispensable tool in our modern-day societies. It plays the central role in countless technological solutions, such as in the information transport along glass fibers or in various display, imaging, and sensing applications.1 The increasing significance of light as a tool sparked a sharply rising demand for technologies that enable the temporal and spatial sculpting of light in user-defined ways.24

    Of notable importance are so-called multiplexing applications, where one of many predefined output fields can be created upon presenting a unique predefined input field. Elements that can handle such tasks with high efficiency would find numerous applications in the analysis and synthesis of light fields. Examples range from conventional spectroscopy to complex tasks around information processing and transport. Mode-division multiplexing, for example, is a potential solution for avoiding the threat of reaching an upper limit in communication speed (capacity crunch).58 Meanwhile, optical computing is currently experiencing a revival due to novel ways of manufacturing computer-designed optical networks that enable sophisticated data processing at the speed of light.913

    Optically recorded volume holograms, e.g., from photorefractive materials,14 have traditionally been used for multiplexing applications.15,16 However, creating such holograms requires the realization of matching physical interference patterns at the recording step, and the approach is also limited to photosensitive substrates, which severely limits its practical applicability.

    Aperiodic photonic volume elements (APVEs) can circumvent these limitations: they are designed on the computer and open to a multitude of different manufacturing techniques. For instance, they can be directly written into a substrate by locally changing its three-dimensional (3D) refractive index (RI) distribution in a voxel-by-voxel fashion. However, a major challenge in the production of APVEs is to meet the high accuracy requirements for manufacturing, since producing an efficient APVE puts high demands on the ability to modify the 3D RI distribution with high precision. Since the output light field arises from the interference of thousands of scattered waves, even small errors made on the voxel-scale quickly accumulate and severely degrade the output field quality. For this reason, past demonstrations of manufacturing APVEs in glass have been limited to proof-of-concept studies with rather low diffraction efficiencies17 or restricted to two-dimensional (2D) configurations.18 Recently, two-photon polymerization additive manufacturing of multilayer holograms9 and the fabrication of 3D-graded index materials10 have been demonstrated.

    Here, we introduce an approach for realizing APVEs using direct laser writing in transparent dielectric media, such as glass. Our method allows for obtaining high diffraction efficiencies of up to 80%, many times more than what could previously be achieved.17 This is made possible by employing precise tomographic voxel characterization19 in combination with a design algorithm based on numerical beam propagation and the use of adaptive optics to ensure space-invariant voxel shapes throughout the full body of the APVE. We experimentally demonstrate the design and manufacture of three different, highly integrated APVEs that are optimized for intensity shaping, spatial mode, and wavelength multiplexing.

    We believe that our results represent an important step toward the realization of robust and highly integrated 3D light shapers for many important application fields, such as information transport,8 optical computing,913 imaging through multimode fibers,20 and nonlinear photonics.21 They may further help to obtain fundamental insights in the behavior of quantum states of light upon scattering.22

    2 APVE Concept

    Figure 1(a) shows the basic concept of our photonic volume element, which is a laser-processed 3D region inside a glass substrate containing hundreds of thousands of spatially separated voxels of modified RI at predefined positions. Our approach is based on past demonstrations of direct laser-written aperiodic volume optics17 but is also inspired by previous work on computer-generated 2D holograms based on waveguides.23

    Light manipulation with an APVE. (a) Sketch of a laser-processed glass substrate containing many voxels of modified RI. (b) Tomographically measured RI cross section of a single voxel. (c) Wide-field image taken from a fabricated device.

    Figure 1.Light manipulation with an APVE. (a) Sketch of a laser-processed glass substrate containing many voxels of modified RI. (b) Tomographically measured RI cross section of a single voxel. (c) Wide-field image taken from a fabricated device.

    A single voxel measures only 1.75  μm×7.5  μm×10  μm and is created by moving the z stage (the long horizontal axis) for 10  μm during exposure to the laser focus. Fabrication of the whole device takes about 20 min. The quantitative RI profile of a single voxel across the xy axes, fabricated in Eagle glass, is shown in Fig. 1(b). This profile must be precisely known, as it serves as the basis for the numerical design process. The RI profile characterization is performed in a home-built tomographic microscope.19 The RI distribution of each voxel is assumed to be invariant along the z direction. The input and output fields of the APVE are coupled through its smallest end facets. A wide-field transmission image of a fabricated APVE is shown in Fig. 1(c).

    Our design algorithm operates on a Cartesian grid of size I×J×K, following the directions (x,y,z) of the coordinate system sketched in Fig. 1(a), which defines potential voxel positions. For our demonstrators, I=55, J=14, and 200K400, depending on the device extension along the propagation direction z. This corresponds to a maximum number of voxels, varying between 154,000 and 308,000. The number of voxels in the transverse x and y directions is quite different due to the elongated nature of our reference voxel represented in Fig. 1(b). Basically, the algorithm simulates the light flow through the device using a beam propagation method24 and decides upon the activation of a voxel, depending on whether it would improve the output wavefront or not. In our experimental demonstration, we explored only binary designs made of identical voxels depicted in Fig. 1(b), but the inverse design algorithm we implemented generalizes well to multilevel RI modifications. Details about this algorithm are provided in the Supplemental Material (Sec. S5).

    The successful implementation of our APVE requires not only precise knowledge about the voxel properties but also the manufacturing abilities to produce the same profile reliably at all targeted substrate depths. This can be ensured using dynamic wavefront control, which compensates for spherical aberrations arising when focusing the laser into the substrate.25 Further information about the manufacturing is provided in the Supplemental Material (Sec. S4).

    3 Results

    In the following sections, we explore three types of APVEs, designed for specific applications with different levels of complexity. The first one is a single-mode intensity shaper with a length of only 2 mm and is discussed in Sec. 3.1; the second one is a multicolor (RGB) multiplexer of 3 mm length and is discussed in Sec. 3.2. Finally, a Hermite–Gaussian (HG) six-mode sorter of 4 mm length is discussed in Sec. 3.3.

    3.1 Sculpting Intensity Distributions

    Our APVEs can be optimized to shape user-defined intensity patterns with high efficiency. To demonstrate this, we designed and fabricated an element producing a microscopic “smiley” at its output facet (i.e., the last layer of voxels) when read out with a Gaussian beam at a zero-degree readout angle (vacuum wavelength λ0=640  nm, waist w0=40  μm). The physical dimensions of the element are 0.1  mm×0.1  mm×2  mm, and it contains 55×14×200  voxels. As mentioned earlier, the unequal grid sizes along the x and y directions are due to the anisotropic voxel shape, which is a consequence of the same anisotropic shape of the focus creating the voxel. The device itself, i.e., the 3D region containing fabricated voxels, is embedded inside a larger glass chip for easier handling.

    Figure 2 shows the results obtained with this APVE. It shows the designed output intensity template for a Gaussian input of 40  μm waist as well as the simulated and experimentally obtained results. The simulated result was obtained by numerical propagation of the input beam through a computer model of the optimized voxel arrangement. It thus marks an upper limit for the quality achievable in the experiment. The experimental result was obtained by imaging the output plane with a regular wide-field microscope (see Sec. S1 of the Supplemental Material for additional information about the experimental APVE characterization).

    Results from a smiley generator. (a) Designed output intensity; (b) simulated readout; (c) experimental result. The total light efficiency ηtot of the experimental result is about 80%. The scale bar measures 20 μm.

    Figure 2.Results from a smiley generator. (a) Designed output intensity; (b) simulated readout; (c) experimental result. The total light efficiency ηtot of the experimental result is about 80%. The scale bar measures 20  μm.

    The diffraction efficiency of the APVE has been determined by calculating an overlap integral of the target amplitude pattern ut with the simulated and experimentally measured output amplitude patterns uout over the area of the observable end facet A, η=|Autuout*dA|2,where the powers of ut and uout are both normalized to 1. We introduce another efficiency metric ηtot, which further takes into account scattering losses into nonobservable angles, ηtot=Tη,with transmission factor T1. Therefore, η quantifies the power fraction of the measurable output light [the light arriving at the (simulated or real) camera plane], which is effectively turned into the target distribution, whereas ηtot is the respective conversion efficiency for the input beam. Losses due to Fresnel reflections at the input/output facets of the APVE are neglected in this consideration.

    The theoretical and experimental diffraction efficiencies ηtot of the smiley converter are 90% and 80%, respectively. We note that T1 for the smiley shaper in both simulation and experiment, i.e., the number of scattering losses is close to zero. Since this application aims at intensity-only shaping, the phase distributions of ut and uout are irrelevant and thus assumed to be flat in Eq. (1). We further derived an error metric ϵ, defined as the root mean square difference between the normalized target and the simulated/experimental output intensities. We find ϵsim=0.25, and ϵexp=0.35.

    Therefore, even though the intensity shaping shown here can be easily achieved using 2D diffractive optical elements, we are nevertheless able to simply demonstrate that our computational design approach can be faithfully implemented through the experimental characterization and reproducible manufacture of 3D voxel arrangements inside glass.

    3.2 Wavelength Multiplexing

    We demonstrate the feasibility of color multiplexing by designing and fabricating a multicolor smiley shaper, where different parts of the smiley (eyes, mouth, and head) appear only for specific readout wavelengths, as shown in Fig. 3. This APVE measures 0.1  mm×0.1  mm×3  mm and contains 55×14×300  voxels. When read out at 640 nm with a beam waist of w0=40  μm, only the circular head appears at the output. Similarly, the eyes appear for a readout wavelength of 543 nm (w0=30  μm) and the mouth for 455 nm (w0=20  μm). Results obtained from simulated readouts and experiments using fiber-coupled lasers (see Sec. S2 of the Supplemental Material for details) are summarized in Fig. 3. The image table depicts false-color intensity distributions at the output facet of the APVE, which are individually normalized to their respective peak intensities. The fourth image column on the right shows a computer-generated overlap of the three readouts.

    Wavelength multiplexing. Different parts of the smiley appear, depending on the readout wavelength. (a) Target intensity patterns used for the APVE design. (b) Results from a simulated readout. (c) Experimental readouts.

    Figure 3.Wavelength multiplexing. Different parts of the smiley appear, depending on the readout wavelength. (a) Target intensity patterns used for the APVE design. (b) Results from a simulated readout. (c) Experimental readouts.

    The simulated and experimentally determined power conversion efficiencies η from the three Gaussian input beams to the respective facial structures are summarized in Table 1. The table values are calculated using Eq. (1), i.e., they show which percentage of the output laser power is shaped into the respective facial structures. The average simulated efficiency over all colors is 67% for the simulation and 55% in the experiment. From the table values, it is noticeable that, in particular, the blue wavelength shows the largest disparity between simulation and experiment, with an efficiency of 64% in the simulation and 49% in the experiment. This may be attributed to small remaining differences between the assumed and real voxel profiles at length scales of a few hundred nanometers. Such small irregularities will especially affect shorter wavelengths and are likely to be overlooked by our tomographic voxel characterization method, which employs the same wavelength for inspection and a smoothing total variation norm regularizer.19 The simulated and experimentally measured transmission values T for all three readout wavelengths are shown in Table 2. We observe well-matching numbers between simulation and experiment for the red and green wavelengths, whereas the blue transmission value is around 25% lower in the experiment than predicted by the simulation.

    λ0/nmHeadEyesMouth
    (a)
    6407721
    5438607
    4553764
    (b)
    6406576
    5435506
    4551449

    Table 1. (a) Simulated and (b) experimentally obtained conversion efficiencies η. For each wavelength, the numbers state the respective percentage of the output power forming head, eyes, and mouth.

    640 nm (head)543 nm (eyes)455 nm (mouth)
    T (sim)838287
    T (exp)848266

    Table 2. Simulated and experimentally measured transmission factors T for the color smiley APVE. The values are in percentages.

    The simulated (experimental) total efficiencies ηtot for the head, eyes, and mouth features are therefore 64% (55%), 49 (41%), and 56% (32%), respectively.

    We further investigated the wavelength-dependent APVE properties using a fiber-coupled monochromator (Polychrome IV from TILL Photonics), whose output wavelength was tuned from 420 to 680 nm in steps of 10 nm. In contrast to the laser readouts where each beam had an individual, optimal waist value, the beam waist of the monochromator light at the APVE input facet was about 30  μm for all wavelengths (details are described in Sec. S2 of the Supplemental Material). While this means that the monochromator results are expected to be somewhat suboptimal, they nevertheless provide valuable information about the wavelength dependence of the APVE.

    At each wavelength, we took images of the input beam and the APVE output (see data in Sec. S2 of the Supplemental Material), which allowed us to calculate wavelength-dependent power conversion efficiencies according to Eq. (1) for each spatial feature (mouth, eyes, and head). These efficiencies are plotted in Fig. 4. Of note, the peaks appear at wavelengths that almost exactly match the targets at 455, 543, and 640 nm. The measured efficiencies η at these wavelengths are 63%, 57%, and 63% and thus are close to the simulation values obtained from the laser readouts, as shown in Table 1(a). Interestingly, the blue monochromator image of the mouth shows a significantly higher efficiency than the respective experimental blue laser readout (63% versus 49%), which can presumably be ascribed to small differences in the readout beam profiles. Indeed, while the blue laser profile was slightly elliptic, the monochromator beam was almost perfectly Gaussian.

    Power conversion efficiencies of the multicolor APVE. The solid curves indicate the measured percentage of the output power transformed into the features mouth, eyes, and head, depending on the readout wavelength. The dashed lines correspond to simulated readouts.

    Figure 4.Power conversion efficiencies of the multicolor APVE. The solid curves indicate the measured percentage of the output power transformed into the features mouth, eyes, and head, depending on the readout wavelength. The dashed lines correspond to simulated readouts.

    Figure 4 further contains data from the simulated readouts (dashed lines), which resemble the experimental data. To match the experimental conditions, these simulations assumed a beam waist of 30  μm for all readout wavelengths, which causes the peak efficiency values to be slightly lower than the values in Table 1, which assumes readouts taken at the designed waist values.

    3.3 Angular Multiplexing

    The high angular selectivity of a photonic volume element allows for encoding different outputs for varying input angles. This characteristic makes APVEs highly interesting for tasks such as mode-division multiplexing and sorting. To investigate the feasibility of angular multiplexing for our approach, we designed an APVE measuring only 0.1  mm×0.1  mm×4  mm and containing 55×14×400  voxels, which produces different HG modes, depending on the angle of incidence (AOI) of a Gaussian readout beam.

    Such a device could be used as a mode-division multiplexer to enhance data transfer speed as sketched in Fig. 5: multiple signals are delivered by single-mode fibers in a triangular arrangement, which has been shown to facilitate high HG mode-conversion efficiencies.26 The fiber ends are in the focal plane of a convex lens, which collimates the light leaving the fiber outputs and sends it into the APVE at different fiber-specific propagation angles. The APVE converts each signal into a particular HG mode traveling in parallel to the optical axis, such that it can be efficiently coupled into a single multimode fiber.

    Principle of mode-division multiplexing with our mode sorter. Multiple signals are delivered via single-mode fibers, arranged in a triangle. A lens gives each input beam a specific AOI. The APVE transforms each input beam into one of six different HG modes.

    Figure 5.Principle of mode-division multiplexing with our mode sorter. Multiple signals are delivered via single-mode fibers, arranged in a triangle. A lens gives each input beam a specific AOI. The APVE transforms each input beam into one of six different HG modes.

    We designed a mode-sorting APVE for readout with a Gaussian input of 640 nm wavelength and a 25  μm waist. Altering the input beam’s AOI by merely 1.4 deg (defined in air) transforms the output field from one particular HG mode to another. In total, we encode six different HG modes, as shown in Fig. 5.

    Figure 6 shows the output intensities and phases resulting from a simulated readout of the mode-sorting APVE. The matching experimental data are shown in Fig. 7. For both simulation and experiment, the numerical aperture (NA) at the output needs to be reduced to block stray light produced by the element. This reduces the overall light efficiency but enhances the spatial quality of the generated modes. In simulation, the NA was restricted to 0.02, in experiment to about 0.05.

    Simulated results from the mode sorter. The images show intensities (top row) and phases when reading out the APVE with a Gaussian beam (w0=25 μm, λ0=640 nm) at six different AOIs. Each angle produces a different HG mode at the output. The saturation of the phase images is weighted by the intensity for enhanced clarity.

    Figure 6.Simulated results from the mode sorter. The images show intensities (top row) and phases when reading out the APVE with a Gaussian beam (w0=25  μm, λ0=640  nm) at six different AOIs. Each angle produces a different HG mode at the output. The saturation of the phase images is weighted by the intensity for enhanced clarity.

    Experimental results from the mode sorter. The images show intensities (top row) and phases when reading out the APVE with a Gaussian beam (w0=25 μm, λ0=640 nm) at six different incidence angles.

    Figure 7.Experimental results from the mode sorter. The images show intensities (top row) and phases when reading out the APVE with a Gaussian beam (w0=25  μm, λ0=640  nm) at six different incidence angles.

    As for the APVEs discussed previously, the overall quality of the mode sorter is governed by two factors: (i) the purity of the generated modes and (ii) the transmission of the APVE quantified by parameter T. Although the element itself absorbs almost no light, there is some power loss caused by the aperture stop restricting the imaging NA. We quantified point (i) by calculating efficiency values in analogy to Eq. (1) and taking the different HG modes as target fields, ηi,j=|AHGi,juout*dA|2,where HGi,j and uout* represent the target mode and conjugate output field with their total powers normalized to 1, respectively. An efficiency value of ηi,j=1 means that the field has been shaped into a perfect HGi,j mode, whereas ηi,j=0 means that the field is orthogonal to this mode. Tables 3 and 4 contain efficiency values of the simulated and experimental mode sorter. The off-diagonal terms represent undesired crosstalks into neighboring channels. The purest modes have efficiency values of 90% in the simulation and 88% in the experiment. The highest cross talk values are 3% for the simulation and 5% for the experiment.

    Input angle no.HG00HG10HG20HG01HG11HG02
    190.60.90.62.00.10.3
    20.289.10.90.33.40.1
    30.90.590.20.40.20.1
    40.91.10.287.20.10.4
    50.11.00.00.293.90.2
    61.10.10.11.60.179.6

    Table 3. Simulated efficiency values ηi,j in percent. For each input angle, the numbers state the respective power fractions of the transmitted output light that is shaped into the corresponding HG modes.

    Input angle no.HG00HG10HG20HG01HG11HG02
    188.41.12.60.35.03.5
    20.387.00.31.80.72.5
    30.70.583.80.10.10.2
    40.61.60.183.70.44.4
    52.31.40.70.686.61.2
    61.01.41.24.51.365.7

    Table 4. Experimental efficiency values ηi,j in percentages.

    The mode-dependent transmission of the APVE (ii), including both losses due to scattering and spatial filtering by the restricted imaging NA, are summarized in Table 5. Moreover, the dependence of the transmission and the maximum cross talk with respect to the restricted NA are shown in Fig. 8. This shows that the stray light that is not converted to the desired modes by the device has mostly high spatial frequencies, orthogonal to the desired modes, and that the quality of the mode conversion is very robust with respect to this unconverted light.

    HG00HG10HG20HG01HG11HG02
    T (sim)50.049.249.542.257.948.9
    T (exp)21.629.620.438.833.032.3

    Table 5. Simulated and experimental transmission values T. For each mode, the numbers state the output/input power ratio in percentages.

    Evolution of the transmission T and the maximum crosstalk in function of the restricted NA.

    Figure 8.Evolution of the transmission T and the maximum crosstalk in function of the restricted NA.

    These results are still far from what could be theoretically obtained with a gradient index design,27 but they are surprisingly good for a binary design. Introducing different types of voxels as new degrees of freedom for the inverse design optimization could significantly improve the capabilities of these mode multiplexers and approach the maximum performance of gradient index designs, for which a mature manufacturing technology is not yet available in glass.

    4 Discussion

    In this discussion section, we place our method in the context of related technological approaches.

    4.1 Optically Recorded Volume Holograms

    An important difference between traditional volume holograms and our APVEs exists in the physics of their creation. Traditional holograms are optically recorded by transferring the properties of interference patterns into a photosensitive material, such as a photopolymer28,29 or a photorefractive crystal,30 which naturally comes with limitations. First, each desired function must be physically realized at the recording step, which becomes unfeasible for advanced multiplexing applications. Second, one is bound to a limited number of suitable photosensitive materials. Finally, the dynamic range of optically recorded holograms is quickly consumed by only a few multiplexed recordings, which has an adverse effect on the obtainable diffraction efficiency.10

    4.2 Metaholograms

    In contrast to the APVE concept presented here, metaholograms rely on nanostructured metallic or dielectric surfaces, on which “meta-atoms” interact with light in predefined ways.3134 While the concept has proven to be especially powerful for wavelength and polarization-multiplexing tasks, angular multiplexing, i.e., the generation of different output fields at varying input angles, appears harder to achieve: only up to four multiplexed fields could be generated upon a large angular variation of more than 60 deg.35 Some folded multiplane designs using metasurfaces have been realized recently to increase the multiplexing capabilities of these metaholograms.36 Yet, the advantages of using metasurfaces in this context seems limited, since three reflections are required to achieve only a three-mode sorter, which is not significantly better than what more conventional cascaded diffractive optical elements can provide.9

    4.3 Silicon Photonics

    The field of silicon photonics,37,38 i.e., the manufacturing and use of photonic integrated circuits inside silicon, has been attracting considerable attention for more than a decade. The fabrication of photonic chips can rely on existing infrastructure and lithographic techniques used in the electronic semiconductor industry and enables structure sizes down to a few nanometers. The field of silicon photonics is comparably mature, and the demonstration of wavelength multiplexing, for instance, dates back to the 1990s39 and has been further developed toward high integration by employing modern tools of inverse design.40 Spatial multimode operations were developed later, but are likewise possible in a highly integrated fashion.41 Compared with silicon photonics, which is bound to infrared wavelengths, our approach offers a wavelength window reaching down to the ultraviolet (UV), depending on the substrate, and is potentially applicable to a larger variety of materials offering different optical properties, including electro-optical and nonlinear ones. Furthermore, glasses as substrate facilitate novel applications linking optical and microfluidic technologies42 and allow for easier light coupling compared with silicon, where mode mismatch can cause important insertion losses.43 Lastly, the manufacturing of 3D devices is more innate to direct laser writing than it is to standard lithographic techniques44 and also puts lower demands on the required infrastructure (no clean room required).

    4.4 Writing Voxels for Data Storage

    From the manufacturing point of view, our approach is related to storing data by writing of voxels inside polymers or glass.45,46 This application has already reached an impressive maturity level, employing birefringent multilevel voxels.47 However, in contrast to our application, data storage applications put significantly lower demands on the knowledge about the quantitative 3D properties of a single voxel, as well as their reproducible and spatially invariant fabrication, since they can be read out sequentially, and any slight deviation from the assumed voxel shape would be irrelevant, since only a few bits are encoded in a single voxel. Conversely, hundreds of thousands of voxels act jointly on the readout light in our APVEs, such that even small systematic errors at the single voxel level would have pronounced adverse effects on the sculpted fields.

    5 Conclusion and Summary

    We present a design and fabrication concept for robust and light efficient APVEs. Our design algorithm uses a mode-matching method and numerical beam propagation. The manufacturing is based on directly writing an optimized 3D arrangement of voxels into the volume of a transparent dielectric such as glass using a focused femtosecond laser. Each voxel consists of a small volume (∼1.75  μm×7.5  μm×10  μm) of slightly increased RI. Precise knowledge of the properties of a single voxel, in conjunction with an advanced fabrication technique, allowed us to physically realize APVEs of high efficiencies of up to 80%.

    We experimentally realize three different APVE designs demonstrating different functionalities: an intensity shaper turning a Gaussian beam into a smiley-shaped light distribution, a wavelength multiplexer producing different parts of the smiley for three different readout wavelengths, and a spatial mode multiplexer, which converts a Gaussian input beam into particular HG modes, depending on the AOI.

    While our proof-of-concept studies already show unprecedented performance, our APVE concept still has room for improvement in several respects and promises significantly higher efficiency and more complex functionalities in the future. For instance, our APVEs are made from a single voxel type, i.e., they are binary devices. However, it is straightforward to extend the design concept to nonbinary devices. On the manufacturing side, the use of varying laser powers, focus shapes, or multipass writing could be used to fabricate multiple different RI profiles. Nonbinary devices will be able to store more information and exhibit higher efficiencies. In addition, our concept is extensible to different types of substrates, including birefringent, electro-optic, and nonlinear substrates, potentially offering the possibility of polarization shaping, dynamic, or even erasable ferroelectric APVEs.48

    Biographies of the authors are not available.

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    Nicolas Barré, Ravi Shivaraman, Simon Moser, Patrick Salter, Michael Schmidt, Martin J. Booth, Alexander Jesacher. Direct laser-written aperiodic photonic volume elements for complex light shaping with high efficiency: inverse design and fabrication[J]. Advanced Photonics Nexus, 2023, 2(3): 036006
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