Overview
FrançaisABSTRACT
Binary optics are optical components coded by a succession of patterns, either opaque or transparent; or etched or not etched. In particular, this paper studies the Self-Imaging Binary Optical Components (COBAI). COBAI are optical components that have the property to replicate, along the propagation axis of light, a single diffractive pattern, some of them being able to channel the light along focal lines. This property provides them outstanding imagery properties different from the ones of conventional optics.
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Read the articleAUTHORS
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Guillaume DRUART: Researcher, engineer Supoptique ONERA Palaiseau, France
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Florence DE LA BARRIERE: Researcher, engineer Supoptique ONERA Palaiseau, France
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Nicolas GUERINEAU: Researcher, Supoptics Engineer ONERA Palaiseau, France
INTRODUCTION
Binary optics are optical components encoded, either in phase or amplitude, by a succession of patterns. Compared with conventional optical components, which use refraction or reflection to modify the direction of light rays, binary components exploit the phenomenon of diffraction, which calls on the wave aspect of light. For a long time, diffraction was seen as a limitation (optical systems are referred to as "diffraction-limited"), but it is now gradually being exploited in optical architectures.
Imaging using binary optics is particularly popular in the gamma-ray and X-ray fields, where the material is highly absorbent. This makes it tricky to create refractive lenses, which require considerable optical thickness, or to use mirrors, where the stacking of reflective dielectric layers can be problematic. With the advent of digital sensors, which enable images to be manipulated after acquisition, some research teams are now looking to take advantage of the original imaging properties of diffractive optics to replace refractive and reflective optics, in order to create lightweight, inexpensive and compact systems. Indeed, the systematic inclusion of cameras in smartphones has considerably reduced the cost of imaging sensors. The production of low-cost sensors from low-cost components for home automation applications makes binary components attractive in the visible and infrared ranges too.
This article highlights the imaging capabilities of Self-Imaging Binary Optical Components (SIBOCs). These have the property of repeating the same diffraction pattern, and some even channel light along focal lines. These COBAIs are the only optical "ingredients" needed to form an image.
The formalism of image formation will not be recalled in this article, the reader can refer to the article
Throughout the article, sidebars discuss the original effects of the various COBAIs.
Finally, a comparative table is presented summarizing the COBAIs presented with their characteristics. They are compared with the focusing binary optics developed in the article
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KEYWORDS
diffraction | imagery | binary optics
This article is included in
Optics and photonics
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Binary optics and imaging applications
Bibliography
Patents
M. Piponnier, J. Primot, G. Druart and N. Guérineau. Guérineau, "Method and device for telemetric imaging", FR2994735(B1), EP2700902(B1), US2014055606(A1), JP2014041126(A), CN103632161(A), 2012
Websites
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coded_aperture
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modified_Uniformly_Redundant_Array
Software tools
Unified optical design software " Wyrowski VirtualLab Fusion ", developed by Wyrowski Photonics UG, distributed and supported by LightTrans GmbH, Jena, Germany
Directory
The study of binary optics is an old discipline and belongs to the toolbox of the researcher/engineer who can revisit these concepts according to his or her application needs. The bulk of current work in photolithography is in the field of nanotechnology and plasmonics, which are not covered in this article. The teams mentioned below have published articles that inspired this article, or have carried out work known to the authors....
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