Meta-optical devices have emerged as promising candidates for all-optical image processing. These devices are of subwavelength size and have the potential to address limitations of current image processing methods including processing speed, energy requirements as well as form factor. We present experimental results demonstrating the use of thin-film absorbers and optical metasurfaces to real-time detection of edges in images and the visualisation of phase objects including human cancer cells. Furthermore, we discuss progress towards the use of meta-optics for ultra-compact wavefront recovery. The findings to be presented have potential for applications in biological live-cell imaging, ultra-compact medical diagnostic tools, and wavefront correction methods.
We utilised thermal and UV-assisted Nanoimprint Lithography (NIL) i.e. thermal and UV-assisted to produce plasmonic coloration, and compare their ability for scalable fabrication. Several designs are presented and we show the generated colors are dependent on their geometry and the direction of polarisation of incident illumination. Finally, we demonstrated UV-NIL for consistent production of large-area (0.6×0.4 cm2) plasmonic color with extended color gamut.
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