Abstract

While interference colors have been known for a long time, conventional color filters have large spatial dimensions and cannot be used to create compact pixelized color pictures. Here we report a simple yet elegant interference-based method of creating microscopic structural color pixels using a single-mask process using standard UV photolithography on an all-dielectric substrate. The technology makes use of the varied aperture-controlled physical deposition rate of low-temperature silicon dioxide inside a hollow cavity to create a thin-film stack with the controlled bottom layer thickness. The stack defines which wavelengths of the reflected light interfere constructively, and thus the cavities act as micrometer-scale pixels of a predefined color. Combinations of such pixels produce vibrant colorful pictures visible to the naked eye. Being fully CMOS-compatible, wafer-scale, and not requiring costly electron-beam lithography, such a method paves the way toward large scale applications of structural colors in commercial products.

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