Abstract

A recently developed color printing system on glass plates, based on dot-by-dot laser irradiation generating the growth of metallic nanoparticles in a special coating, produces structural colors depending strongly on the illumination and observation configuration. The difficulty for an exhaustive color characterization of the printing technology comes not only from the goniochromaticity of the samples, but also from their very high specularity, to which classical measurement instruments are not adapted. Moreover, as the light-matter interaction relies on a number of optical phenomena (surface plasmon resonance, interferences , diffraction, effects of polarization of light) for which no predictive model is available today, their characterization requires measurement of many printed samples. In this paper, we present a characterization method based on multispec-tral imaging and on spectral prediction for halftone colors that permitted a first gamut estimation in three specific illumination/viewing configurations. Recent progresses in nanotechnologies enable the coloration of glass with interesting visual rendering. This is for example the case of the technology developed by the la-boratoire Hubert Curien, called PICSULP [1], where a coating containing silver [2] is deposited on the glass plate, then irradiated by a laser beam in order to anneal the coating and cluster the metallic ions into metallic nanoparticles (NPs). Goniochromatic col-oration of the glass plate surface is thus obtained thanks to various optical phenomena: the presence of silver NPs generates surface plasmon resonance, therefore wavelength-selective absorption as in stained glass [3]; the organization of the NPs along one plane parallel to the coating-air interface generates interferences as in thin films; the NPs can even be aligned along parallel lines, as shown in Figure 1-a, which produces diffraction effects visible at grazing angles, and also gives to the sample a dichroic spectral behavior , i.e. polarization sensitive colors [4,5]. These optical effects are influenced by several physical parameters: the nanoparticle shape, size and spatial organization, as well

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