Abstract
Birefringent color filters serve a critical role in next-generation display systems, including augmented-/virtual-/mixed-reality headsets, and many types of optical remote sensing. Most prior polarization interference filters (PIFs) employ many individually aligned plates that enable only relatively thick color filters (≥100s of µm), are usually limited to small clear apertures (few cm), and offer poor off-axis performance. Here, we report on a family of monolithic, thin-film, birefringent PIFs formed using liquid crystal polymer (LCP) network materials, also known as reactive mesogens. These multi-twist retarders (MTRs) are only a few µm thick and have a single alignment surface. They offer high color saturation with a notch-type pass/stopband, analogous to Solc PIFs and stable off-axis performance. Here, we apply simplifying assumptions inspired by Solc PIFs, and develop a design method resulting in MTRs with an alternating achiral/chiral architecture. We theoretically and experimentally presented three types of MTR color filters (blue-yellow, green-magenta, and cyan-red), which manifest strong color filtering behavior and improved angular performance (up to ±20°) with larger color space coverage and high total light efficiency compared to their Solc filters counterparts. Such high-saturated and wide-viewing MTR color filters can be promising elements to maintain the system field of view (FOV) in the next-generation displays or spectral imaging applications.
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