Abstract

A method to use a pulsed solid-state laser to create structural color modulation on metal-coated colloidal crystal surfaces by changing the scanning speed has been proposed. Vivid colors as cyan, orange, yellow, and magenta are obtained with different predefined stringent geometrical and structural parameters. The effect of laser scanning speeds and polystyrene (PS) particle sizes on the optical properties is studied, and the angle-dependent property of the samples is also discussed. As a result, the reflectance peak is progressively red shifted along with increasing the scanning speed from 4mm/s to 200mm/s with 300nm PS microspheres. Moreover, the influence of the microsphere particle sizes and incident angle are also experimentally investigated. For 420 and 600nm PS colloidal crystals, along with a gradual decrease in the scanning speed of the laser pulse from 100mm/s to 10mm/s and an increase in the incident angle from 15° to 45°, there was a blue shift for two reflection peak positions. This research is a key, low-cost step toward applications in green printing, anti-counterfeiting, and other related fields.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call