TY - JOUR
T1 - Beating spectral bandwidth limits for large aperture broadband nano-optics
AU - Fröch, Johannes E.
AU - Chakravarthula, Praneeth
AU - Sun, Jipeng
AU - Tseng, Ethan
AU - Colburn, Shane
AU - Zhan, Alan
AU - Miller, Forrest
AU - Wirth-Singh, Anna
AU - Tanguy, Quentin A.A.
AU - Han, Zheyi
AU - Böhringer, Karl F.
AU - Heide, Felix
AU - Majumdar, Arka
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/12
Y1 - 2025/12
N2 - Flat optics have been proposed as an attractive approach for the implementation of new imaging and sensing modalities to replace and augment refractive optics. However, chromatic aberrations impose fundamental limitations on diffractive flat optics. As such, true broadband high-quality imaging has thus far been out of reach for fast f-numbers, large aperture, flat optics. In this work, we overcome intrinsic spectral bandwidth limitations, achieving broadband imaging in the visible wavelength range with a flat meta-optic, co-designed with computational reconstruction. We derive the necessary conditions for a broadband, 1 cm aperture, f/2 flat optic, with a diagonal field of view of 30° and average system MTF contrast of 20% or larger for a spatial frequency of 100 lp/mm in the visible band (>30% for <70 lp/mm). Finally, we use a coaxial, dual-aperture system to train the broadband imaging meta-optic with a learned reconstruction method operating on pair-wise captured imaging data. Fundamentally, our work challenges the entrenched belief of the inability of capturing high-quality, full-color images using a single large aperture meta-optic.
AB - Flat optics have been proposed as an attractive approach for the implementation of new imaging and sensing modalities to replace and augment refractive optics. However, chromatic aberrations impose fundamental limitations on diffractive flat optics. As such, true broadband high-quality imaging has thus far been out of reach for fast f-numbers, large aperture, flat optics. In this work, we overcome intrinsic spectral bandwidth limitations, achieving broadband imaging in the visible wavelength range with a flat meta-optic, co-designed with computational reconstruction. We derive the necessary conditions for a broadband, 1 cm aperture, f/2 flat optic, with a diagonal field of view of 30° and average system MTF contrast of 20% or larger for a spatial frequency of 100 lp/mm in the visible band (>30% for <70 lp/mm). Finally, we use a coaxial, dual-aperture system to train the broadband imaging meta-optic with a learned reconstruction method operating on pair-wise captured imaging data. Fundamentally, our work challenges the entrenched belief of the inability of capturing high-quality, full-color images using a single large aperture meta-optic.
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U2 - 10.1038/s41467-025-58208-4
DO - 10.1038/s41467-025-58208-4
M3 - Article
C2 - 40155619
AN - SCOPUS:105001112023
SN - 2041-1723
VL - 16
JO - Nature communications
JF - Nature communications
IS - 1
M1 - 3025
ER -