The invention generally relates to optical filters. More particularly the current invention relates to a single photonic crystal slab isotropic image filter device operating in the wavevector domain.
Filtering in the wavevector domain is widely used in image processing. Due to the two-dimensional nature of images, isotropic filters, where the responses depend on the magnitude but not the orientation of the wavevectors, are particularly useful. The most commonly used isotropic filters are high-pass, low-pass, band-reject, and band-pass filters, all defined in the wavevector domain.
In conventional Fourier optics, to achieve filtering in the wavevector domain, one first obtains a Fourier transformation of an image on a Fourier plane by passing the image through a lens. One then performs spatial filtering on the Fourier plane, followed by a Fourier transformation again through a second lens. Such a technique requires long propagation distance and therefore results in a bulky system.
In recent years, there has been significant progress in using nanophotonic structures to develop a compact device for analog optical computing. Specifically, many efforts have been made on achieving spatial differentiation of an incoming image, which in fact corresponds to a high-pass filter in the wavevector domain. While most initial works on nanophotonic structures have focused on demonstrating one-dimensional differential operators, more recent works have shown that two-dimensional differential operators, including, in particular, the Laplace operator, which is a high-pass filter, can be achieved using nanophotonic structures in either reflection or transmission.
What is needed is a compact, real-time and high-throughput image processing device with reduced energy consumption and increased speed.
To address the needs in the art, an isotropic imaging filter is provided that includes a photonic crystal slab, where the photonic crystal slab includes a square lattice of air through holes, a dielectric constant, a thickness (d), a through hole radius (r), and a lattice constant (a), where the square lattice of air holes are separated according to a value of the lattice constant, where the thickness is configured according to d=M(a), where the through hole radii is configured according to r=N(a), where the thickness and the hole radii are configured to generate isotropic bands of guided resonances of an incident image.
According to one aspect of the invention, the guided resonances can include an isotropic high-pass filtered image, an isotropic low-pass filtered image, an isotropic band-reject filtered image, or an isotropic band-pass filtered image, where the isotropic low-pass filtered image and the isotropic band-pass filtered image comprise a reflected incident image, where the isotropic high-pass filtered image and the isotropic band-reject filtered image include a transmitted incident image. In one aspect, the invention further includes a beam splitter, where the beam splitter is configured to separate the incident image from the reflected incident image.
In another aspect of the invention, the photonic crystal slab includes a dielectric material.
According to another aspect, the invention further includes a uniform dielectric slab with a thickness ds disposed proximal to the photonic crystal slab, wherein an air gap dg between the uniform dielectric slab and the photonic crystal slab is configured according to dg=T(a), where ds is configured according to ds=B(a), where ds and the dg are disposed to set a background transmission to unity. In one aspect, the uniform dielectric slab gap factor T has a value that disposes the dielectric slab in a position to set a background transmission to unity.
In another aspect of the invention, the hole radii factor N has a value in a range of N 0.5.
In a further aspect of the invention, the thickness factor M and the radii N are optimized together to establish an isotropic band structure of a guided resonance.
x,
y). (3D) Log plot of the Fourier transform of the field profile for the reflected image (3F): log|{tilde over (S)}out|(
x,
y). The low wavevector components have been filtered out. (3E) Incident image |Sin|2 of the Stanford emblem. The image size is 5220a×3456a. (3F) Calculated transmitted image |Sout|2, which shows the edges with different orientations. |k|kx, and ky are in units of 10−2×2π/a, according to the current invention.
x,
y). (4D) Log plot of the Fourier transform of the field profile for the reflected image (4F): log|{tilde over (S)}out|(
x,
y). The high wavevector components have been filtered out. (4E) Incident image |Sout|2 of the Stanford emblem corrupted by white noise. The image size is 5220a×3456a. (4F) Calculated reflected image |Sout|2, which reduces the white noise by image smoothing. |k|kx, and ky are in units of 10−2×2π/a, according to the current invention.
x,
y). The sinusoidal noise appears as peaks in the spectrum, which lie on an approximate circle around the origin. (5D) Log plot of the Fourier transform of the field profile for the transmitted image (5F): log|{tilde over (S)}out|(
x,
y). The wavevector components corresponding to the periodic noise have been filtered out. (5E) Incident image |Sin|2 of the Stanford emblem corrupted by sinusoidal noise. The image size is 5220a×3456a. (5F) Calculated transmitted image |Sout|2, which eliminates the periodic noise. |k|kx, and ky are in units of 10−2×2π/a, according to the current invention.
x,
y). The sinusoidal noise appears as impulses in the spectrum, which lie on an approximate circle around the origin. (6D) Log plot of the Fourier transform of the field profile for the reflected image (6F): log|{tilde over (S)}out|(
x,
y). (6E) Incident image |Sin|2 of the Stanford emblem corrupted by sinusoidal noise. The image size is 5220a×3456a. (6F) Calculated reflected image |Sout|2 which isolates the periodic noise and simplifies its analysis. |k|kx, and k are in units of 10−2×2π/a, according to the current invention.
Disclosed herein is a showing that several types of isotropic image filters in the wavevector domain can be implemented with a single photonic crystal slab device, according to the current invention. According to one embodiment, a slab is provided that is configured so that the guided resonance near the F point exhibits an isotropic band structure. Depending on the light frequency and the choice of transmission or reflection mode, the invention realizes isotropic high-pass, low-pass, band-reject, and band-pass filtering in wavevector space. These filter functions are important for various image processing tasks, including edge detection, smoothing, white noise suppression, and suppression or extraction of periodic noises. Further disclosed is a numerical demonstration of these filter functionalities by simulations of a slab structure that is designed to operate in the visible wavelength range. The current invention expands the application of nanophotonics-based optical analog computing for image processing.
The purpose of filtering in the wavevector domain is to transform an image by modifying its Fourier transformation. In general, for a normally incident light beam along the z axis with a transverse field profile Sin(x, y), the transmitted or reflected beam has a profile Sout(x,y)=−1[H(
x,ky){tilde over (S)}in(
x,
y)], where
−1 is the inverse Fourier transform, {tilde over (S)}in(
x,
y) is the Fourier transform of the input image, and H(kx, ky) is the filter transfer function. If H(
x,
y)=H(|k|) only depends on the magnitude of the wavevector |k|, the filter is isotropic. Here, k=(kx, ky) refers to the in-plane wavevector.
According to one embodiment of the invention, the isotropic filters are realized by a photonic crystal slab device, as shown in
The photonic crystal slab in
ωk≈ω0A|k|2, (1)
where A+=4.35, A−=−1.41 from fitting the band dispersion, and the upper (lower) sign corresponds to the upper (lower) band. In Eq. (1), and throughout the rest of this disclosure, the wavevector will be in units of 2π/a.
The nearly isotropic photonic band structure (ω±()−ω0) for the structures shown in
)/∂ki∂kj]−1.
), unlike ω±(
) are anisotropic. Nonetheless, (γ±(
−γ0) are much smaller than (ω±(
−ω0), thus, they do not affect the circular symmetry of the transfer functions much, as we will show later.
In general, guided resonances in photonic crystal slabs may induce sharp Fano resonance features in the transmission and reflection spectra. For the specific pair of guided resonances considered here, it has been proved that, due to the isotropic band structure, S-polarized (P-polarized) light can only excite the upper (lower) band for every direction of incidence. This effect is referred to as single-band excitation.
Due to the single-band excitation effect, as well as the presence of the uniform dielectric slab, which sets the background transmission coefficient to be unity, for this structure shown in
where the upper (lower) sign corresponds to S-polarized (P-polarized) light and upper (lower) band; ω is the incident light frequency. Therefore, on resonance,
t
±(ω±(),
)=0,r±(ω±(
),
)=−ejϕ. (4)
The numerically determined transmission and reflection spectra for S-polarized light are plotted in
Depending on the operating conditions, the structures as shown in
Turning now to the isotropic high-pass filter embodiment, where the inventors have shown the k-dependent transmittance at the frequency ω=ω0≡ω±(=0)
This transmittance realizes the Laplacian, a special isotropic high-pass filter.
Disclosed herein, it is show that the same device can provide a few other very useful image processing functionalities under different operating conditions.
Regarding the isotropic low-pass filter embodiment, at the frequency ω=ω0, if one considers instead the reflected light, the transfer function is
This transfer function realizes an isotropic low-pass filter with reflection peak |r±|=1 at the Γ point.
Regarding the isotropic band-reject filter, this embodiment is configured to operate away from the frequency ω0, but at the frequency ω=ω±,q where q is the amplitude of a non-zero in-plane wavevector, the transfer function then becomes
This transfer function realizes an isotropic band-reject filter with transmission dip=|t±|=0 at ||=q.
Turning now to the isotropic band-pass filter, at the frequency ω=ψ±,q the reflrection to has a transfer function
This transfer function realizes an isotropic band-pass filter with reflection peak |r±|=1 at ||=q.
Therefore, devices according to the current invention achieve multiple filtering functions. As schematically shown in
The filtering functions of the current invention are numerically demonstrated herein. The isotropic high-pass filter (Laplacian) is disclosed in
In all the numerical demonstrations below, the incident beam is S polarized. The transmitted image is calculated following the standard way in image processing. (1) Compute the Fourier transform {tilde over (S)}in(k,
y) of the incident field profile Sin(x, y). Note the incident image is |Sin(x,y)|2. (2) Compute the Fourier transform of the output field profile, {tilde over (S)}out(
x,
y)=H(
x,
y){tilde over (S)}in(
x,
y), where H(kx, ky) is the transfer function. (3) Obtain the output field profile Sout(x, y) by inverse Fourier transform. Calculate the output image |Sout(x,y)|2.
Regarding the isotropic high-pass filter (the Laplacian)
The Laplacian enables image sharpening and edge detection.
Turning now to the isotropic low-pass filter,
The isotropic low-pass filter accomplishes image smoothing, with applications ranging from character recognition in ma-chine perception, preprocessing functions in the printing and publishing industry, to satellite and aerial image processing. Here, one specific application of the low-pass filter is shown in white noise reduction.
Regarding the isotropic band-rejection filter,
The isotropic band-reject filter can effectively eliminate periodic noise, a common type of noise arising typically from electrical or electromechanical interference during image acquisition. As periodic noise appears as peaks in the Fourier transform at locations corresponding to the wavevectors of the periodic interference, it can be isolated and filtered by band-reject filters. Here, shown is an example of periodic noise reduction with the isotropic band-reject filter.
Turning now to the isotropic band-pass filter,
The isotropic band-pass filter performs the opposite operation of the band-reject filter. It is quite useful in isolating the effects on an image caused by selected wavevector bands. Shown here is an example of extracting periodic noise patterns with the isotropic band-pass filter.
The design of isotropic wavevector domain image filters using a photonic crystal slab is based on the guided resonances with isotropic band structure. The same idea can extend to other photonic structures that host resonant modes with isotropic band structures. In particular, a phase-shifted Bragg grating can also perform the four filtering functionalities of our device, but with the transmission/reflection mode flipped.
The present invention has now been described in accordance with several exemplary embodiments, which are intended to be illustrative in all aspects, rather than restrictive. Thus, the present invention is capable of many variations in detailed implementation, which may be derived from the description contained herein by a person of ordinary skill in the art. For example, one may use other photonic devices rather than photonic crystals that incorporate guided resonances with desired band structure, such as metasurfaces. One may use geometry that is different from a square lattice of air holes; other lattices of other shapes of holes are also possible. Moreover, our design can be readily extended to multiple frequencies, by using a stack of multiple layers. Our design principle is not restricted to specific materials; it is general to any dielectrics.
All such variations are considered to be within the scope and spirit of the present invention as defined by the following claims and their legal equivalents.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/190,820, which is incorporated herein by reference. Application Ser. No. 16/190,820 claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application 62/585,816 filed Nov. 14, 2017, which is incorporated herein by reference.
This invention was made with Government support under contract FA9550-17-1-0002 awarded by the United States Air Force. The Government has certain rights in the invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62585816 | Nov 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16190820 | Nov 2018 | US |
Child | 17181318 | US |