Abstract

In optical anti-counterfeiting, several distinct optically variable devices (OVDs) are often concurrently employed to compensate for the insufficient security level of constituent OVDs. Alternatively, metasurfaces that exhibit multiple optical responses effectively combine multiple OVDs into one, thus significantly enhancing their security and hindering fraudulent replication. This work demonstrates the simultaneous control of three separate optical responses, i.e., phase, amplitude, and luminescence, using anisotropic gap-plasmon metasurfaces. Due to the incorporated geometric anisotropy, the designed structure exhibits distinct responses under x- and y-polarized light, revealing either a color image, or a holographic projection in the far-field. Furthermore, inserting upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) into the dielectric gaps of the structures, the designed metasurface is able to generate a third luminescent image upon illumination with the near-infrared light. The stochastic distribution of the UCNPs constitutes a unique “fingerprint”, achieving a physically unclonable function (PUF) layer. Crucially, our triple-mode metasurface requires only readily attainable equipment such as a macro-lens/camera and a laser pointer to read most of the channels, thus paving the way towards highly secure and easy-to-authenticate metasurface-driven OVDs (mOVDs).

This work demonstrates the simultaneous control of three separate optical responses, i.e., phase, amplitude, and luminescence, using anisotropic gap-plasmon metasurfaces. Due to the incorporated geometric anisotropy, the designed structure exhibits distinct responses under x- and y-polarized light, revealing either a color image, or a holographic projection in the far-field as well as a luminescence image when pumped with NIR laser. Inserting upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) into the dielectric gaps of the structures, creates a unique “fingerprint”, achieving a physically unclonable function (PUF) layer. Our triple-mode metasurface paves the way towards highly secure and easy-to-authenticate metasurface-driven optically variable devices (mOVDs).
This work demonstrates the simultaneous control of three separate optical responses, i.e., phase, amplitude, and luminescence, using anisotropic gap-plasmon metasurfaces. Due to the incorporated geometric anisotropy, the designed structure exhibits distinct responses under x- and y-polarized light, revealing either a color image, or a holographic projection in the far-field as well as a luminescence image when pumped with NIR laser. Inserting upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) into the dielectric gaps of the structures, creates a unique “fingerprint”, achieving a physically unclonable function (PUF) layer. Our triple-mode metasurface paves the way towards highly secure and easy-to-authenticate metasurface-driven optically variable devices (mOVDs).

See full text for more information.

Read full text on ScienceDirect

DOI: 10.1016/j.mattod.2022.11.010