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Journal Article Wavefront Characteristics of a Digital Holographic Optical Element
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Authors
Beom-Ryeol Lee, José Gil Marichal-Hernández, José Manuel Rodríguez-Ramos, Wook-Ho Son, Sunghee Hong, Jung-Young Son
Issue Date
2023-06
Citation
Micromachines, v.14, no.6, pp.1-15
ISSN
2072-666X
Publisher
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
DOI
https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi14061229
Abstract
In this study, a 50 × 50 mm holographic optical element (HOE) with the property of a spherical mirror was recorded digitally on a silver halide photoplate using a wavefront printing method. It consisted of 51 × 96 hologram spots with each spot measuring 0.98 × 0.52 mm. The wavefronts and optical performance of the HOE were compared with those of reconstructed images from a point hologram displayed on DMDs of different pixel structures. The same comparison was also performed with an analog-type HOE for a heads-up display and with a spherical mirror. A Shack–Hartmann wavefront sensor was used to measure the wavefronts of the diffracted beams from the digital HOE and the holograms as well as the reflected beam from the analog HOE and the mirror when a collimated beam was incident on them. These comparisons revealed that the digital HOE could perform as a spherical mirror, but they also revealed astigmatism—as in the reconstructed images from the holograms on DMDs—and that its focusability was worse than that of the analog HOE and the spherical mirror. A phase map, i.e., the polar coordinate-type presentation of the wavefront, could visualize the wavefront distortions more clearly than the reconstructed wavefronts obtained using Zernike polynomials. The phase map revealed that the wavefront of the digital HOE was more distorted than those of the analog HOE and the spherical mirror.
KSP Keywords
2 mm, Collimated beam, Heads-up display, Holographic optical element, Phase map, Polar coordinate, Printing method, Reflected beam, Spherical mirror, Zernike polynomials, optical performance
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CC BY