Revolutionary Metasurface Enables Secure 3D Holography with Optical Encryption and Quantum Applications

March 6, 2026
Revolutionary Metasurface Enables Secure 3D Holography with Optical Encryption and Quantum Applications
  • A new ultrathin metasurface enables true 3D vectorial holography by engineering the longitudinal evolution of hundreds of structured beams to control axial intensity and polarization within a volumetric region.

  • The platform enables an all-optical encryption scheme where information is encoded by depth and polarization signatures; without the correct polarization key and axial position, the output appears scrambled, providing hardware-level security resistant to digital analysis.

  • The technology is scalable: increasing the number of Bessel components or decreasing pixel size could boost axial resolution and enable richer volumetric scenes, with potential applications in high-density optical data storage, secure communications, volumetric displays, optical steganography, and quantum light engineering.

  • Experimentally, the device reconstructs sequences of high-contrast axial-depth images across a broad visible range, with full Stokes polarimetry confirming accurate polarization trajectories and the ability to traverse complex paths on the Poincare sphere.

  • The method decomposes a target 3D light field into a dense array of quasi non-diffracting beams, each with a tailored longitudinal response function that describes how its intensity and polarization evolve along the propagation axis, synthesized by combining multiple Bessel beam components.

  • The metasurface is built from rectangular amorphous silicon nanopillars on a fused silica substrate, acting as anisotropic scatterers to precisely control amplitude, phase, and polarization, implemented via a dual matrix holography framework to map the desired vectorial field to nanopillar geometries and orientations.

Summary based on 1 source


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