Flexi Detectors Sharpen Pics
The photo distortion created by conventional photo lenses could be eliminated by new curved photodetectors made from extremely thin, flexible sheets of germanium, a light-sensitive material often used in high-end imaging sensors.
University of Wisconsin-Madison electrical and computer engineering associate professor Zhenqiang Ma and colleagues developed the light-sensitive material that could revolutionize photography and other imaging technologies and make distorted cell phone photos and big, clunky telephoto lenses things of the past.
This curved photodetector array was developed by University of Wisconsin-Madison electrical and computer engineering associate professor Zhenqiang Ma and colleagues. Inspired by the human eye,it is made of flexible germanium and could eliminate the photo distortion that occurs in conventional lenses. (Image courtesy of Zhenqiang Ma.)
When a device records an image, light passes through a lens and lands on a photodetector – a light-sensitive material such as the sensor in a digital camera. However, a lens bends the light and curves the focusing plane. In a digital camera, the point where the focusing plane meets the flat sensor will be in focus, but the image becomes more distorted the farther it is from that focus point.
“If I take a picture with a cell phone camera, for example, there is distortion,” Ma said. “The closer the subject is to the lens, the more distortion there is.”
That’s why some photos can turn out looking like images in a funhouse mirror, with an enlarged nose or a hand as big as a head.
High-end digital cameras correct this problem by incorporating multiple panes of glass to refract light and flatten the focusing plane. However, such lens systems – such as the mammoth telephoto lenses that sports photographers use – are large, bulky and expensive. Even high-quality lenses stretch the edges of an image somewhat.
Inspired by the human eye, Ma’s curved photodetector could eliminate that distortion. In the eye, light enters though a single lens, but at the back of the eye, the image falls upon the curved retina, eliminating distortion.
“If you can make a curved imaging plane, you just need one lens,” Ma said. “That’s why this development is extremely important.”
Ma and his group can create curved photodetectors with specially fabricated nanomembranes – extremely thin, flexible sheets of germanium, a very light-sensitive material often used in high-end imaging sensors. Researchers then can apply the nanomembranes to any polymer substrate, such as a thin, flexible piece of plastic. Currently, the group has demonstrated photodetectors curved in one direction, but Ma hopes next to develop hemispherical sensors.
“We can easily realize very high density flexible and sensitive imaging arrays because the photodetector material germanium itself is extremely bendable and extremely efficient in absorbing light,” he said. Ma’s co-authors include UW-Madison materials science and engineering professor Max Lagally and University of Michigan professor Pallab Bhattacharya.
Their technology is featured on the cover of the Jan. 5 issue of
Applied Physics Letters.For more information, visit:
www.wisc.edu
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