Method and master for producing a volume hologram
10642221 · 2020-05-05
Assignee
Inventors
- Andreas Schilling (Hagendorn, CH)
- Wayne Robert Tompkin (Baden, CH)
- Norbert Lutz (Ruckersdorf, DE)
- Achim Hansen (Zug, CH)
Cpc classification
G02B5/1861
PHYSICS
G02B27/4261
PHYSICS
G03H2223/53
PHYSICS
G03H2222/13
PHYSICS
G03H1/202
PHYSICS
G02B27/288
PHYSICS
G03H2001/207
PHYSICS
G03H2222/12
PHYSICS
International classification
G03H1/02
PHYSICS
G03H1/00
PHYSICS
G03H1/22
PHYSICS
G03H1/26
PHYSICS
Abstract
A method for producing a volume hologram with at least one first area in a first color and at least one second area in a second color includes, providing a volume hologram layer made of a photopolymer; arranging a master with a surface structure on the volume hologram layer; exposing the master using coherent light, wherein light which is incident on at least one first partial area of the surface of the master is diffracted or reflected in the direction of the at least one first area of the volume hologram layer and light which is incident on at least one second partial area of the surface of the master is diffracted or reflected in the direction of the at least one second area of the volume hologram, and wherein the light diffracted or reflected by the first and second partial areas differs in at least one optical property.
Claims
1. A method for producing a volume hologram with at least one first area in a first color and at least one second area in a second color, the method comprising: a) providing a volume hologram layer made of a photopolymer; b) arranging a master with a surface structure on the volume hologram layer; and c) exposing the master using coherent light, wherein light which is incident on at least one first partial area of the surface of the master is diffracted or reflected in the direction of the at least one first area of the volume hologram layer and light which is incident on at least one second partial area of the surface of the master is diffracted or reflected in the direction of the at least one second area of the volume hologram, and wherein the light diffracted or reflected by the first and second partial areas differs in at least one optical property, wherein the exposure takes place in at least two successive exposure steps, and wherein at least one of the exposure steps is carried out over the whole surface of the two partial areas such that the at least one first area in a first color of the volume hologram is produced in a desired fixed positional register relationship with respect to the at least one second area in a second color of the volume hologram.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the light diffracted or reflected by the first and second partial areas differs by at least 10% in intensity for a predetermined diffraction order and/or reflection direction and/or wavelength.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein a master with a binary grating is used.
4. The method according to claim 3, wherein a master is used which has a binary grating with a different structure depth in the first and second partial areas.
5. The method according to claim 4, wherein a master is used which in the first partial area has a structure depth of from 350 nm to 510 nm, and, in the second partial area, has a structure depth of from 450 nm to 630 nm.
6. The method according to claim 4, wherein a master is used which has a grating period of from 500 to 10,000 nm.
7. The method according to claim 1, wherein a master is used which has a four-step grating.
8. The method according to claim 7, wherein a master is used, the structure depth of which differs by from 80 nm to 600 nm between adjacent steps.
9. The method according to claim 3, wherein a master with a blazed grating is used.
10. The method according to claim 9, wherein a master is used in which the blazed grating is arranged on planes inclined relative to each other in the first and in the second partial area, wherein the absolute angle of inclination of the blazed gratings arranged in the first and second partial areas is different with respect to the plane spanned by the volume hologram layer.
11. The method according to claim 10, wherein the planes are inclined by from 5 to 90 with respect to each other.
12. The method according to claim 1, wherein a master is used which has a Fabry-Prot layer system.
13. The method according to claim 12, wherein a distance between the planes of the Fabry-Prot layer system differs by from 10 nm to 200 nm between the first and the second partial area.
14. The method according to claim 1, wherein a master is used in which a polarizing structure is provided in the first and/or second partial area.
15. The method according to claim 14, wherein a master is used in which the direction of polarization of the polarizing structure differs between the first and the second partial area.
16. The method according to claim 14, wherein a master is used which has in each case in the first and second partial areas a zero-order diffraction structure with a grating period which is smaller than the wavelength of the light used for the exposure of the master or a blazed grating with a polarizing superlattice, wherein the respective diffraction structures influence the polarization of the incident light differently.
17. The method according to claim 1, wherein the exposure steps are carried out at a different wavelength and/or different exposure angle of the incident light.
18. The method according to claim 1, wherein one of the exposure steps is carried out at a wavelength of from 600 nm to 660 nm and another of the exposure steps is carried out at a wavelength of from 500 nm to 560 nm.
19. The method according to claim 1, wherein the planes of polarization of the light used for two of the exposure steps differ by 45 to 135.
20. The method according to claim 1, wherein at least one of the exposure steps is carried out in a grid.
21. The method according to claim 20, wherein the grid is a dot or line grid.
22. The method according to claim 20, wherein the grid has a grid width of from 50 m to 300 m.
23. The method according to claim 20, wherein a plurality of exposure steps is carried out in which the exposure takes place in each case in dot grids offset with respect to each other.
24. The method according to claim 1, wherein the exposure takes place with a light intensity of from 2 mJ/cm.sup.2 to 200 MJ/cm.sup.2.
25. The method according to claim 1, wherein the light intensity is modulated periodically during the exposure in order to produce a grid.
26. The method according to claim 1, wherein the first and/or second area forms a symbol, logo, image, or alphanumeric character.
27. The method according to claim 1, wherein, after the exposure, the volume hologram layer is fixed by curing.
28. A master for use with a method according to claim 1 comprising a surface structure with a first and a second partial area which differ in their optical properties.
29. The master according to claim 28, wherein light diffracted or reflected by the partial areas differs by at least 10% in intensity for a predetermined diffraction order and/or reflection direction and/or wavelength.
30. The master according to claim 28, wherein the surface structure comprises a binary grating, a multistep phase grating, a blazed grating, or combinations thereof.
31. The master according to claim 28, wherein the master comprises a metallic base body made of nickel.
32. The master according to claim 28, wherein the master comprises at least one further surface structure which is arranged adjacent to or overlapping the surface structure.
33. The master according to claim 28, wherein the master comprises a varnish layer which covers the surface structure.
34. A security element with a volume hologram layer, in which a volume hologram with at least two areas of different color is formed, obtained by a method according to claim 1.
35. The security element according to claim 34, wherein the volume hologram layer is formed from a photopolymer, silver halide emulsions or dichromatic gelatin.
36. The security element according to claim 34, wherein the volume hologram layer has a layer thickness of from 3 m to 100 m.
37. The security document with a security element according to claim 34.
38. A security document according to claim 37, wherein the security document is formed as an identification document, passport document, visa document, credit card, banknote.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention is now explained in more detail with reference to embodiment examples. There are shown in:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(28) In
(29) In general, the areas 11, 12 can form graphic motifs in the form of a symbol, a logo, an image or an alphanumeric character.
(30) It may, however, also be provided that one area 11, 12 provides an item of information and the other area 12, 11 forms the surround from which the item of information stands out. The item of information can, for example, be a logo which appears light against a dark background in one observation position and dark against a light background in the other observation position. It may thus be provided that, when the volume hologram is tilted or moved, a change from a positive representation to a negative representation occurs and vice versa. Furthermore, the areas 11, 12 can be formed such that one area 11, 12 forms the edge of the other area 12, 11. One area can thus, for example, reproduce the border of an alphanumeric character and the other area the alphanumeric character itself.
(31) In order to produce such a volume hologram, a volume hologram layer made of a photopolymer is exposed to coherent light by irradiation of a master 2. The photopolymer is preferably a photopolymer in which the desired changes in refractive index can be triggered by exposure or irradiation. The photopolymer is, for example, the Omni DX 706 photopolymer from DuPont. Further examples are silver halide emulsions, liquid photopolymer or dichromatic gelatin with a layer thickness of from 3 m to 100 m.
(32) When the master 2 is exposed, light which is incident on at least one first partial area 21 of the surface of the master 2 is diffracted or reflected in the direction of the at least one first area 11 of the volume hologram layer and light which is incident on at least one second partial area 22 of the surface of the master 2 is diffracted or reflected in the direction of the at least one second area 12 of the volume hologram. The light diffracted or reflected by the first and second partial areas differs in at least one optical property.
(33) This is illustrated in detail in
(34) With a method of this type it is thus possible to produce multicolored volume holograms 1 using a single master 2. The differently colored areas 11, 12 are therefore always arranged in perfect register, that is to say in the desired fixed positional relationship, relative to each other.
(35) It is preferred if the light diffracted or reflected by the first partial area 21 and second partial area 22 differs by at least 10%, preferably by 50% in intensity for a predetermined diffraction order and/or polarization and/or reflection direction and/or wavelength.
(36) The master 2 preferably comprises a metallic base body, in particular made of nickel, on the surface of which the surface structures are formed.
(37) The surface structures of the master 2 can also be sealed with a thin and transparent sealing layer 27 (see
(38) A first example of the surface structure of a master 2 is shown in
(39) Binary gratings are gratings with an essentially rectangular grating profile. Elevations and valleys with essentially perpendicular edges thus alternate. Deep binary gratings can be designed such that they act like a mirror for a first wavelength, i.e. reflect strongly in the zero order, but have a weak zero order for a second wavelength and rather diffract this strongly in the first order. The desired wavelength-specific partial areas 21, 22 of the master 2 can thus be produced particularly easily. This is illustrated in
(40) In the first partial area, such a master has a strong zero order and weak first order for red light and in the second partial area a strong zero order and weak first order for green light. In this way, optically attractive two-colored, red-green volume holograms can thus be produced.
(41) It is accordingly possible to produce differently colored volume holograms with differently designed masters. In particular, the following color combinations are of interest, for example: red-turquoise, red-blue, orange-turquoise, orange-blue, yellow-turquoise, yellow-blue. The structure depths for the two binary gratings of a particular color combination are obtained by using the overphasing described above and determining the overphasing factor n, such that one binary grating acts like a mirror for a first wavelength, i.e. reflects strongly in the zero order, but has a weak zero order for a second wavelength and rather diffracts strongly into the first order. For this, calculations are generally carried out by means of precise electromagnetic diffraction theory.
(42) The essential structural parameter for this wavelength specificity is the structure depth of the binary grating. As can be seen in
(43) The strict dependence of the diffraction intensity on the structure depth is illustrated in
(44) In addition to the described binary gratings, multistep gratings can also be used, as represented in
(45) Such structures, also known as phase gratings, have a particularly high wavelength sensitivity and can be used in particular to produce more than two colors in the volume hologram. When three primary colors, e.g. RGB (Red Green Blue), are used, the production of true-color holograms with high register accuracy is thus possible.
(46) It is advantageous if a master is used the structure depth of which differs by from 80 nm to 600 nm, preferably from 120 nm to 400 nm, between adjacent steps.
(47) It is furthermore possible for a master with a blazed grating to be used. This is illustrated in
(48) In contrast to the binary gratings already described, blazed gratings have a sawtooth-shaped cross-sectional profile. Depending on the angle of incidence during the exposure, the diffraction angle of the diffracted light also changes and consequently also the distance between the Bragg planes in the exposed volume hologram. In this way, multicolored holograms can likewise be produced using a single master.
(49) As shown in
(50) Under otherwise identical conditions, at an angle of incidence of 0 a blue-green area is obtained (
(51) On the whole, there is a linear relationship between angle of incidence and the resulting color of the exposed volume hologram for a given exposure wavelength and a given blazed grating, as illustrated in
(52) The desired effect can be produced by variation of the angle of incidence during the exposure. However, this makes relatively complex control of the exposure laser necessary since the angle of incidence must be varied depending on the position of the laser beam on the master. The achievable resolution would furthermore be restricted by the comparatively large dimensions of the respective local irradiation surface of the exposing laser beam.
(53) It is therefore expedient if a master 2 is used in which the blazed grating is arranged on planes 24, 25, 26 inclined relative to each other in several partial areas 21, 22, 23. An embodiment example of such a master 2 is shown schematically in
(54) In the case of such a master 2, if the angle of incidence of the light used for the exposure relative to the surface normal of the master 2 is kept constant, different angles of incidence relative to the blazed gratings arranged there nevertheless result for the partial areas 21, 22, 23, with the result that, for the light diffracted towards corresponding areas 11, 12, 13 of the volume hologram, different diffraction angles and thus different colors arise in the areas. This enables a particularly simple exposure.
(55) Other diffractive structures such as linear or crossed sinusoidal gratings, linear or crossed binary gratings, Fresnel lens-like structures or the above structures combined with isotropic or anisotropic mat structures can also be used instead of blazed gratings. In particular, linear sinusoidal grating structures with a structure depth which gives a maximum diffraction efficiency in an order higher than the first diffraction order can advantageously be used here.
(56) It is advantageous if the planes are inclined by from 5 to 90, preferably from 20 to 60, with respect to each other.
(57) The partial areas 21, 22, 23 can also be arranged in complex patterns in order to realize any graphic designs. A schematic top view of such a master 2 and the resulting volume hologram 1 is shown in
(58) A further alternative embodiment of a master 2 is represented in
(59) If, for example, in the first partial area a polarizing structure is provided and the master 2 is irradiated with light, the plane of polarization of which is perpendicular to the plane of polarization of this polarizing structure, the first partial area is selectively excluded from the exposure. For example, light of a different wavelength which is polarized parallel to the plane of polarization of the polarizing structure can then be used for the exposure, with the result that the first partial area is now selectively exposed.
(60) In contrast, the plane of polarization of the polarizing structure in the second partial area is preferably arranged perpendicular to that of the polarizing structure in the first partial area. During the first exposure, the second partial area is therefore selectively exposed and during the second exposure is excluded from the exposure.
(61) If the exposures take place at different wavelengths, a multicolored volume hologram can in this way also be produced using a single master.
(62) In all the embodiments described above, the exposure can take place over the whole surface. However, it has been shown that particularly good results can be obtained by a grid exposure. This is represented by way of example in
(63) Instead of a mask, a gridded exposure can also be used in which a scanning and, where appropriate, focused first laser beam is intensity-modulated (see
(64) This is expedient in particular if small, i.e. highly resolved, color areas forming the grid are to be combined in order to produce a mixed color impression. A grid arrangement may also be expedient for the production of a light colored background for a motif, in particular for the production of a half-tone of the background color.
(65) Examples of grid masks 3 formed as dot or line grids are represented in
(66) By dot grids are generally to be meant grids which are composed of distinct, small elements. These can be circular, but also adopt different structures such as, for example, stars, squares, alphanumeric characters and the like.
(67) The grid preferably has a grid width of from 50 m to 300 m.
(68) In
(69) For the first exposure, the grid mask 3 shown in
(70) The intermediate product shown in
(71) The grid mask is then removed and a further exposure to green light carried out. This takes place over the whole surface. The green light is now strongly diffracted by the second partial area 22 of the master with the result that intense green pixels 16 are now formed in the hitherto non-exposed parts of the second area 12 of the volume hologram 1, as shown in
(72) Overall, the volume hologram 1 represented in
LIST OF REFERENCE NUMBERS
(73) 1 volume hologram
(74) 11 area
(75) 12 area
(76) 13 area
(77) 14 pixel
(78) 15 pixel
(79) 16 pixel
(80) 17 pixel
(81) 18 volume hologram layer
(82) 2 master
(83) 21 partial area
(84) 22 partial area
(85) 23 partial area
(86) 24 plane
(87) 25 plane
(88) 26 plane
(89) 27 varnish layer
(90) 3 grid mask
(91) 31 area
(92) 32 area
(93) 4 laser beam
(94) 5 layer structure
(95) 51 varnish layer
(96) 52 carrier layer