CVOPTICSSep 28, 2021

Diffractive lensless imaging with optimized Voronoi-Fresnel phase

arXiv:2109.13703v21 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for compact imaging systems in extreme conditions, representing an incremental advance in lensless camera technology.

The paper tackled the problem of improving image quality in lensless cameras by developing a diffractive lensless camera with an optimized Voronoi-Fresnel phase, demonstrating superior performance over existing designs in photography applications with a 1.6-megapixel sensor.

Lensless cameras are a class of imaging devices that shrink the physical dimensions to the very close vicinity of the image sensor by replacing conventional compound lenses with integrated flat optics and computational algorithms. Here we report a diffractive lensless camera with spatially-coded Voronoi-Fresnel phase to achieve superior image quality. We propose a design principle of maximizing the acquired information in optics to facilitate the computational reconstruction. By introducing an easy-to-optimize Fourier domain metric, Modulation Transfer Function volume (MTFv), which is related to the Strehl ratio, we devise an optimization framework to guide the optimization of the diffractive optical element. The resulting Voronoi-Fresnel phase features an irregular array of quasi-Centroidal Voronoi cells containing a base first-order Fresnel phase function. We demonstrate and verify the imaging performance for photography applications with a prototype Voronoi-Fresnel lensless camera on a 1.6-megapixel image sensor in various illumination conditions. Results show that the proposed design outperforms existing lensless cameras, and could benefit the development of compact imaging systems that work in extreme physical conditions.

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