Abstract: Combining hyperspectral and polarimetric imaging provides a powerful sensing modality with broad applications from astronomy to biology. Existing methods rely on temporal data acquisition or snapshot imaging of spatially separated detectors. These approaches incur fundamental artifacts that degrade imaging performance. To overcome these limitations, we present a stomatopod-inspired sensor capable of snapshot hyperspectral and polarization sensing in a single pixel. The design consists of stacking polarization-sensitive organic photovoltaics (P-OPVs) and polymer retarders. Multiple spectral and polarization channels are obtained by exploiting the P-OPVs’ anisotropic response and the retarders’ dispersion. We show that the design can sense 15 spectral channels over a 350-nanometer bandwidth. A detector is also experimentally demonstrated, which simultaneously registers four spectral channels and three polarization channels. The sensor showcases the myriad degrees of freedom offered by organic semiconductors that are not available in inorganics and heralds a fundamentally unexplored route for simultaneous spectral and polarimetric imaging.
Mantis shrimp-inspired organic photodetector for hyperspectral and polarimetric imaging
A. Altaqui, P. Sen, H. Schrickx, J. Rech, J.-W. Lee, M. Escuti, W. You, B. J. Kim, R. Kolbas, B. T. O’Connor, and M. Kudenov, “Mantis shrimp–inspired organic photodetector for simultaneous hyperspectral and polarimetric imaging,” Science Advances 7(10), eabe3196 (2021).