We have previously presented a novel spatial light modulator appropriate for use in transparent, flat-panel holographic display applications. Our architecture consists of an anisotropic leaky-mode coupler and integrated Bragg reflection grating as a monolithic device implemented in lithium niobate and is fabricated using direct femtosecond laser writing techniques. In this paper, we present a methodology for the experimental characterization of holographically-reconstructed point spread functions from sample devices.
We generated a fully complex hologram by utilizing a combination of amplitude and phase spatial light modulators. A digital micromirror device (DMD) was used to produce the amplitude profile, and a liquid crystal spatial light modulator (SLM) produced the phase profile. A band-limited 4-f imaging system imaged the DMD onto the SLM to create a fully complex modulated wavefront, which reconstructed a holographic image at the desired location. We utilized backwards diffraction calculations, error-diffusion, and amplitude beam-shaping to design a hologram with small reconstruction error.
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