Nanostructured LED produces circularly polarized light without bulky optics


Mar 26, 2026

A new LED design uses a built-in nanoscale metasurface to emit circularly polarized light directly, eliminating bulky optics for 3D displays and AR devices.

(Nanowerk News) From 3D movie screens to augmented-reality devices, many modern technologies rely on our ability to manipulate light. Doing so in a cost-effective and efficient way, however, is often a formidable task. In an article published in Optics Letters (“Circularly polarized (0001) InGaN-based LED integrated with GaN metasurface”), researchers from The University of Osaka announced a new light-emitting diode (LED) design that may help shrink complex optical systems into much smaller devices. The LED produces circularly polarized light using a built-in nanostructured surface, eliminating the need for bulky external optical components. A schematic of InGaN-based CP light LED where a single-layer metasurface is directly integrated on the LED emission surface to convert unpolarized light into CP light A schematic of InGaN-based CP light LED where a single-layer metasurface is directly integrated on the LED emission surface to convert unpolarized light into CP light. (Image: Shuhei Ichikawa) Circularly polarized light, whose electric field rotates like a corkscrew as it travels, is essential for technologies such as 3D displays, advanced imaging systems, and quantum communication tools. Traditionally, generating this kind of light requires optical components such as polarizers and special plates that modify the light’s phase. However, these components make devices larger, more complex, and harder to integrate. “Our goal is to simplify the way circularly polarized light is produced,” says corresponding author Shuhei Ichikawa. “By integrating polarization control directly into the LED with a specially designed metasurface, we remove the need for additional optical components.” This metasurface consists of extremely small gallium nitride nanopillars directly arranged in a carefully designed pattern on the surface of a semiconductor LED. The nanoscale structures manipulate the phase of light so that one circular polarization state is selectively transmitted while the opposite polarization is suppressed. “Computer simulations show that the design can produce strong circularly polarized light while allowing about 35% of the LED’s light to pass through the nanostructured surface,” explains Shuhei Ichikawa, senior author. “That level of efficiency approaches the theoretical maximum of 50%.” Unlike many previous circularly polarized LEDs, which utilize organic materials or complex spin-based systems, the new design uses robust inorganic materials, which could help enable more durable and practical circularly polarized light sources. “Theoretically, there is a tradeoff between LED efficiency and polarization degree, which measures the extent to which one polarization state dominates,” says Ichikawa. “What is very exciting about this device is that we have found a way to maintain high levels of both.” In the future, such compact circularly polarized light sources could simplify the optical hardware used in virtual reality headsets, high-resolution 3D displays, and emerging photonic technologies. Thanks to the team’s research, the future of smaller and more efficient light-based devices is definitely looking bright.

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