Affiliation:
1. Institute of Microelectronics Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing 100029 China
2. Department of Physics Capital Normal University Beijing 100048 China
3. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing 100049 China
Abstract
AbstractSteganography technology which conceals a message in a carrier to make it invisible is critical for information security. Conventional optical image steganography using diffractive optical components or spatial light modulators suffers from less encoding channel and bulky volume. The emergence of multifunctional metasurface that can manipulate abundant physical dimensions of optical fields allows the multi‐channel image steganography in a compact volume. Here, the image hiding in a metasurface is demonstrated by modulating the amplitude, phase, and polarization states of terahertz (THz) waves completely. Especially, the phase channel can decouple from the amplitude channel based on a Fresnel‐diffraction‐based algorithm. By directly measuring the phase distribution using the homemade THz focal plane imaging system, the number of transmission channels can expand from N to 2N. As a proof of concept, it is shown that the secret images can encode in the phase channel and subsequently extract by using different keys, such as polarization states, detection distances, and its combinations. Moreover, different hiding strategies with different attacker behaviors are also demonstrated. The decoupling of the phase and amplitude channels with a single metasurface may open an avenue toward innovative optoelectronic devices for optical image steganography, data storage, and terahertz communication.
Funder
National Key Research and Development Program of China
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Natural Science Foundation of Beijing Municipality