Evanescent-wave and open-air chiral sensing via signal-reversing cavity-enhanced polarimetry
Dimitris Sofikitis, Lykourgos Bougas, Georgios E. Katsoprinakis,, Alexandros K. Spiliotis, Benoit Loppinet, and T. Peter Rakitzis

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel cavity-enhanced polarimeter that significantly improves the detection of weak chiral signals in open air and evanescent waves by using signal reversal techniques to suppress backgrounds and enhance sensitivity.
Contribution
The authors develop a pulsed-laser bowtie-cavity polarimeter with signal reversal, enabling absolute chiral measurements in challenging environments and surpassing current sensitivity limits.
Findings
Enhanced chiral signal detection via cavity passes
Suppressed linear birefringence effects using Faraday rotation
Achieved sensitivity orders of magnitude better than existing methods
Abstract
Sensing chirality is of fundamental importance to many fields, including analytical and biological chemistry, pharmacology, and fundamental physics. Recent developments have extended optical chiral sensing using microwaves, fs pulses, superchiral light, and photoionization. The most widely used methods are the traditional methods of circular dichroism and optical rotation (OR). However, chiral signals are typically very weak, and their measurement is limited by larger time-dependent backgrounds and by imperfect and slow subtraction procedures. Here, we demonstrate a pulsed-laser bowtie-cavity-enhanced polarimeter with counter-propagating beams, which solves these background problems: the chiral signals are enhanced by the number of cavity passes; the effects of linear birefringence are suppressed by a large induced intracavity Faraday rotation; and rapid signal reversals are effected by…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
