Topological engineering of interfacial optical Tamm states for highly-sensitive near-singular-phase optical detection
Yoichiro Tsurimaki, Jonathan K. Tong, Victor N. Boriskin, Alexander, Semenov, Mykola I. Ayzatsky, Yuri P. Machekhin, Gang Chen, and Svetlana V., Boriskina

TL;DR
This paper introduces topologically engineered optical Tamm states in multilayer structures to significantly enhance the sensitivity of optical sensors through near-singular-phase detection, both theoretically and experimentally.
Contribution
It demonstrates the design and fabrication of planar Tamm absorbers that achieve over tenfold sensitivity improvements in temperature sensing compared to traditional methods.
Findings
Over an order of magnitude increase in sensor sensitivity.
Two orders of magnitude improvement in figure of merit.
Nearly double the sensitivity of nano-patterned plasmonic detectors.
Abstract
We developed planar multilayered photonic-plasmonic structures, which support topologically protected optical states on the interface between metal and dielectric materials, known as optical Tamm states. Coupling of incident light to the Tamm states can result in perfect absorption within one of several narrow frequency bands, which is accompanied by a singular behavior of the phase of electromagnetic field. In the case of near-perfect absorptance, very fast local variation of the phase can still be engineered. In this work, we theoretically and experimentally demonstrate how these drastic phase changes can improve sensitivity of optical sensors. A planar Tamm absorber was fabricated and used to demonstrate remote near-singular-phase temperature sensing with an over an order of magnitude improvement in sensor sensitivity and over two orders of magnitude improvement in the figure of…
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