Sensitive singular-phase optical detection without phase measurements with Tamm plasmons
Svetlana V Boriskina, Yoichiro Tsurimaki

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel planar Tamm plasmon structure that achieves broadband, polarization-insensitive perfect absorption and sharp phase resonances, enabling ultra-sensitive, phase-free optical detection.
Contribution
It presents a new design of dielectric photonic nanostructures with embedded plasmonic materials supporting topologically-protected Tamm states for enhanced sensing without phase measurements.
Findings
Achieves perfect absorption for both polarizations at normal incidence.
Supports sharp asymmetric amplitude resonances for improved sensitivity.
Tunable absorption lines across broad spectral range.
Abstract
Spectrally-tailored interactions of light with material interfaces offer many exciting applications in sensing, photo-detection, and optical energy conversion. In particular, complete suppression of light reflectance at select frequencies accompanied by sharp phase variations in the reflected signal forms the basis for the development of ultra-sensitive singular-phase optical detection schemes such as Brewster and surface plasmon interferometry. However, both the Brewster effect and surface-plasmon-mediated absorption on planar interfaces are limited to one polarization of the incident light and oblique excitation angles, and may have limited bandwidth dictated by the material dielectric index and plasma frequency. To alleviate these limitations, we design narrow-band super-absorbers composed of plasmonic materials embedded into dielectric photonic nanostructures with…
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