# Interference-type plasmonic polarizers and generalized law of Malus

**Authors:** Cheng-ping Huang, Yu-lin Wang, and Yong Zhang

arXiv: 1906.04361 · 2025-10-28

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a novel plasmonic polarizer that can transmit both electric components, breaking the classical law of Malus, and demonstrates unique polarization effects through a generalized law of Malus.

## Contribution

A specially-designed single-layer plasmonic polarizer that couples both electric components, extending the classical law of Malus to include interference effects.

## Key findings

- Achieves anomalous polarization-angle dependence
- Enables wide-angle polarization filtering
- Allows tunable polarization rotation from 0° to 90°

## Abstract

The conventional linear polarizer only allows the electric component parallel to the polarizer axis to pass through whereas prohibits the vertical component. We propose that a specially-designed single-layer plasmonic polarizer can couple both parallel and vertical electric components to the transmission, thus breaking the classical law of Malus. A variety of anomalous polarization effects, such as the asymmetric polarization-angle dependence, enhanced polarization filtering with wide polarization angle, and tunable polarization rotation from 0o to 90o, can be resulted. To understand the effects, the generalized law of Malus,originating from the superposition principle, has been presented and analyzed. This provides a basis for studying the interference-type plasmonic polarizers, where the interference effect and polarization effect are combined together. The difference between the plasmonic and conventional polarizers is of both fundamental and practical interests.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.04361