Publications by authors named "Berini P"

Interference of surface plasmons has been widely utilized in optical metrology for applications such as high-precision sensing. In this paper, we introduce a surface plasmon interferometer with the potential to be arranged in arrays for parallel multiplexing applications. The interferometer features two grating couplers that excite surface plasmon polariton (SPP) waves traveling along a gold-air interface before converging at a gold nanoslit where they interfere.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report the fabrication and characterization of a plasmonic metasurface comprising electrically-contacted sub-wavelength gold dipole nanoantennas, conformally coated by a thin hafnia film, an indium tin oxide layer and a backside mirror, forming metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) capacitors, for use as an electrically-tunable reflectarray or metasurface. By voltage biasing the nanoantennas through metallic connectors and leveraging the carrier refraction effect in the MOS capacitors, our measurements demonstrate phase control in reflection over a range of about 30°, with a constant magnitude of reflection coefficient of 0.5, and the absence of secondary lobes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The overlap integrals method, with a fully vectorial formulation, is used to model the selective excitation of the TM mode in a few-mode optical fiber with a radially polarized donut beam, and its coupling to guided modes having a plasmonic character (supermodes). The analyses were performed on a waveguide formed as a step-index few-mode optical fiber coated with a thin gold film, at an operating wavelength of 1310 nm. The waveguide was found to support modes having optical fiber, circular metallic waveguide, and surface plasmon characteristics, depending on geometrical and material parameters.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Currently, intravascular optical coherence tomography (IV-OCT) is primarily used for imaging the structure of arterial plaques, but it lacks the ability to detect molecular changes in the endothelium, which could improve risk assessment for cardiovascular issues.
  • Researchers developed gold superclusters (AuSCs) that are designed to enhance IV-OCT by increasing light scattering and targeting specific molecules in the vascular system.
  • In tests with a rat model, these AuSCs successfully enabled molecular imaging of vascular inflammation by correlating the imaging signal with the severity of inflammation, demonstrating potential for earlier detection of cardiovascular risks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Plasmonic catalysis holds the promise of opening new reaction pathways that are inaccessible thermally or via direct UV-vis electronic transitions. Here, energetic carriers produced via the decay of surface plasmons excited by visible light at 532 nm (2.33 eV, green) on a Ag-grating-bearing pyrolytic carbon residue drive its transformation into light-emitting graphitized carbon dots.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The symmetry of achiral metasurfaces suggests selective absorption is nonexistent when irradiated either by circularly polarized Gaussian or twisted light beams carrying orbital angular momentum (OAM). In chiral metasurfaces, the lack of symmetry leads to differential absorption when probed with chiral light either in the form of circular polarization (circular dichroism) or helical phase fronts (helical dichroism). Here, we demonstrate differential absorption of asymmetric twisted light beams, known as helical dichroism, which exist in an array and a single achiral structure and can be controlled.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We present an experimental study of plasmonic slanted slit gratings (PSSGs) designed to achieve directional coupling between an incident light beam and surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) propagating along the surface of the structure. We also investigate mirrored PSSG pairs interconnected by a plasmonic slab waveguide. The structures are fabricated using direct milling by a gallium focused ion beam (FIB).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Surface plasmon resonance is an effect widely used for biosensing. Biosensors based on this effect operate in different configurations, including the use of diffraction gratings as couplers. Gratings are highly tunable and are easy to integrate into a fluidic system due to their planar configuration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We propose the concept of a Dirac grating, where periodic permittivity perturbations approach a train of Dirac functions. We show that Dirac gratings can yield identical spectral characteristics for higher-order gratings compared to first-order gratings of the same length. Using an inverse Fourier transform technique, we design different types of Dirac gratings, including structures operating at the exceptional point where parity-time symmetry breaks down, producing unidirectional reflectance.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The electrical bandwidth of an electro-optic modulator plays a vital role in determining the throughput of an optical communications link. We propose a broadband plasmonic electro-optic modulator operating at telecommunications wavelengths (λ ∼ 1550 nm), based on free carrier dispersion in indium tin oxide (ITO). The ITO is driven through its epsilon-near-zero point within the accumulation layers of metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) structures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A deep metal grating enables quasi-phase-matched simultaneous excitation of two counterpropagating surface plasmon modes by means of its +1st and -2nd diffraction orders. The resulting angular reflection spectra of the scattered -1st and zeroth orders exhibit three interleaved zeros and maxima in a range centered around the Littrow angle. The spectra differ thoroughly from the usual reflection dip resulting from single-order plasmon coupling that produces strong absorption.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Optical biosensors target widespread applications, such as drug discovery, medical diagnostics, food quality control, and environmental monitoring. Here, we propose a novel plasmonic biosensor on the end-facet of a dual-core single-mode optical fiber. The concept uses slanted metal gratings on each core, interconnected by a metal stripe biosensing waveguide to couple the cores via the propagation of surface plasmons along the end facet.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Physical unclonable functions (PUFs) are receiving significant attention with the rise of cryptography and the drive towards creating unique structures for security applications and anti-counterfeiting. Specifically, nanoparticle based PUFs can produce a high degree of randomness through their size, shape, spatial distribution, chemistry, and optical properties, rendering them very difficult to replicate. However, nanoparticle PUFs typically rely on complex preparation procedures involving chemical synthesis in solution, therefore requiring dispersion, and embedding within a host medium for application.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A new plasmonic configuration is proposed for application in a sensor and demonstrated for the detection of variations in the bulk refractive index of solutions. The configuration consists of monitoring two diffracted orders resulting from the interaction of a TM-polarized optical beam incident on a grating coupler, operating based on an effect termed the "optical switch". The two monitored diffracted orders enable differential measurements which cancel the drift and perturbations common to both, leading to an improved detection limit, as demonstrated experimentally.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The carrier density profile in metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) capacitors is computed under gating using two classical models - conventional drift-diffusion (CDD) and density-gradient (DG) - and a self-consistent Schrödinger-Poisson (SP) quantum model. Once calibrated the DG model approximates well the SP model while being computationally more efficient. The carrier profiles are used in optical mode computations to determine the gated optical response of surface plasmons supported by waveguides incorporating MOS structures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) propagating along a waveguide working electrode are sensitive to changes in the local refractive index, which follow changes in the concentration of reduced and oxidized species near the working electrode. The real-time response of the output optical power from a waveguide working electrode is proportional to the time convolution of the electrochemical current density, precluding the need to compute the latter a posteriori via numerical integration. Convolutional voltammetry yields complementary results to conventional voltammetry and can be used to determine the diffusion constant, bulk concentration, and the number of transferred electrons of electroactive species.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Plasmonic catalysis holds promise for opening new reaction pathways inaccessible thermally or for improving the efficiency of chemical processes. We report a gold stripe waveguide along which infrared (λ ~ 1350 nanometers) surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) propagate, operating simultaneously as an electrochemical working electrode. Cyclic voltammograms obtained under SPP excitation enable oxidative processes involving energetic holes to be investigated separately from reductive processes involving energetic electrons.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Parity-time symmetric Bragg gratings produce unidirectional reflection around the exceptional point. We propose and explore directional coupling of gain and loss modulated waveguide Bragg gratings operating at around 880 nm with long-range surface plasmon polaritons. Step-in-width modulation of a Ag stripe supporting long-range plasmons combined with a periodic modulation of the cladding were used to balance the real and imaginary index perturbation of the gratings.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Surface acoustic wave (SAW) cavities have been widely applied as electronic bandpass filters, sensors, microfluidic tweezers, and, in recent years, as devices for coupling with quantum systems. Here we propose a novel method of analyzing acoustic Fabry-Pérot spectra, by analogy with optical cavities, to determine the free surface velocity and attenuation of SAW waves, as well as the reflection of interdigital transducers (IDTs), all of which are crucial design parameters. In our experiment, two-port SAW resonators, consisting of two IDTs laterally separated by a free surface cavity length, are used to generate SAWs on 128° Y-X lithium niobate that are trapped between the two IDTs which also act as Bragg reflectors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Short wavelength high-harmonic sources are undergoing intense development for applications in spectroscopy and microscopy. Despite recent progress in peak and average power, spatial control over coherent extreme ultraviolet (XUV) beams remains a formidable challenge due to the lack of suitable optical elements for beam shaping and control. Here we demonstrate a robust and precise approach that structures XUV high-order harmonics in space as they are emitted from a nanostructured MgO crystal.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Non-specific adsorption of proteins to the surfaces of microfluidic channels poses a serious problem in lab-on-a-chip devices involving complex biological fluids. Materials commonly used in the formation of microfluidic channels include CYTOP, silica and SU-8. CYTOP is a transparent fluoropolymer (Poly[perfluoro(4-vinyloxy-1-butene)]) with a low refractive index that approximately matches the refractive index of biologically compatible fluids, and is useful in optical biosensors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We use the end-facet of a solid-core polarization-maintaining photonic crystal fiber (PM-PCF) as a platform on which to fabricate resonant plasmonic nanostructures. Solid-core PM-PCFs can be excited in a polarization-aligned single mode by supercontinuum light, so they are well-suited to the wavelength-interrogation of resonant plasmonic nanostructures, especially supporting complex spectra over a broad spectral range. The nanostructures implemented consist of an array of heptamer-arranged nanoholes formed in a thin Au film.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A nanoplasmonic interferometric biosensor is introduced, utilizing the selective excitation of plasmonic modes via a nanoslit for enhanced biosensing sensitivity.
  • The system leverages the interference of counter-propagating surface plasmon polaritons to excite specific dipolar and quadrupolar modes based on analyte-induced phase shifts, leading to significant changes in light transmission patterns.
  • The sensor demonstrates impressive bulk and surface sensitivities, with the ability to fine-tune performance characteristics by adjusting the nanoslit's width, making it adaptable for various sensing applications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Optical phased arrays are of strong interest for beam steering in telecom and LIDAR applications. A phased array ideally requires that the field produced by each element in the array (a pixel) is fully controllable in phase and amplitude (ideally constant). This is needed to realize a phase gradient along a direction in the array, and thus beam steering in that direction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Exceptional points (EPs) are branch point singularities of self-intersecting Riemann sheets, and they can be observed in a non-Hermitian system with complex eigenvalues. It has been revealed recently that dynamically encircling EPs by adiabatically changing the parameters of a system composed of lossy optical waveguides could lead to asymmetric (input-output) mode transfer. However, the length of the waveguides had to be considerable to ensure adiabatic evolution.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF