AI Article Synopsis

  • - The metasurface thermal emitter is a compact and energy-efficient tool for non-contact gas detection, expanding applications from medical diagnostics to environmental monitoring using the "molecular fingerprint" technique.
  • - A one-dimensional dual-ridge grating emitter allows for dual-band and tri-band emission spectra, effectively targeting various gases like CH, CO, NO, and NH in the 3-6 µm range, reducing interference from mixed gases.
  • - This design's single metal layer minimizes material losses, enhances sensitivity, and maintains the quality of absorption peaks, supporting the development of miniaturized multi-gas detection systems.

Article Abstract

The metasurface thermal emitter offers an energy-efficient, compact, and sensitive solution as a radiation source for non-contact gas detection, enabling the "molecular fingerprint" technique to be widely applied, from medical diagnostics to environmental monitoring. However, most narrowband emitters are designed for a single target gas, hindering the miniaturization of multi-gas detection systems. In this work, a one-dimensional dual-ridge grating emitter is employed, achieving dual-band and tri-band polarization-distinguishable emission spectra through the excitation of Fabry-Perot (FP) resonances and quasi-bound states in the continuum (qBICs). These emission spectra can be readily matched to multiple non-overlapping absorption peaks of gases such as CH, CO, CO, NO, and NH within the 3-6 µm range, thereby reducing the impact of mixed gases on measurements. Compared to conventional metal-dielectric-metal structures, the use of a single metal layer results in lower material losses, enabling higher Q-factors and more pronounced directional radiation intensity variations. Furthermore, adjusting the asymmetry to modulate the qBIC-excited absorption peaks does not affect the Q-factor of the FP resonance absorption, thus achieving high-sensitivity multi-band gas detection. This work provides a promising approach for the miniaturization and integration of multi-gas channel detection, facilitating more accurate and sensitive sensing strategies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OE.541087DOI Listing

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