Mohamed M. Gad, Yasser M. El Batawy, Mai O. Sallam
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Metamaterials for refractive index sensing applications have garnered significant attention in recent years. However, achieving an optimal balance between high sensitivity and quality factor, which together determine the Figure of Merit of sensors, necessitates extensive optimization efforts. In this paper, we present the metaheuristic optimization of a refractive index-based plasmonic sensor operating at a wavelength of 1500 nm, which has the potential to open new avenues for applications in biomedical sensing and beyond. Particle Swarm Optimization is utilized to maximize the performance of the proposed infrared metamaterial sensor. The proposed design features two overlapping E-shaped silver patches placed on top of a grounded \(\mathrm {Al_{2}O_{3}}\) substrate. This configuration results in a narrow-band absorption spectrum with peak resonances caused by the confinement of the electric field within the gaps of the E-shaped metallic arms. The metaheuristic optimization process yielded sensor dimensions that achieve a high sensitivity of 834.7 nm/RIU,Q = 865 and a Figure of Merit of 481.34 \(\textrm{RIU}^{-1}\), demonstrating outstanding performance in cancer cell detection.
期刊介绍:
Optical and Quantum Electronics provides an international forum for the publication of original research papers, tutorial reviews and letters in such fields as optical physics, optical engineering and optoelectronics. Special issues are published on topics of current interest.
Optical and Quantum Electronics is published monthly. It is concerned with the technology and physics of optical systems, components and devices, i.e., with topics such as: optical fibres; semiconductor lasers and LEDs; light detection and imaging devices; nanophotonics; photonic integration and optoelectronic integrated circuits; silicon photonics; displays; optical communications from devices to systems; materials for photonics (e.g. semiconductors, glasses, graphene); the physics and simulation of optical devices and systems; nanotechnologies in photonics (including engineered nano-structures such as photonic crystals, sub-wavelength photonic structures, metamaterials, and plasmonics); advanced quantum and optoelectronic applications (e.g. quantum computing, memory and communications, quantum sensing and quantum dots); photonic sensors and bio-sensors; Terahertz phenomena; non-linear optics and ultrafast phenomena; green photonics.