Cookies Policy
The website need some cookies and similar means to function. If you permit us, we will use those means to collect data on your visits for aggregated statistics to improve our service. Find out More
Accept Reject
  • Menu
About

About

Paulo Marques was born in Portugal in 1968. He received a degree in Physics (1991), a MSc in Optoelectronics and Lasers (1995) and a PhD in Physics (2000), all from the University of Porto, Portugal. From Nov. 1999 he was appointed as Teaching Assistant in University of Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro. In 2001, he joined the Faculty of Science from University of Porto as an Assistant Professor.

Since July 2000 he develops research activity in the Optoelectronics and Electronics Systems Unit (UOSE) of INESC PORTO, being responsible for several National and European research contracts. His current research interests include integrated optical sensors, laser direct writing techniques for integrated optics and microfabrication in general, microfluidics, Bragg gratings, optical photosensitivity. More recently has been involved in laser processing with ultrafast lase sources. Has published 4 world patents (patent family of 32) and published more than 100 scientific papers in international magazines and conferences and three book chapters.

Since October 2009 is the coordinator of the Center of Applied Photonics of INESCTEC (former Optoelectronics and Electronics Systems Unit). From May 2013 is also the director of the Micro and Nanofabrication Center of Porto University (CEMUP MNTEC).

Interest
Topics
Details

Details

  • Name

    Paulo Vicente Marques
  • Role

    Centre Coordinator
  • Since

    01st July 2000
  • Nationality

    Portugal
  • Centre

    Applied Photonics
  • Contacts

    +351220402301
    paulo.v.marques@inesctec.pt
016
Publications

2025

Optical Fiber Interferometers Fabricated by Femtosecond Laser Direct Writing for Sensing Applications

Authors
Viveiros, D; Maia, JM; de Almeida, JMMM; Coelho, L; Amorim, VA; Jorge, PAS; Marques, PVS;

Publication
29TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON OPTICAL FIBER SENSORS

Abstract
The fabrication of Mach-Zehnder and Fabry-Perot interferometers in SMF-28e fibers by femtosecond laser direct writing is demonstrated. The feasibility and effectiveness of this technique in fabricating high-sensitivity fiber optic interferometers is highlighted. TiO2 coated Mach-Zehnder interferometers exhibit improved refractive index sensitivity compared to uncoated interferometers, while the dual-cavity intrinsic Fabry-Perot interferometers shows enhanced spectral response and sensitivity for measurement of gas pressure.

2025

Femtosecond written waveguides for evanescent excitation of resonant optical sensing devices

Authors
Amorim, VA; Maia, JM; Frigenti, G; Baldini, F; Berneschi, S; Farnesi, D; Jorge, PAS; Conti, GN; dos Santos, PSS; Marque, PVS;

Publication
OPTICAL COMPONENTS AND MATERIALS XXII

Abstract
Optical resonant structures, such as circular disks and optical microbubble resonators (OMBRs), are crucial for highresolution chemical and biochemical sensing. Both can be integrated into microfluidic systems: resonant disks can be fabricated within microfluidic channels, while OMBRs use thin silica capillary walls to confine fluid samples in a hollowcore cavity. Optical modes are typically excited using tapered optical fibers, which offer efficiency but lack robustness for functional devices. This work presents two femtosecond laser-written waveguide designs for exciting whispering gallery modes (WGMs) in these resonant structures. For resonant disks, suspended waveguides are fabricated tangentially between the microfluidic channel walls. For OMBRs, integrated waveguides are written on fused silica substrates to excite resonant modes. Both configurations provide stable and robust optical sensing solutions. The OMBR platform achieved a sensitivity of 45 nm/RIU with a resolution of 4.4x10(-5) RIU, while monolithically integrated disks reached 80 nm/RIU with a resolution of 7.0x10(-4) RIU. In both cases, the Q-factor exceeded 10(4) across the measurement range. These results confirm that femtosecond laser-written waveguides can efficiently excite resonant modes, offering promising platforms for chemical and biochemical sensing applications.

2024

CONVERGE: A Vision-Radio Research Infrastructure Towards 6G and Beyond

Authors
Teixeira, FB; Ricardo, M; Coelho, A; Oliveira, HP; Viana, P; Paulino, N; Fontes, H; Marques, P; Campos, R; Pessoa, LM;

Publication
2024 JOINT EUROPEAN CONFERENCE ON NETWORKS AND COMMUNICATIONS & 6G SUMMIT, EUCNC/6G SUMMIT 2024

Abstract
Telecommunications and computer vision have evolved separately so far. Yet, with the shift to sub-terahertz (sub-THz) and terahertz (THz) radio communications, there is an opportunity to explore computer vision technologies together with radio communications, considering the dependency of both technologies on Line of Sight. The combination of radio sensing and computer vision can address challenges such as obstructions and poor lighting. Also, machine learning algorithms, capable of processing multimodal data, play a crucial role in deriving insights from raw and low-level sensing data, offering a new level of abstraction that can enhance various applications and use cases such as beamforming and terminal handovers. This paper introduces CONVERGE, a pioneering vision-radio paradigm that bridges this gap by leveraging Integrated Sensing and Communication (ISAC) to facilitate a dual View-to-Communicate, Communicate-to-View approach. CONVERGE offers tools that merge wireless communications and computer vision, establishing a novel Research Infrastructure (RI) that will be open to the scientific community and capable of providing open datasets. This new infrastructure will support future research in 6G and beyond concerning multiple verticals, such as telecommunications, automotive, manufacturing, media, and health.

2024

Manipulation of Microparticles in Optofluidic Devices Fabricated by Femtosecond Laser Micromachining

Authors
Cameira, C; Maia, M; Marques, PVS;

Publication
EPJ Web of Conferences

Abstract
This study reports the fabrication of three-dimensional microfluidic channels in fused silica, using femtosecond laser micromachining, to achieve two-dimensional hydrodynamic flow focusing in either the horizontal or the vertical directions. Spatial focusing of 3 µm polystyrene particles was successfully demonstrated, showing the ability of the fabricated devices to confine microparticles within a 6 µm layer over a channel width of 420 µm and within a 5 µm layer over a channel height of 260 µm. Integration of laser-direct written optical waveguides inside a microfluidic chip and orthogonal to the channel also enabled the implementation of a dual-beam optical trap, with trapping of polystyrene microparticles using a 1550 nm beam being demonstrated. © The Authors.

2024

Integrated All-In-Silica Optofluidic Platform Based on Microbubble Resonator and Femtosecond Laser Written Surface Waveguide

Authors
Amorim, VA; Frigenti, G; Baldini, F; Berneschi, S; Farnesi, D; Jorge, PAS; Maia, JM; Conti, GN; dos Santos, PSS; Marques, PVS;

Publication
IEEE SENSORS JOURNAL

Abstract
Optical microbubble resonators (OMBRs)-understood as localized thin wall bulges induced in silica microcapillaries-are gaining an ever-growing interest in microfluidic sensing applications due to their capability to sustain whispering gallery modes (WGMs) and confine the fluidic sample within their own hollow-core microcavity. Currently, most applications use an external tapered optical fiber for coupling light to the resonator. This arrangement is known to be fragile and prone to vibrations. In this work, an alternative approach, based on coupling OMBR with a femtosecond (fs) laser-written optical waveguides, integrated at the surface of fused silica substrate, is proposed. In this configuration, a stable and robust final structure is accomplished by gluing the two ends of the microcapillary, on which the OMBR is made, to the substrate. The OMBR quality factors, measured at the excitation wavelength of 1540 nm, show values close to 10(4) in the case of a water-filled cavity, with a maximum coupling efficiency of up to 6.5%. Finally, the operation of the integrated optical devices as refractometers is demonstrated by delivering different solutions with successively increasing concentrations of NaCl inside the OMBR. An average sensitivity of 45 nm/RIU is obtained, yielding a resolution of 4.4x10(-5) RIU, creating the potential for this platform to be applied in chemical/biochemical sensing.