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Publicações

Publicações por CAP

2025

Enhancement of Fiber-Optic Sensor Performance Through Hyperbolic Dispersion Engineering

Autores
Carvalho, JPM; Mendes, JP; Coelho, LCC; de Almeida, JMMM;

Publicação
29TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON OPTICAL FIBER SENSORS

Abstract
Optical fibers have been extensively applied in optical sensing platforms for their large bandwidth, stability, light weight and accessibility. This work presents a theoretical analysis of an optical fiber surface plasmon resonance system for refractometric sensing applications. The device consists of a multilayer hyperbolic metamaterial (HMM) composed of concentric Au/TiO2 alternate layers in optical fiber matrix. HMMs exhibit hyperbolic dispersion (HD) and the interaction of different plasmonic modes at each interface of the HMM is reported to enhance light-matter coupling, leading to an increased refractometric sensitivity. The HD and its effects on sensor performance are numerically investigated by effective medium theory (EMT) and backed by the exact transfer matrix method (TMM). The maximum sensor performance was attained for a configuration with 2 bilayers with 30 nm thickness for a metal fill fraction (rho) of 0.7, achieving a figure of merit (FOM) of 18.45. A direct comparison with a plasmonic Au optical fiber sensor returned an optimized FOM of 5.74, therefore achieving over a three-fold increase in sensor performance, assessing the potential of HMM as highly refractometric sensitive platforms.

2025

Optimization of Magnetoplasmonic Behavior in Ag/Fe Bilayer Nanostructures Towards Refractometric Sensing

Autores
Carvalho, JPM; Dias, BS; Coelho, LCC; de Almeida, JMMM;

Publicação
SENSORS

Abstract
Magneto-optic surface plasmon resonances (MOSPRs) rely on the interaction of magnetic fields with surface plasmon polaritons (SPP) to modulate plasmonic bands with magnetic fields and enhance magneto-optical activity. In the present work, a study on the magnetoplasmonic behavior of Ag/Fe bilayers is carried out by VIS-NIR spectroscopy and backed with SQUID measurements, determining the thickness-dependent magnetization of thin-film samples. The MOSPR sensing properties of Ag/Fe planar bilayers are simulated using Berreman's matrix formalism, from which an optimized structure composed of 15 nm of Ag and 12.5 nm of Fe is obtained. The selected structure is fabricated and characterized for refractive index (RI) sensitivity, reaching 4946 RIU-1 and returning an effective enhancement of refractometric sensitivity after magneto-optical modulation. A new optimized and cobalt-free magnetoplasmonic Ag/Fe bilayer structure is studied, fabricated, and characterized for the first time towards refractometric sensing, to the best of our knowledge. This configuration exhibits potential for enhancing refractometric sensitivity via magneto-optical modulation, thus paving the way towards a simpler, more accessible, and safe type of RI sensor with potential applications in chemical sensors and biosensors.

2025

Gold-coated silver nanorods on side-polished singlemode optical fibers for remote sensing at optical telecommunication wavelengths

Autores
dos Santos, PSS; Mendes, JP; Pastoriza-Santos, I; Juste, JP; de Almeida, JMMM; Coelho, LCC;

Publicação
SENSORS AND ACTUATORS B-CHEMICAL

Abstract
The lower refractive index sensitivity (RIS) of plasmonic nanoparticles (NP) in comparison to their plasmonic thin films counterparts hindered their wide adoption for wavelength-based sensor designs, wasting the NP characteristic field locality. In this context, high aspect-ratio colloidal core-shell Ag@Au nanorods (NRs) are demonstrated to operate effectively at telecommunication wavelengths, showing RIS of 1720 nm/RIU at 1350 nm (O-band) and 2325 nm/RIU at 1550 nm (L-band), representing a five-fold improvement compared to similar Au NRs operating at equivalent wavelengths. Also, these NRs combine the superior optical performance of Ag with the Au chemical stability and biocompatibility. Next, using a side-polished optical fiber, we detected glyphosate, achieving a detection limit improvement from 724 to 85 mg/L by shifting from the O to the C/L optical bands. This work combines the significant scalability and cost-effective advantages of colloidal NPs with enhanced RIS, showing a promising approach suitable for both point-of-care and long-range sensing applications at superior performance than comparable thin film-based sensors in either environmental monitoring and other fields.

2025

High-precision acoustic event monitoring in single-mode fibers using Fisher information

Autores
Monteiro, CS; Ferreira, TD; Silva, NA;

Publicação
OPTICS LETTERS

Abstract
Polarization optical fiber sensors are based on modifications of fiber birefringence by an external measurand (e.g., strain, pressure, acoustic waves). Yet, this means that different input states of polarization will result in very distinct behaviors, which may or may not be optimal in terms of sensitivity and signal-to-noise ratio. To tackle this challenge, this manuscript presents an optimization technique for the input polarization state using the Fisher information formalism, which allows for achieving maximal precision for a statistically unbiased metric. By first measuring the variation of the Mueller matrix of the optical fiber in response to controlled acoustic perturbations induced by piezo speakers, we compute the corresponding Fisher information operator. Using maximal information states of the Fisher information, it was possible to observe a significant improvement in the performance of the sensor, increasing the signal-to-noise ratio from 4.3 to 37.6 dB, attaining an almost flat response from 1.5 kHz up to 15 kHz. As a proof-of-concept for dynamic audio signal detection, a broadband acoustic signal was also reconstructed with significant gain, demonstrating the usefulness of the introduced formalism for high-precision sensing with polarimetric fiber sensors. (c) 2025 Optica Publishing Group. All rights, including for text and data mining (TDM), Artificial Intelligence (AI) training, and similar technologies, are reserved.

2025

Enhancing a Polarimetric Fiber Sensor Using Fisher Information

Autores
Ferreira, TD; Monteiro, C; Gonçalves, C; Frazao, O; Silva, NA;

Publicação
29TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON OPTICAL FIBER SENSORS

Abstract
Polarization-based fiber sensors rely on the dynamics of the Stokes vector at the output of the optical fiber to probe stimuli that induce polarization variations. However, these sensors often suffer from limitations in sensitivity, precision, and reproducibility. In this work, we address these challenges by incorporating concepts from the Mueller matrix formalism to enhance the capabilities of such sensors. Specifically, we measure the Mueller matrix in the polarization basis that describes how the polarization evolves inside the optical fiber. Leveraging this formalism, we configure the system as a precise sensor to detect deformations along the fiber. By utilizing the Fisher Information framework, we significantly improve accuracy and resolution, enabling the detection of subtle perturbations with greater precision. This study introduces a novel approach for precise polarization control and advanced fiber-based sensing applications.

2025

Harnessing Speckle Optical Fiber Sensors through High-Frequency Interrogation with an Event-Based Camera

Autores
Lopes, T; Teixeira, J; Rocha, VV; Ferreira, TD; Monteiro, CS; Jorge, PAS; Silva, NA;

Publicação
29TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON OPTICAL FIBER SENSORS

Abstract
Despite their extreme sensitivity, speckle-based fiber optical sensors are typically limited by the camera frame rate and dynamic range. In this context, recent developments in event-based sensors make them a promising and affordable tool for high-speed interrogation for such class of sensors, offering a low-latency approach to detecting dynamic changes in illumination patterns, well-suited for fast interrogation with frequency response up to the MHz range. In this manuscript, we investigate the potential of using an event-based vision sensor (EVS) as an interrogator for a speckle-based optical fiber sensor operating at 532nm to detect vibrations induced by an off-the-shelf sound speaker. In contact with the fiber, these vibrations induce dynamic changes in the speckle pattern, which are tracked by the EVS and processed to construct temporal frames with timestamps below 100 mu s. Approximating the differential operator of the deformation in the linear regime, we show a successful reconstruction of the acoustic signal for two illustrative case studies: i)a single-frequency signal at 1.2 KHz and ii)a linear ramp between 300 Hz to 2.5 kHz. The results demonstrate the ability to accurately identify not only the fundamental frequencies but also their harmonics generated by the speaker up to 5 KHz, paving an innovative path to harness the potential of speckle-based sensors in multiple scenarios of optical metrology and dynamic sensing applications.

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