This paper presents a graphene-Au coated photonic crystal fiber (PCF) sensor in the visible regime. Designing a side-polish D-shaped plane over the PCF’s defect of the periodic air holes can effectively enhance the evanescent field. Graphene on gold can enhance the sensor’s sensitivity because it can stably adsorb biomolecules and increase the propagation constant of the surface plasmon polariton (SPP). Using the finite element method (FEM), we demonstrated that the sensing performance is greatly improved by optimizing the PCF’s geometric structural parameter. The proposed PCF sensor exhibited high performance with a maximum wavelength sensitivity of 4200 nm/RIU, maximum amplitude sensitivity of 450 RIU−1, and refractive index resolution of 2.3 × 10−5 RIU in the sensing range 1.32–1.41. This research provides a potential application for the design a new generation of highly sensitive biosensors.
We propose a high quality-factor (Q-factor) multi-Fano resonance hybrid metamaterial waveguide (HMW) sensor. By ingeniously designing a metal/dielectric hybrid waveguide structure, we can effectively tailor multi-Fano resonance peaks’ reflectance spectrum appearing in the visible wavelength range. In order to balance the high Q-factor and the best Fano resonance modulation depth, numerical calculation results demonstrated that the ultra-narrow linewidth resolution, the single-side quality factor, and Figure of Merit (FOM) can reach 1.7 nm, 690, and 236, respectively. Compared with the reported high Q-value (483) in the near-infrared band, an increase of 30% is achieved. Our proposed design may extend the application of Fano resonance in HMW from mid-infrared, terahertz band to visible band and have important research value in the fields of multi-wavelength non-labeled biosensing and slow light devices.
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