Open Access Paper
17 July 2019 Front Matter: Volume 11025
Abstract
This PDF file contains the front matter associated with SPIE Proceedings Volume 11025 including the Title Page, Copyright information, Table of Contents, Author and Conference Committee lists.

The papers in this volume were part of the technical conference cited on the cover and title page. Papers were selected and subject to review by the editors and conference program committee. Some conference presentations may not be available for publication. Additional papers and presentation recordings may be available online in the SPIE Digital Library at SPIEDigitalLibrary.org.

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Please use the following format to cite material from these proceedings:

Author(s), “Title of Paper,” in Metamaterials XII, edited by Vladimír Kuzmiak, Peter Markos, Tomasz Szoplik, Proceedings of SPIE Vol. 11025 (SPIE, Bellingham, WA, 2019) Seven-digit Article CID Number.

ISSN: 0277-786X

ISSN: 1996-756X (electronic)

ISBN: 9781510627161

ISBN: 9781510627178 (electronic)

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Paper Numbering: Proceedings of SPIE follow an e-First publication model. A unique citation identifier (CID) number is assigned to each article at the time of publication. Utilization of CIDs allows articles to be fully citable as soon as they are published online, and connects the same identifier to all online and print versions of the publication. SPIE uses a seven-digit CID article numbering system structured as follows:

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  • The last two digits indicate publication order within the volume using a Base 36 numbering system employing both numerals and letters. These two-number sets start with 00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 06, 07, 08, 09, 0A, 0B … 0Z, followed by 10-1Z, 20-2Z, etc. The CID Number appears on each page of the manuscript.

Authors

Numbers in the index correspond to the last two digits of the seven-digit citation identifier (CID) article numbering system used in Proceedings of SPIE. The first five digits reflect the volume number. Base 36 numbering is employed for the last two digits and indicates the order of articles within the volume. Numbers start with 00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 06, 07, 08, 09, 0A, 0B…0Z, followed by 10-1Z, 20-2Z, etc.

Abdeddaim, R., 0E

Ahmed, W., 06

Amanaganti, Sushanth Reddy, 0J

Antosiewicz, Tomasz J., 0D, 0S

Artemov, Vladimir, 0N

Bagci, Fehim Taha, 0G, 0K, 0Y

Bancerek, Maria, 0D

Borysiuk, J., 0V

Botey, M., 06

Centini, Marco, 03, 0O

Ciesielski, A., 0V

Czajkowski, Krzysztof M., 0D, 0S

Danilov, V. A., 0P

Demésy, Guillaume, 0Q

Dontabhaktuni, Jayasri, 0J

Enoch, S., 0E

Ezhov, Alexander, 0N

Geivandov, Artur, 0N

Gladskikh, Igor A., 16

Godlewski, M., 0V

Gorkunov, Maxim, 0N

Hayran, Z., 06

Herrero, R., 06

Kasyanova, Irina, 0N

Kocer, Hasan, 0G

Kotlyar, Victor V., 0Z, 18

Kotyński, Rafał, 0D

Kurt, Hamza, 06, 0G, 0K, 0Y

Lannebère, Sylvain, 0A

Larciprete, Maria Cristina, 03, 0O

Lecoq, P., 0E

Li Voti, Roberto, 03, 0O

Mamonova, Alena, 0N

Marlow, Emma L., 0U

Murphy, Antony P., 0U

Nabiullina, Rezida D., 16

Nalimov, Anton G., 0Z, 18

Nicolet, André, 0Q

Odintsova, Olga V., 12

O’Faolain, Liam, 0Z

Ozer, Ahmet, 0G, 0K

Ozga, M., 0V

Palto, Serguei, 0N

Petrov, N. I., 0P

Pietruszka, R., 0V

Pollard, Robert J., 0U

Popov, V. V., 0P

Sibilia, Concita, 03, 0O

Silveirinha, Mário G., 0A

Smirnov, Alexey N., 12

Sobczak, K., 0V

Solovyeva, Elena V., 12

Stafeev, Sergey S., 0Z, 18

Staliunas, K., 06

Starovoytov, Anton A., 16

Szoplik, T., 0V

Truong, Minh Duy, 0Q

Usievich, B. A., 0P

Vartanyan, Tigran A., 16

Witkowski, B. S., 0V

Wrobel, P., 0V

Yildirim, Tolga, 0Y

Yilmaz, Nazmi, 0G, 0K, 0Y

Zolla, Frédéric, 0Q

Conference Committee

Symposium Chairs

  • Bedřich Rus, ELI Beamlines (Czech Republic)

  • Chris B. Edwards, STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (United Kingdom)

  • Saša Bajt, Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (Germany)

  • Ivo Rendina, Istituto per la Microelettronica e Microsistemi (Italy)

  • Mike Dunne, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory (United States)

Honorary Symposium Chair

  • Erich Spitz, French Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Technologies (France), Advisor to Thales (France)

Conference Chairs

  • Vladimír Kuzmiak, Institute of Photonics and Electronics of the CAS, v.v.i. (Czech Republic)

  • Peter Markos, Comenius University in Bratislava (Slovakia)

  • Tomasz Szoplik, University of Warsaw (Poland)

Conference Program Committee

  • Che Ting Chan, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (Hong Kong, China)

  • Jiří Čtyroký, Institute of Photonics and Electronics of the CAS, v.v.i. (Czech Republic)

  • F. Javier García de Abajo, ICFO - Institut de Ciències Fotòniques (Spain)

  • Maria Kafesaki, Foundation for Research and Technology-Hellas (Greece)

  • Yuri S. Kivshar, The Australian National University (Australia)

  • Rafal Kotynski, University of Warsaw (Poland)

  • Andrei V. Lavrinenko, DTU Fotonik (Denmark)

  • Ekmel Özbay, Bilkent University (Turkey)

  • Concita Sibilia, Universitá degli Studi di Roma La Sapienza (Italy)

  • Mario Silveirinha, Universidad Técnica de Lisboa (Portugal)

  • Costas M. Soukoulis, Iowa State University (United States)

  • Martin Wegener, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (Germany)

  • Nikolay I. Zheludev, Optoelectronics Research Centre (United Kingdom)

  • Richard W. Ziolkowski, The University of Arizona (United States)

Session Chairs

  • 1 Tunable Metamaterials

    Vladimír Kuzmiak, Institute of Photonics and Electronics of the CAS, v.v.i. (Czech Republic)

  • 2 Applications of Metamaterials

    Tomasz Stefaniuk, University of Warsaw (Poland)

  • 3 Photonic Topological Insulators and their Applications

    Anatoly V. Zayats, King’s College London (United Kingdom)

  • 4 Hyperbolic Metamaterials and Refractive Index Materials

    Ekmel Özbay, Bilkent University (Turkey)

  • 5 Metasurfaces and Flat Optics

    M. C. Larciprete, Universitá degli Studi di Roma La Sapienza (Italy)

  • 6 Analytical and Numerical Modeling of Metamaterials

    Constantin R. Simovski, Aalto University (Finland)

  • 7 Plasmonics: Fundamentals and Applications

    Tomasz Szoplik, University of Warsaw (Poland)

Introduction

Metamaterials structured on the subwavelength scale and their extraordinary and tunable interaction with electromagnetic waves have continued to attract interest for a few decades. After almost twenty years since the realization of 3D metamaterials new opportunities of design and fabrication of 2D functional metasurfaces for discrete phase front modifications have well advanced. Generation, properties, and applications of surface plasmon-polariton waves have been incorporated into rich plethora of light-matter interactions.

In recent years, eastern and western European SPIE conferences on metamaterials have brought together the intertwined scientific communities of metamaterials, plasmonics, and nanophotonics.

In the invited lectures the latest advances in the field of plasmonic metamaterials, hyperbolic, polar metamaterials, in analytical and numerical modeling, metasurfaces, flat optics and in applications were reviewed. The scope of this conference has widened to include topological insulators - materials which have a semiconductor interior with narrow bandgap of controlled width and a conductive surface.

Several advances in both widespread methods as well as novel concepts implemented in metamaterial-based platforms were highlighted in the conference. For example, new ways to excite surface plasmons in integrated circuits by low-energy inelastic electron tunneling [11025-1] were presented by Anatoly Zayats, who also discussed an excitation of waveguided modes, light emission and hot-electrons in electrically-driven plasmonic nanorod metamaterials. A new approach based on a local Hilbert transform to design non-Hermitian potentials generating arbitrary vector fields of directionality [11025-6] was proposed by Kestutis Staliunas. It was demonstrated that such a functionality provides a flexible new mechanism for dynamically shaping and precise control over probe fields leading to novel effects in wave dynamics. The role of the Purcell effect which manifests itself in both surface-enhanced Raman scattering and plasmon-enhanced fluorescence [11025-20] was discussed by Constantin Simovski. In the field of topological insulators the implementations of fundamental topological models in both electronic and photonic graphene-type systems [11025-7] were presented by Sylvain Lannebere. In addition, a new class of topological crystalline insulators based on IV-VI compounds [11025-11] was presented by Tomasz Story and the influence of doping on magnetic properties of 3D topological insulators [11025-12] was discussed by Agnieszka Wolos.

In terms of applications, the conference covered several interesting topics: new technological opportunities created by metamaterials in medical imaging and sensor development [11025-15] were reviewed by Stefan Enoch; metamaterials composed of dispersed nanowire systems for managing and tuning of infrared emission [11025-2] were presented by Maria Larciprette and a review of various metamaterial-based designs for nanobiosensors, nanophotodetectors and perfect absorbers [11025-30] was given by Ekmel Ozbay.

We would like to thank to all participants and contributors to the conference who provided a lively environment for scientific discussion and collaboration, the Program Committee members, and the SPIE team who made things work.

Vladimir Kuzmiak

Peter Markos

Tomasz Szoplik

© (2019) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
"Front Matter: Volume 11025", Proc. SPIE 11025, Metamaterials XII, 1102501 (17 July 2019); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2535601
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