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Anders Pors

Researcher at University of Southern Denmark

Publications -  62
Citations -  4938

Anders Pors is an academic researcher from University of Southern Denmark. The author has contributed to research in topics: Plasmon & Surface plasmon polariton. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 61 publications receiving 4246 citations. Previous affiliations of Anders Pors include Autonomous University of Madrid.

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Broadband focusing flat mirrors based on plasmonic gradient metasurfaces

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that metal-insulator-metal configurations, with the top metal layer consisting of a periodic arrangement of differently sized nanobricks, can be designed to function as broadband focusing flat mirrors and can be extended to realize the radiation focusing in two dimensions as well as other optical functionalities by suitably controlling the phase distribution of reflected light.
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Gradient metasurfaces: a review of fundamentals and applications.

TL;DR: The fundamental building blocks essential for the realization of metasurfaces are discussed in order to elucidate the underlying physics of various physical realizations of both plasmonic and purely dielectric metAsurfaces.
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Gap plasmon-based metasurfaces for total control of reflected light

TL;DR: The presented approach establishes a new class of compact optical components, viz., plasmonic metasurfaces with controlled gradient birefringence, with no dielectric counterparts, and can straightforwardly be adapted to realise new optical components with hitherto inaccessible functionalities.
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Subwavelength plasmonic color printing protected for ambient use.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that, due to inherent stability of GPRs with respect to surfactants, the fabricated color print can be protected with a transparent dielectric overlay for ambient use without destroying its coloring.
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Plasmonic metasurfaces for efficient phase control in reflection

TL;DR: It is shown how a combination of metal nanobrick and nanocross elements allows one to fully control the phase of reflected light for two orthogonal polarizations simultaneously, in relation to birefringent metal-backed metasurfaces.