Conference Agenda

Please note small changes to the agenda are still possible.

Read about the Topical Meetings and sessions of the conference

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Select a single session for a detailed view (with abstracts and downloads when you are logged in as a registered attendee).

 
 
Session Overview
Date: Sunday, 24/Aug/2025
12:00pm - 1:00pmRegistration opening
1:00pm - 2:30pmTutorial Julius Muschaweck
Location: Room 1

Title: Introduction to Colorimetry

1:00pm - 2:30pmTutorial Hugo Cramer
Location: Room 2

Title: Scatterometry in the Semiconductor Industry

1:00pm - 2:30pmTutorial Simon Horsley
Location: Room 3

Title: Topology, Waves, and the Refractive Index

1:00pm - 2:30pmTutorial Sanli Faez
Location: Room 4

Title: Who gets a chance at a university career and why?

2:30pm - 4:00pmTutorial Sylvain Gigan
Location: Room 1

Title: Photonics for AI : coming of age?

2:30pm - 4:00pmTutorial James Blakesley
Location: Room 2

Title: Applications of Digital Illumination in Metrology for Semiconductors and Photovoltaics

2:30pm - 4:00pmTutorial Qingfeng Li
Location: Room 3

Title: Thorlabs Quantum Optics Kit

2:30pm - 4:00pmTutorial
Location: Room 4
4:00pm - 4:30pmBreak
4:30pm - 6:00pmTutorial Martijn Anthonissen
Location: Room 1

Title: Computational Illumination Optics

4:30pm - 6:00pmTutorial Sara Nocentini
Location: Room 2

Title: 3D printing of polymers at the nanoscale for advanced optics and photonics

4:30pm - 6:00pmTutorial Ignacio Moreno
Location: Room 3

Title: Spatial Light Modulators

4:30pm - 6:00pmTutorial Shima Rajabhali
Location: Room 4

Title: Terahertz Integrated Photonics


Date: Monday, 25/Aug/2025
8:15am - 9:00amRegistration opening
9:00am - 9:45amOpening Ceremony
9:45am - 10:30amPLENARY: Two-photon infrared vision by Pablo Artal

Although human vision is traditionally confined to the visible spectrum, recent research has revealed that pulsed near-infrared (NIR) light can be perceived as visible due to two-photon absorption (TPA) in the photoreceptors. This nonlinear optical process enables infrared photons to effectively stimulating the visual pigments in a manner similar to conventional visible-light absorption. This expands our understanding of retinal physiology and opens new possibilities for both fundamental and applied vision research. In this presentation, I will discuss our recent investigations into TPA-mediated vision, including its impact on visual acuity and color perception. Our experimental studies demonstrate that visual resolution under TPA conditions is comparable to that of normal visible-light vision, achieved by scanning a pulsed NIR beam across the retina to form letter stimuli. Furthermore, our psychophysical experiments reveal that perceived hues shift predictably with increasing NIR wavelength (880 to 1100 nm) and radiant power (10 to 30 µW), transitioning from reddish-purple to blue, green, and yellow-green. These findings provide novel insights into the intensity-dependent interplay between single-photon (1P) and two-photon (2P) absorption processes in human vision. Beyond its fundamental implications, TPA vision presents exciting clinical and technological opportunities. It offers a potential method for retinal diagnostics that circumvents ocular opacities. Additionally, the development of TPA-based RGB displays could revolutionize display technologies. This presentation will provide an overview of our key findings, the methodologies employed, and the broader impact of TPA vision research and applications.

Read more: Plenary Speakers

10:30am - 11:00amCoffee Break - Visit the Exhibition
11:00am - 12:30pmPLENARY: EU Project Podium Session

For the ninth time, the European Optical Society (EOS) is organizing a special session for EU project partners to disseminate their results. The session is organized in collaboration with Photonics21 and ICFO. During this session, projects will have the opportunity to present their goals and results to the conference audience.

12:30pm - 1:30pmLUNCH - Visit the Exhibition
1:30pm - 2:15pmAward Ceremony
2:15pm - 3:00pmPLENARY: Hollow core fibres: when less is more by Francesco Poletti

For decades, hollow core fibres have been a fascinating tool for scientists, enabling long distance light guidance in any gas, as well as innovative experiments exploiting the long light:gas interaction length. For a long time, their optical performance fell much shorter than the requirements of optical communications. Recently though, thanks to nested antiresonant designs, the loss of these fibres has reached lower values than fundamentally achievable in conventional glass-guiding telecoms fibres, opening exploitation opportunities in data-transmission systems. This, added to negligible nonlinearity, very high damage threshold and ultimately low latency, has dramatically increased global interest in the technology for numerous applications involving the transmission and delivery of light. While there are still substantial challenges to be solved before they can achieve widespread commercialization, it is hard to believe that hollow core fibres will not find an application in the optical communication networks of the future. In this talk we will review state-of-the-art, opportunities and challenges of the hollow core fibre technology.

Read more: Plenary Speakers

3:00pm - 3:30pmCoffee Break - Visit the Exhibition
3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM Applications S1: Applications of Optics and Photonics
Location: Collegezaal A
Session Chair: André Gomes, Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology, Germany
3:30pm - 5:00pmEU S1: EU Session
Location: Collegezaal B
3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM Materials S1: Luminescence and Emission of Optical Materials / Light Matter Interactions
Location: Collegezaal C
3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM Fibers S1: Applications
Location: Collegezaal D
Session Chair: Jean-Charles Beugnot, FEMTO-ST/CNRS, France
3:30pm - 5:00pmF2P S1: Face2Phase
Location: Commissiekamer 3
3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM Quantum S1: Quantum Polaritonics
Location: Hasseltzaal
Session Chair: N. Asger Mortensen, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark
3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM BioPhot S1: Super Resolution Imaging
Location: Senaatszaal
Session Chair: Carlas Smith, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands, The
5:15pm - 6:15pmPodium: HR strategies for the growing Photonics industry
6:15pm - 8:30pmNetworking reception

Unwind and connect with fellow attendees over drinks and finger foods. Join us for a relaxed and friendly evening of conversation, collaboration, and new connections.

Open to all registered attendees.


Date: Tuesday, 26/Aug/2025
8:30am - 10:00amTOM Applications S2: Applications of Optics and Photonics
Location: Collegezaal A
Session Chair: Rosa Ana Perez-Herrera, UNIVERSIDAD PUBLICA DE NAVARRA, Spain
8:30am - 10:00amEU S2: EU Session
Location: Collegezaal B
8:30am - 10:00amTOM Materials S2: Optical Materials, Synthesis and Characterizations
Location: Collegezaal C
8:30am - 10:00amTOM Fibers S2: Optical Communications
Location: Collegezaal D
8:30am - 10:00amF2P S2: Face2Phase
Location: Commissiekamer 3
8:30am - 10:00amTOM Quantum S2: Quantum Polaritonics
Location: Hasseltzaal
Session Chair: N. Asger Mortensen, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark
8:30am - 10:00amTOM BioPhot S2: Imaging 1
Location: Senaatszaal
Session Chair: Kristin Grussmayer, TU Delft, Netherlands, The
10:00am - 10:30amCoffee Break - Visit the Exhibition
10:30am - 11:15amPLENARY: Optical tomography of scattering samples by means of acoustofluidic actuation by Monika Ritsh-Marte

Large cell clusters, such as organoids, cancer spheroids or developing embryos are often optically too opaque for imaging under illumination from only one side. Rotating or re-orienting the sample for multi-angle illumination is a solution to this problem, in the best case enabling 3D tomographic reconstruction of the refractive index distribution. Tailored optical and acoustic fields  can exert controlled forces on microscopic biomedical samples in suspension in a non-contact way. Large and therefore heavy particles, however, can only be levitated by acoustic forces - optical tweezers could not handle them without adverse high-power effects. By tuning standing MHz ultrasound waves it is possible to rotate or re-orient a sample inside a micro-fluidic chamber around one or more chosen axes perpendicular to the optical imaging direction, thus avoiding the ‘missing-cone’ problem which commonly leads to artifacts. As examples, the 3D reconstruction of a levitated zebrafish larva by optical coherence tomography (OCT) and of cell clusters by optical diffraction tomography (ODT) will be presented.

Read more: Plenary Speakers

11:15am - 12:00pmPLENARY: EOS Partner Society, Optical Society of Japan (OSJ), Presents: Electron-beam excitation assisted optical microscopy for high resolution bio-imaging and cell stimulation by Yoshimasa Kawata OSJ
12:00pm - 1:00pmLUNCH - Visit the Exhibition
1:00pm - 2:00pmPOSTER SESSION 1
2:00pm - 2:15pmProgram tbc
2:15pm - 3:00pmPLENARY: High-power ultrafast moves into the Terahertz by Clara Saraceno

High-power ultrafast moves into the Terahertz

Ultrafast laser-driven broadband Terahertz light sources are nowadays ubiquitous tools in many scientific fields, enabling researchers to control and probe an immense variety of low energy phenomena in condensed matter and other systems. They are also being increasingly deployed in industrial settings for inspection and non destructive testing: THz waves "see through" optically opaque objects, and can provide rich spectroscopic information at a glance. While techniques to generate short, broadband THz pulses using ultrafast laser pulses and nonlinear conversion techniques have seen continuous performance progress in the last few years, their average power has traditionally moved comparatively slowly, which has prevented many of these fields from blooming. On the other hand, the increasing availability and enormous performance progress of ultrafast Ytterbium-based lasers providing multi-100-W to kilowatt average-power levels has opened up the area of high average power, laser-driven THz sources: recent results reaching average power levels in the THz domain approaching the watt-level, opening the door to a multiplicity of new and old research areas to be re-visited. We review recent progress in the generation of high-average power THz-pulses, current technological challenges in scaling THz average power, and applications areas that could potentially benefit from these novel sources.

3:00pm - 3:30pmCoffee Break - Visit the Exhibition
3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM Applications S3: Applications of Optics and Photonics
Location: Collegezaal A
Session Chair: Luís Coelho, INESC TEC, Portugal
3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM NanoPhot S1: Nanophotonics
Location: Collegezaal B
Session Chair: Willem Vos, University of Twente, Netherlands, The
3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM Materials S3: Nanomaterials and Nanophotonics
Location: Collegezaal C
3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM Fibers S3: Characterisations
Location: Collegezaal D
Session Chair: Marc Wuilpart, University of Mons, Belgium
3:30pm - 5:00pmFS Mid-Infrared: Mid-Infrared Photonics: Materials, Devices, and Applications
Location: Commissiekamer 2
3:30pm - 5:00pmF2P S3: Face2Phase
Location: Commissiekamer 3
3:30pm - 5:00pmJoint Session: Ultrafast Phenomena + Nonlinear and Quantum Optics
Location: Hasseltzaal
3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM BioPhot S3: Biosensors 1
Location: Senaatszaal
Session Chair: Petra Paiè, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
5:15pm - 6:45pmAnnual General Assembly of EOS (AGA), open for all EOS Members

Date: Wednesday, 27/Aug/2025
8:30am - 10:00amTOM Applications S4: Applications of Optics and Photonics
Location: Collegezaal A
Session Chair: Susana Silva, INESC TEC, Portugal
8:30am - 10:00amTOM NanoPhot S2: Nanophotonics
Location: Collegezaal B
Session Chair: Nandini Bhattacharya, TU Delft, Netherlands, The
8:30am - 10:00amTOM Materials S4: Thin Films and Applications
Location: Collegezaal C
8:30am - 10:00amTOM Fibers S4: Optical Non Linearities
Location: Collegezaal D
8:30am - 10:00amFS Visual: Visual Optics and Imaging
Location: Commissiekamer 2
8:30am - 10:00amF2P S4: Face2Phase
Location: Commissiekamer 3
8:30am - 10:00amTOM Nonlinear S1: Nonlinear and Quantum Optics
Location: Hasseltzaal
8:30am - 10:00amTOM BioPhot S4: Imaging 2
Location: Senaatszaal
Session Chair: Dimitrii Tanese, Vision Institute, France
10:00am - 10:30amCoffee Break - Visit the Exhibition
10:30am - 11:15amPLENARY: Digital Holographic Microscopy in overlay metrology for the semiconductor industry by Arie de Boef

Device density in semiconductor chips continues to increase through many innovations. For example, high-NA EUV lithography enables the printing of smaller features that allow more devices in a smaller area. In addition, many innovations are taking place in the area of 3D device integration where devices are stacked on each other.
Manufacturing state-of-the-art chips with sufficient yield requires good control of many process steps during manufacturing. Overlay, for example, is a critical parameter in chip manufacturing. Overlay describes the lateral mis-alignment between 2 overlapping layers in a device. Any misalignment (=overlay error) can result in significant yield loss and overlay must therefore be controlled to the 1 nm level. These levels of control need accurate and robust overlay metrology.
Overlay is often measured on dedicated targets using optical microscopy. However, robustly achieving sub-nanometer precision requires near-perfect microscopic imaging conditions which drives the need for high-quality imaging optics with very low aberration levels. Technically this is possible, but it leads to complex and costly optical imaging systems. In order to keep metrology costs to acceptable levels there is a need for a microscopy approach that achieves the sub-nanometer precision levels in a more cost-efficient way.

Read more: Plenary Speakers

11:15am - 12:00pmPLENARY: EOS Partner Society, Chinese Optical Society (COS), Presents: High quality multifunctional dynamic imaging through one multimode fiber by Xu Liu
12:00pm - 1:00pmLUNCH - Visit the Exhibition
1:00pm - 2:00pmPOSTER SESSION 2
2:00pm - 2:15pmEOS Fellow Ceremony

EOS celebrates distinguished members of the society with one of the highest categories of membership of the EOS: the Fellowship.

2:15pm - 3:00pmPLENARY: Frequency Comb Interferometry by Nathalie Picque

Optical frequency combs have revolutionized time and frequency metrology by providing rulers in frequency space that measure large optical frequency differences and/or straightforwardly link microwave and optical frequencies. Such combs enable precision laser spectroscopy, tests of fundamental physics and provide the long-missing clockwork mechanism for optical clocks.

While frequency combs have become key to research areas such as attosecond science, or calibration of astronomical spectrographs, one of the most successful applications beyond their original purpose has been dual-comb interferometry. An interferometer can be formed using two frequency combs of slightly different line spacing. Dual-comb interferometers without moving parts are fundamentally different from any other type of interferometers: they perform direct frequency measurements, without geometric limitations to resolution. They outperform state-of-the-art devices in an increasing number of fields including spectroscopy and three-dimensional imaging, offering unique features such as frequency measurements, accuracy, precision, speed. This talk will provide a short introduction to optical frequency combs and will survey dual-comb interferometry and its latest exciting developments.

Read more:Plenary Speakers

3:00pm - 3:30pmCoffee Break - Visit the Exhibition
3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM Applications S5: Applications of Optics and Photonics
Location: Collegezaal A
Session Chair: Orlando Frazão, INESC TEC, Portugal
3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM NanoPhot S3: Nanophotonics
Location: Collegezaal B
Session Chair: Shima Rajabali, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands, The
3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM Materials S5: Organic Optical Materials and Applications
Location: Collegezaal C
3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM Fibers S5: Fabrication
Location: Collegezaal D
Session Chair: Sylvie Lebrun, Laboratoire Charles Fabry, Institut d'Optique, CNRS, Université Paris-Saclay, France
3:30pm - 5:00pmEOS - COS session
Location: Commissiekamer 2

The session organized by the European Optical Society (EOS) and the Chinese Optical Society (COS) is intended to promote international cooperation and knowledge-sharing between Chinese and European researchers. The session will showcase speakers from EU and China with professional experience in both frameworks.

Chairs: Xu Liu (COS) and Remo Proietti Zaccaria (EOS)

Read more: EOS–COS Session

3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM Nonlinear S2: Nonlinear and Quantum Optics
Location: Hasseltzaal
3:30pm - 5:00pmTOM BioPhot S5: Biosensors 2
Location: Senaatszaal
Session Chair: Francesco Baldini, CNR, Italy
5:15pm - 6:45pmTOM Applications S6: Applications of Optics and Photonics
Location: Collegezaal A
Session Chair: Vittorio Cecconi, Loughborough University, United Kingdom
5:15pm - 6:45pmTOM NanoPhot S4: Nanophotonics
Location: Collegezaal B
Session Chair: Willem Vos, University of Twente, Netherlands, The
5:15pm - 6:45pmTOM Adaptive S1: Adaptive and Freeform Optics
Location: Collegezaal D
Session Chair: Wilbert IJzerman, Signify, Netherlands, The
5:15pm - 6:45pmESRS: Early Stage Researcher Session
Location: Commissiekamer 2

This session is designed to allow participants to present the preliminary status of their work. It covers all topics in optics and photonics. 

The objective is to share and develop ideas, to exchange and discuss the possible issues, and find help from peers around a research work.  

5:15pm - 6:45pmTOM Ultrafast S1: Ultrafast Phenomena
Location: Commissiekamer 3
5:15pm - 6:45pmTOM Nonlinear S3: Nonlinear and Quantum Optics
Location: Hasseltzaal
8:30pm - 11:00pmCONFERENCE DINNER

Join us in the greenery of Delft for a relaxed dinner off-site.

Separate registration required.


Date: Thursday, 28/Aug/2025
8:30am - 10:00amTOM Applications S7: Applications of Optics and Photonics
Location: Collegezaal A
Session Chair: M.Teresa Flores-Arias, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Spain
8:30am - 10:00amTOM NanoPhot S5: Nanophotonics
Location: Collegezaal B
Session Chair: Nandini Bhattacharya, TU Delft, Netherlands, The
8:30am - 10:00amTOM Adaptive S2: Adaptive and Freeform Optics
Location: Collegezaal D
Session Chair: Stefan Bäumer, TNO, Netherlands, The
8:30am - 10:00amFS Complex S1: Optics with Complex Wavefronts
Location: Commissiekamer 2
Session Chair: Allard Mosk, Utrecht University, Netherlands, The
8:30am - 10:00amTOM Ultrafast S2: Ultrafast Phenomena
Location: Commissiekamer 3
8:30am - 10:00amTOM Nonlinear S4: Nonlinear and Quantum Optics
Location: Hasseltzaal
10:00am - 10:30amCoffee Break
10:30am - 12:00pmTOM Applications S8: Applications of Optics and Photonics
Location: Collegezaal A
Session Chair: Matthieu Roussey, University of Eastern Finland, Finland
10:30am - 12:00pmTOM NanoPhot S6: Nanophotonics
Location: Collegezaal B
Session Chair: Shima Rajabali, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands, The
10:30am - 12:00pmTOM Adaptive S3: Adaptive and Freeform Optics
Location: Collegezaal D
Session Chair: Alois Herkommer, University Stuttgart, Germany
10:30am - 12:00pmFS Complex S2: Optics with Complex Wavefronts
Location: Commissiekamer 2
Session Chair: Ivo M Vellekoop, University of Twente, Netherlands, The
10:30am - 12:00pmTOM Ultrafast S3: Ultrafast Phenomena
Location: Commissiekamer 3
12:00pm - 12:15pmBest Student Presentation Awards

All student presentations - oral and poster - are eligible for the best student presentation awards. 

12:15pm - 12:30pmCLOSING CEREMONY
12:30pm - 7:00pmCarla Symposium and Training at TU Delft

This exciting event bridges the gap between academic excellence and industry opportunities in photonics. This is your chance to explore how students (HBO, Master, PhD) like you can shape tomorrow’s technological advancements through innovative careers.

Meet Potential Employers and Hear Genuine Stories! 

Read more: Photonics Careers 

Separate registration required.