We propose a 1D photonic crystal with nonlinear graphene-spacer-graphene truncation, which enables a tunable, non-monotonic, and intensity-dependent transmission response. By employing synthetic geometrical space to obtain Fermi arc states, the structure is designed to support a real-space topologically protected Tamm plasmon polariton, revealing an intensity-dependent transmission peak within the THz spectral range. As such, the proposed thin-film structure may serve as a nonlinear DBR element that can be integrated into a laser cavity to provide intensity-selective feedback, thereby facilitating controllable pulse shaping and enabling passive pulse formation mechanisms such as mode-locking or Q-switching. Due to its topological robustness, spectral scalability, and electrical tunability via graphene biasing, the platform provides a new route toward compact, reconfigurable nonlinear reflectors for efficient and controllable laser pulse generation, thereby extending the functionality of conventional saturable absorbers and semiconductor DBRs.
Janaszek et al. (Tue,) studied this question.