A porous material was considered as a platform for optical sensing. It was
envisaged that the porous material was infiltrated by a fluid which contains an
agent to be sensed. Changes in the optical properties of the infiltrated porous
material provide the basis for detection of the agent to be sensed. Using a
homogenization approach based on the Bruggeman formalism, wherein the
infiltrated porous material was regarded as a homogenized composite material,
the sensitivity of such a sensor was investigated. For the case of an isotropic
dielectric porous material of relative permittivity ϵa and an
isotropic dielectric fluid of relative permittivity ϵb, it was found
that the sensitivity was maximized when there was a large contrast between
ϵa and ϵb; the maximum sensitivity was achieved at
mid-range values of porosity. Especially high sensitivities may be achieved for
ϵb close to unity when ϵa>>1, for example. Furthermore,
higher sensitivities may be achieved by incorporating pores which have
elongated spheroidal shapes