59 research outputs found

    Waveplates based on metasurfaces in the THz range

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    Los platos de onda basados en metasuperficies son componentes clave en electromagnetismo, ya que permiten un control total de la polarización de las ondas electromagnéticas con la ventaja de presentar estructuras más compactas que los platos de onda convencionales. Además, la aplicación del principio de Pancharatnam Berry (PB) a los platos de media onda (HWP) basados en metasuperficies, permite la manipulación de frentes de onda junto con la conversión de la polarización de las ondas incidentes circularmente polarizadas, simplemente girando los meta-átomos que componen la metasuperficie. Para lograr altos niveles de eficiencia de transmisión con platos de onda basados en metasuperficies, generalmente se requieren diseños multicapa. Esto implica estructuras voluminosas y complica el proceso de fabricación, restando importancia a la ventaja de utilizar metasuperficies. El propósito de esta tesis realizada en la Universidad Pública de Navarra y en L’École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Suiza (EPFL) es ofrecer una ventaja tecnológica tanto para el control de polarización como para la manipulación del frente de onda y contribuir al desarrollo de dispositivos basados en metamasuperficies, incluyendo su fabricación y verificación experimental. Los resultados incluyen lo siguiente: Un plato de media onda operando en transmisión, ultradelgado y basado en una metasuperficie en zigzag de dos capas que opera en la parte baja del espectro del THz con un 90% de eficiencia de transmisión, que se demuestra numérica y experimentalmente. Se lleva a cabo un análisis detallado de la robustez del dispositivo con respecto a los desalineamientos de las capas mediante el diseño y la fabricación de dos dispositivos adicionales con el máximo desalineamiento entre capas en ambas direcciones transversales. Una metalente ultradelgada y compacta basada en el principio Pancharatnam Berry con solo dos capas alcanzando un 90% de eficiencia de transmisión, enfocando el frente de onda de una onda incidente polarizada circularmente y convirtiendo su polarización. La estructura es estudiada semi-analítica y numéricamente y medida experimentalmente, comprobándose un excelente comportamiento como HWP PB metalente a 87 GHz. Una aplicación de ingeniería de frentes de onda para la manipulación de los mismos se demuestra numéricamente en el rango de ondas milimétricas mediante la integración de la metalente en un sistema de antena-metalente, que se estudia semi-analíticamente y se corrobora experimentalmente. El sistema convierte la polarización de las ondas polarizadas circularmente, logrando un incremento de la directividad de antena de 17 dB a ⁓35 dB a 87 GHz con un AR inferior a 0.5 dB. Finalmente, se presentan dos configuraciones extra del sistema para trabajar entre los extremos del rango de frecuencia comprendido entre 75 GHz y 105 GHz, con directividades ⁓32 dB y AR < 3 dB.Transmissive waveplates based on metasurfaces are key components in electromagnetism, as they allow for a full control of the electromagnetic wave polarization with the advantage of presenting structures more compact than conventional waveplates. Moreover, applying the Pancharatnam Berry (PB) principle to half-wave plate (HWP) metasurfaces allows the manipulation of wavefronts along with the conversion of the handedness of circularly polarized incident waves by simply rotating the meta-atoms that compose the metasurface. For achieving high levels of transmission efficiency with transmissive waveplates based on metasurfaces, multiple layer designs are usually required. It implies bulky structures and complicates the fabrication process, downplaying the aim of the use of metasurfaces. The purpose of this thesis performed at the Public University of Navarre and at École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) is to offer a technological advantage both for polarization controlling as wavefront manipulation and contribute to the development of metasurface-based devices, including their fabrication and experimental verification. The results include the following: An ultrathin transmissive half-wave plate based on a bi-layered zigzag metasurface operating at the lower-frequency edge of the THz spectrum with a 90% of transmission efficiency, which is numerically and experimentally demonstrated. A detailed analysis of the device robustness with respect to layer misalignments is carried out by designing and fabricating two additional devices with the maximum possible shift between layers along both transverse directions. A compact ultrathin metalens based on the Pancharatnam Berry principle with only two layers with a 90% of transmission efficiency, focusing the wavefront of a circularly polarized incident wave and converting its handedness. The structure is semi-analytically and numerically studied and experimentally measured, verifying an excellent behavior as HWP PB metalens at 87 GHz. A wavefront engineering application for wavefront manipulation is numerically demonstrated in the millimeter-wave range by the integration of the metalens in an antenna-metalens system, which is semi-analytically studied and experimentally corroborated. The system converts the handedness of circular polarized waves, achieving an increment of the antenna directivity from17 dB to ⁓35 dB at 87 GHz with an AR lesser than 0.5 dB. Finally, two extra system configurations are presented to work around the frequency range extremes comprised between 75 GHz and 105 GHz, with directivities ⁓32 dB and AR < 3 dB.Programa de Doctorado en Tecnologías de las Comunicaciones, Bioingeniería y de las Energías Renovables (RD 99/2011)Bioingeniaritzako eta Komunikazioen eta Energia Berriztagarrien Teknologietako Doktoretza Programa (ED 99/2011

    Electromagnetic Response and Broadband Utilities of Planar Metamaterials

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    Metamaterial

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    In-depth analysis of the theory, properties and description of the most potential technological applications of metamaterials for the realization of novel devices such as subwavelength lenses, invisibility cloaks, dipole and reflector antennas, high frequency telecommunications, new designs of bandpass filters, absorbers and concentrators of EM waves etc. In order to create a new devices it is necessary to know the main electrodynamical characteristics of metamaterial structures on the basis of which the device is supposed to be created. The electromagnetic wave scattering surfaces built with metamaterials are primarily based on the ability of metamaterials to control the surrounded electromagnetic fields by varying their permeability and permittivity characteristics. The book covers some solutions for microwave wavelength scales as well as exploitation of nanoscale EM wavelength such as visible specter using recent advances of nanotechnology, for instance in the field of nanowires, nanopolymers, carbon nanotubes and graphene. Metamaterial is suitable for scholars from extremely large scientific domain and therefore given to engineers, scientists, graduates and other interested professionals from photonics to nanoscience and from material science to antenna engineering as a comprehensive reference on this artificial materials of tomorrow

    Metamaterials for Computational Imaging

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    <p>Metamaterials extend the design space, flexibility, and control of optical material systems and so yield fundamentally new computational imaging systems. A computational imaging system relies heavily on the design of measurement modes. Metamaterials provide a great deal of control over the generation of the measurement modes of an aperture. On the other side of the coin, computational imaging uses the data that that can be measured by an imaging system, which may limited, in an optimal way thereby producing the best possible image within the physical constraints of a system. The synergy of these two technologies - metamaterials and computational imaging - allows for entirely novel imaging systems. These contributions are realized in the concept of a frequency-diverse metamaterial imaging system that will be presented in this thesis. This 'metaimager' uses the same electromagnetic flexibility that metamaterials have shown in many other contexts to construct an imaging aperture suitable for single-pixel operation that can measure arbitrary measurement modes, constrained only by the size of the aperture and resonant elements. It has no lenses, no moving parts, a small form-factor, and is low-cost.</p><p>In this thesis we present an overview of work done by the author in the area of metamaterial imaging systems. We first discuss novel transformation-optical lenses enabled by metamaterials which demonstrate the electromagnetic flexibility of metamaterials. We then introduce the theory of computational and compressed imaging using the language of Fourier optics, and derive the forward model needed to apply computational imaging to the metaimager system. We describe the details of the metamaterials used to construct the metaimager and their application to metamaterial antennas. The experimental tools needed to characterize the metaimager, including far-field and near-field antenna characterization, are described. We then describe the design, operation, and characterization of a one-dimensional metaimager capable of collecting two-dimensional images, and then a two-dimensional metaimager capable of collecting two-dimensional images. The imaging results for the one-dimensional metaimager are presented including two-dimensional (azimuth and range) images of point scatters, and video-rate imaging. The imaging results for the two-dimensional metaimager are presented including analysis of the system's resolution, signal-to-noise sensitivity, acquisition rate, human targets, and integration of optical and structured-light sensors. Finally, we discuss explorations into methods of tuning metamaterial radiators which could be employed to significantly increase the capabilities of such a metaimaging system, and describe several systems that have been designed for the integration of tuning into metamaterial imaging systems.</p>Dissertatio

    Antennas and Propagation

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    This Special Issue gathers topics of utmost interest in the field of antennas and propagation, such as: new directions and challenges in antenna design and propagation; innovative antenna technologies for space applications; metamaterial, metasurface and other periodic structures; antennas for 5G; electromagnetic field measurements and remote sensing applications

    Negative Index Materials and Plasmonic Antennas Based Nanocouplers

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    Selective electro-magnetic absorbers based on metal-dielectric-metal thin-film cavities

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    Efficient absorption of light is required for a large number of applications such as thermo-photovoltaics,thermal imaging, bio-sensing, thermal emitters, astronomy, and stealth technology. Strong light absorbers found in nature with high intrinsic losses such as carbon black, metal-black, and carbon nano-tubes etc. are bulky, not design-tunable and are hard to pattern for micro- and nano- devices. We developed thin-film, high performance absorbers in the visible, near-, mid-, long-wave - and far-IR region based on a 3 layer metal-dielectric-metal (MDM) structure. We fabricated a 3-layerMDMabsorber with large band-widths in the visible and near IR spectral range without any lithographic patterning. This was the first demonstration in the optical range of the Salisbury Screen, which was originally invented for radar absorption. A Fabry-Perot cavity model depending on the thickness of the dielectric, but also the effective permittivity of the semi-transparent top metal gives calculated spectra that agree well with experiment. Secondly, we fabricated long-wave IR and far-IR MDM absorbers comprising surface patterns of periodic metal squares on the dielectric layer. Strong absorption in multiple bands were obtained, and these depended weakly on polarization and angle of incidence. Though such absorbers had been extensively studied by electrodynamic simulations and experiment in the visible to far- R regions, there existed no analytic model that could accurately predict the wavelengths of the multiple resonances. We developed a theoretical model for these absorbers based on standingwave resonances, which accurately predicts resonance wavelengths for experiment and simulation for the first time. Unlike metamaterial theories our model does not depend on the periodicity of the squares but only on their lateral dimension and the thickness of the dielectric. This feature is confirmed by synchrotron-based IR spectral imaging microscopy of single isolated squares

    The science case and challenges of space-borne sub-millimeter interferometry

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    Ultra-high angular resolution in astronomy has always been an important vehicle for making fundamental discoveries. Recent results in direct imaging of the vicinity of the supermassive black hole in the nucleus of the radio galaxy M87 by the millimeter VLBI system Event Horizon Telescope and various pioneering results of the Space VLBI mission RadioAstron provided new momentum in high angular resolution astrophysics. In both mentioned cases, the angular resolution reached the values of about 10–20 microarcseconds (0.05–0.1 nanoradian). Further developments towards at least an order of magnitude “sharper” values, at the level of 1 microarcsecond are dictated by the needs of advanced astrophysical studies. The paper emphasis that these higher values can only be achieved by placing millimeter and submillimeter wavelength interferometric systems in space. A concept of such the system, called Terahertz Exploration and Zooming-in for Astrophysics, has been proposed in the framework of the ESA Call for White Papers for the Voyage 2050 long term plan in 2019. In the current paper we present new science objectives for such the concept based on recent results in studies of active galactic nuclei and supermassive black holes. We also discuss several approaches for addressing technological challenges of creating a millimeter/sub-millimeter wavelength interferometric system in space. In particular, we consider a novel configuration of a space-borne millimeter/sub-millimeter antenna which might resolve several bottlenecks in creating large precise mechanical structures. The paper also presents an overview of prospective space-qualified technologies of low-noise analogue front-end instrumentation for millimeter/sub-millimeter telescopes. Data handling and processing instrumentation is another key technological component of a sub-millimeter Space VLBI system. Requirements and possible implementation options for this instrumentation are described as an extrapolation of the current state-of-the-art Earth-based VLBI data transport and processing instrumentation. The paper also briefly discusses approaches to the interferometric baseline state vector determination and synchronisation and heterodyning system. The technology-oriented sections of the paper do not aim at presenting a complete set of technological solutions for sub-millimeter (terahertz) space-borne interferometers. Rather, in combination with the original ESA Voyage 2050 White Paper, it sharpens the case for the next generation microarcsecond-level imaging instruments and provides starting points for further in-depth technology trade-off studies.</p

    The science case and challenges of space-borne sub-millimeter interferometry

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    Ultra-high angular resolution in astronomy has always been an important vehicle for making fundamental discoveries. Recent results in direct imaging of the vicinity of the supermassive black hole in the nucleus of the radio galaxy M87 by the millimeter VLBI system Event Horizon Telescope and various pioneering results of the Space VLBI mission RadioAstron provided new momentum in high angular resolution astrophysics. In both mentioned cases, the angular resolution reached the values of about 10–20 microarcseconds (0.05–0.1 nanoradian). Further developments towards at least an order of magnitude “sharper” values, at the level of 1 microarcsecond are dictated by the needs of advanced astrophysical studies. The paper emphasis that these higher values can only be achieved by placing millimeter and submillimeter wavelength interferometric systems in space. A concept of such the system, called Terahertz Exploration and Zooming-in for Astrophysics, has been proposed in the framework of the ESA Call for White Papers for the Voyage 2050 long term plan in 2019. In the current paper we present new science objectives for such the concept based on recent results in studies of active galactic nuclei and supermassive black holes. We also discuss several approaches for addressing technological challenges of creating a millimeter/sub-millimeter wavelength interferometric system in space. In particular, we consider a novel configuration of a space-borne millimeter/sub-millimeter antenna which might resolve several bottlenecks in creating large precise mechanical structures. The paper also presents an overview of prospective space-qualified technologies of low-noise analogue front-end instrumentation for millimeter/sub-millimeter telescopes. Data handling and processing instrumentation is another key technological component of a sub-millimeter Space VLBI system. Requirements and possible implementation options for this instrumentation are described as an extrapolation of the current state-of-the-art Earth-based VLBI data transport and processing instrumentation. The paper also briefly discusses approaches to the interferometric baseline state vector determination and synchronisation and heterodyning system. The technology-oriented sections of the paper do not aim at presenting a complete set of technological solutions for sub-millimeter (terahertz) space-borne interferometers. Rather, in combination with the original ESA Voyage 2050 White Paper, it sharpens the case for the next generation microarcsecond-level imaging instruments and provides starting points for further in-depth technology trade-off studies.</p
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