26 research outputs found

    Multiple-Notch Frequency Selective Surface for Automotive Applications

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    A one-layer frequency selective surface (FSS) is proposed for wide-band and multiple-notch filtering applications. The structure consists of one or two pairs of modified square rings on one side of the supporting dielectric layer. Two, three and four notches are obtained by modifying the parameters involved. A parametric analysis concerning the frequency response in function of the substrate thickness is reported, demonstrating the possibility of changing the stop bands and providing design flexibility. By duplicating the structure on both sides of the FR4 substrate, a wide band is obtained, for both TE and TM polarizations. The devised FSS can be used for filtering in the Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and X bands for Automotive applications. The analysis is realized by full-wave electromagnetic simulation

    Reconfigurable phase-change optical metasurfaces: novel design concepts to practicable devices

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    Optical metasurfaces have been proven to be capable of controlling amplitude, phase and polarization of optical beams without the need of bulky geometries, making them really attractive for the development of compact photonic devices. Recently, their combination with chalcogenide phase-change materials (traditionally employed in non-volatile optical and electrical memories), whose refractive index can be reversibly and repeatedly controlled, has been proposed to yield low power consumption tunable metasurfaces having several functionalities in a single device. However, despite phase-change memories are commercially available since various decades now, the unification of phase-change materials with metasurfaces towards real life applications is becoming a formidable task, mainly due to the several engineering branches involved in this technology, which sometimes compromise each other in a non-trivial way. This includes thermo/optical, thermo/electric, and chemical incompatibilities which are typically not taken into account by researchers working in the field, resulting in devices having exciting reconfigurable properties, but at the same time, lack of practicability. This thesis is therefore dedicated to the development of novel phase-change metasurface architectures which could partially or totally address such engineering problems. Particular emphasis has been put in the realization of reconfigurable metasurfaces for active wavefront control, as such a functionality remains relatively unexplored. The first part of this thesis focuses in the first experimental demonstration of active, reconfigurable non-mechanical beam steering devices working the near-infrared. This was achieved via integration of ultra-thin films of chalcogenide phase-change materials (in this case, the widely employed alloy Ge2Sb2Te5) within the body of a dielectric spacer in a plasmonic metal/insulator/metal metasurface architecture. Active, and optically reversible beam steering between two different angles with efficiencies up to 40% were demonstrated. The second part of this work shows the work carried out in metal-free metasurfaces as a way to manipulate optical beams with high efficiency in both transmission and/or reflection. This was achieved via combination of all-dielectric silicon nanocylinders with deeply-subwavelenght sized Ge2Sb2Te5 inclusions. By strategic placement of the phase-change inclusions in the regions of high electric field density, independent and active control of the metasuface resonances is demonstrated, with modulations depths as high as 70% and 65% in reflection and transmission respectively. Multilevel, and fully reversible optically-induced switching of the phasechange layer is also reported, with up to 11 levels of tunability over 8 switching cycles. Finally, the last section of this thesis introduces the concept of hybrid dielectric/plasmonic phase-change metasurfaces having key functional benefits when compared to both purely dielectric and plasmonic approaches. The proposed architectures showed great versatility in terms of both active amplitude and phase control, offering the possibility of designing devices for different purposes (i.e. such as active absorbers/modulators or beam steerers with enhanced efficiency) employing the same unit-cell configuration with minor geometry re-optimizations. Initial device experimental demonstrations of such an approach are discussed, as well as their potential in terms of delivering in-situ electrical switching capabilities using a metallic ground plane as a resistive heater.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC

    Plasmonics and its Applications

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    Plasmonics is a rapidly developing field that combines fundamental research and applications ranging from areas such as physics to engineering, chemistry, biology, medicine, food sciences, and the environmental sciences. Plasmonics appeared in the 1950s with the discovery of surface plasmon polaritons. Plasmonics then went through a novel propulsion in the mid-1970s, when surface-enhanced Raman scattering was discovered. Nevertheless, it is in this last decade that a very significant explosion of plasmonics and its applications has occurred. Thus, this book provides a snapshot of the current advances in these various areas of plasmonics and its applications, such as engineering, sensing, surface-enhanced fluorescence, catalysis, and photovoltaic devices

    Phonon-polaritonics: enabling powerful capabilities for infrared photonics

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    Here, we review the progress and most recent advances in phonon-polaritonics, an emerging and growing field that has brought about a range of powerful possibilities for mid- to far-infrared (IR) light. These extraordinary capabilities are enabled by the resonant coupling between the impinging light and the vibrations of the material lattice, known as phonon-polaritons (PhPs). These PhPs yield a characteristic optical response in certain materials, occurring within an IR spectral window known as the reststrahlen band. In particular, these materials transition in the reststrahlen band from a high-refractive-index behavior, to a near-perfect metal behavior, to a plasmonic behavior – typical of metals at optical frequencies. When anisotropic they may also possess unconventional photonic constitutive properties thought of as possible only with metamaterials. The recent surge in two-dimensional (2D) material research has also enabled PhP responses with atomically-thin materials. Such vast and extraordinary photonic responses can be utilized for a plethora of unusual effects for IR light. Examples include sub-diffraction surface wave guiding, artificial magnetism, exotic photonic dispersions, thermal emission enhancement, perfect absorption and enhanced near-field heat transfer. Finally, we discuss the tremendous potential impact of these IR functionalities for the advancement of IR sources and sensors, as well as for thermal management and THz-diagnostic imaging

    Roadmap on Transformation Optics

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    Transformation Optics asks Maxwell's equations what kind of electromagnetic medium recreate some smooth deformation of space. The guiding principle is Einstein's principle of covariance: that any physical theory must take the same form in any coordinate system. This requirement fixes very precisely the required electromagnetic medium. The impact of this insight cannot be overestimated. Many practitioners were used to thinking that only a few analytic solutions to Maxwell's equations existed, such as the monochromatic plane wave in a homogeneous, isotropic medium. At a stroke, Transformation Optics increases that landscape from `few' to `infinity', and to each of the infinitude of analytic solutions dreamt up by the researcher, corresponds an electromagnetic medium capable of reproducing that solution precisely. The most striking example is the electromagnetic cloak, thought to be an unreachable dream of science fiction writers, but realised in the laboratory a few months after the papers proposing the possibility were published. But the practical challenges are considerable, requiring meta-media that are at once electrically and magnetically inhomogeneous and anisotropic. How far have we come since the first demonstrations over a decade ago? And what does the future hold? If the wizardry of perfect macroscopic optical invisibility still eludes us in practice, then what compromises still enable us to create interesting, useful, devices? While 3D cloaking remains a significant technical challenge, much progress has been made in 2- dimensions. Carpet cloaking, wherein an object is hidden under a surface that appears optically flat, relaxes the constraints of extreme electromagnetic parameters. Surface wave cloaking guides sub-wavelength surface waves, making uneven surfaces appear flat. Two dimensions is also the setting in which conformal and complex coordinate transformations are realisable, and the possibilities in this restricted domain do not appear to have been exhausted yet. Beyond cloaking, the enhanced electromagnetic landscape provided by Transformation Optics has shown how fully analytic solutions can be found to a number of physical scenarios such as plasmonic systems used in electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) and cathodoluminescence (CL). Are there further fields to be enriched? A new twist to Transformation Optics was the extension to the space-time domain. By applying transformations to space-time, rather than just space, it was shown that events rather than objects could be hidden from view; Transformation Optics had provided a means of effectively redacting events from history. The hype quickly settled into serious nonlinear optical experiments that demonstrated the soundness of the idea, and it is now possible to consider the practical implications, particularly in optical signal processing, of having an `interrupt-without-interrupt' facility that the so-called temporal cloak provides. Inevitable issues of dispersion in actual systems have only begun to be addressed. Now that time is included in the programme of Transformation Optics, it is natural to ask what role ideas from General Relativity can play in shaping the future of Transformation Optics. Indeed, one of the earliest papers on Transformation Optics was provocatively titled `General Relativity in Electrical Engineering'. The answer that curvature does not enter directly into transformation optics merely encourages us to speculate on the role of Transformation Optics in defining laboratory analogues. Quite why Maxwell's theory defines a `perfect' transformation theory, while other areas of physics such as acoustics are not apparently quite so amenable, is a deep question whose precise, mathematical answer will help inform us of the extent to which similar ideas can be extended to other fields. The contributors to this roadmap review, who are all renowned practitioners or inventors of Transformation Optics, will give their perspectives into the field's status and future development

    Light Trapping Transparent Electrodes

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    Transparent electrodes represent a critical component in a wide range of optoelectronic devices such as high-speed photodetectors and solar cells. Fundamentally, the presence of any conductive structures in the optical path leads to dissipation and reflection, which adversely affects device performance. Many different approaches have been attempted to minimize such shadowing losses, including the use of transparent conductive oxides (TCOs), metallic nanowire mesh grids, graphene-based contacts, and high-aspect ratio metallic wire arrays. In this dissertation I discuss a conceptually different approach to achieve transparent electrodes, which involves recapturing photons initially reflected by highly conductive electrode lines. To achieve this, light-redirecting metallic wires are embedded in a thin dielectric layer. Incident light is intentionally reflected toward large internal angles, which enables trapping of reflected photons through total internal reflection (TIR). Light trapping transparent electrodes could potentially reach the holy grail of transparent electrodes: the simultaneous achievement of high conductivity and near-complete optical transparency. We numerically and experimentally investigate several light trapping electrode structures. First, we study the spectral and angular optical transmission of embedded interdigitated metallic electrodes with inclined wire surfaces and demonstrate efficient broadband angle-insensitive polarization-independent light trapping. Proof-of-principle experiments are carried out, demonstrating several of the features observed in our numerical studies. Second, a novel type of grating-based light trapping transparent electrode is discussed. In this approach, diffraction from metal wires covered with nanoscale silicon gratings is used to achieve total internal reflection. We show that careful grating optimization achieves strong suppression of specular reflection, enabling a more than fivefold reduction of shadowing losses. The realization of a high light-trapping efficiency in a coplanar structure makes the design a promising candidate for integration in real-world optoelectronic devices. Finally, the transmission of high-index metasurfaces is investigated. Such structures may enable efficient light redirection around metallic contacts, if reflection losses by the metasurface can be suppressed. We demonstrate that the traditional anti-reflection coating approach fails for such structures, and present an improved design approach that reduces reflection losses over a broad range of structural parameters

    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
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