108 research outputs found
Bianisotropic Effective Parameters of Optical Metamagnetics and Negative-Index Materials
Approaches to the adequate homogenization of optical metamaterials are becoming more and more complex, primarily due to an increased understanding of the role of asymmetric electrical and magnetic responses, in addition to the nonlocal effects of the surrounding medium, even in the simplest case of plane-wave illumination. The current trend in developing such advanced homogenization descriptions often relies on utilizing bianisotropic models as a base on top of which novel optical characterization techniques can be built. In this paper, we first briefly review general principles for developing a bianisotropic homogenization approach. Second, we present several examples validating and illustrating our approach using single-period passive and active optical metamaterials. We also show that the substrate may have a significant effect on the bianisotropic characteristics of otherwise symmetric passive and active metamaterials
Tunable magnetic response of metamaterials
We demonstrate a thermally tunable optical metamaterial with negative
permeability working in the visible range. By covering coupled metallic
nanostrips with aligned nematic liquid crystals (NLCs), the magnetic response
wavelength of the metamaterial is effectively tuned through control of the
ambient temperature, changing the refractive index of LC via phase transitions.
By increasing the ambient temperature from 20 degree to 50 degree, the magnetic
response wavelength shifts from 650nm to 632nm. Numerical simulations confirm
our tests and match the experimental observations well
Dual-Band Negative Index Metamaterial: Double-Negative at 813 nm and Single-Negative at 772 nm
This work is concerned with the experimental demonstration of a dual-band
negative index metamaterial. The sample is double-negative (showing both a
negative effective permeability and a negative effective permittivity) for
wavelengths between 799 and 818 nm of linearly polarized light with a real part
of refractive index of about -1.0 at 813 nm; the ratio -Re(n)/Im(n) is close to
1.3 at that wavelength. For an orthogonal polarization, the same sample also
exhibits a negative refractive index in the visible (at 772 nm). The
spectroscopic measurements of the material are in good agreement with the
results obtained from a finite element electromagnetic solver for the actual
geometry of the fabricated sample at both polarizations.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
Comment on "Negative Refractive Index in Artificial Metamaterials" [A. N. Grigorenko, Opt. Lett., 31, 2483 (2006)]
A key optical parameter characterizing the existence of negative refraction
in a thin layer of a composite material is the effective refractive index of an
equivalent, homogenized layer with the same physical thickness as the initial
inhomogeneous composite. Measuring the complex transmission and reflection
coefficients is one of the most rigorous ways to obtain this parameter. We
dispute Grigorenko's statement (Optics Letters 31, 2483 (2006)) that measuring
only the reflection intensity spectrum is sufficient for determining the
effective refractive index. We discuss fundamental drawbacks of Grigorenko's
technique of using a best-fit approximation with an a priori prescribed
dispersive behavior for a given metamaterial and an 'effective optical
thickness' that is smaller than the actual thickness of the sample. Our
simulations do not confirm the Grigorenko paper conclusions regarding the
negative refractive index and the negative permeability of the nanopillar
sample in the visible spectral range.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figure
Negative Refractive Index in Optics of Metal-Dielectric Composites
Specially designed metal-dielectric composites can have a negative refractive
index in the optical range. Specifically, it is shown that arrays of single and
paired nanorods can provide such negative refraction. For pairs of metal rods,
a negative refractive index has been observed at 1.5 micrometer. The inverted
structure of paired voids in metal films may also exhibit a negative refractive
index. A similar effect can be accomplished with metal strips in which the
refractive index can reach -2. The refractive index retrieval procedure and the
critical role of light phases in determining the refractive index is discussed.Comment: 39 pages, 17 figures, 24 equation
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