30 research outputs found
Multi-functional metasurface architecture for amplitude, polarization and wavefront control
Metasurfaces (MSs) have been utilized to manipulate different properties of
electromagnetic waves. By combining local control over the wave amplitude,
phase, and polarization into a single tunable structure, a multi-functional and
reconfigurable metasurface can be realized, capable of full control over
incident radiation. Here, we experimentally validate a multi-functional
metasurface architecture for the microwave regime, where in principle variable
loads are connected behind the backplane to reconfigurably shape the complex
surface impedance. As a proof-of-concept step, we fabricate several metasurface
instances with static loads in different configurations (surface mount
capacitors and resistors of different values in different connection
topologies) to validate the approach and showcase the different achievable
functionalities. Specifically, we show perfect absorption for oblique incidence
(both polarizations), broadband linear polarization conversion, and beam
splitting, demonstrating control over the amplitude, polarization state, and
wavefront, respectively. Measurements are performed in the 4-18 GHz range
inside an anechoic chamber and show good agreement with
theoretically-anticipated results. Our results clearly demonstrate the
practical potential of the proposed architecture for reconfigurable
electromagnetic wave manipulation.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
ABSense: Sensing Electromagnetic Waves on Metasurfaces via Ambient Compilation of Full Absorption
Metasurfaces constitute effective media for manipulating and transforming
impinging EM waves. Related studies have explored a series of impactful MS
capabilities and applications in sectors such as wireless communications,
medical imaging and energy harvesting. A key-gap in the existing body of work
is that the attributes of the EM waves to-be-controlled (e.g., direction,
polarity, phase) are known in advance. The present work proposes a practical
solution to the EM wave sensing problem using the intelligent and networked MS
counterparts-the HyperSurfaces (HSFs), without requiring dedicated field
sensors. An nano-network embedded within the HSF iterates over the possible MS
configurations, finding the one that fully absorbs the impinging EM wave, hence
maximizing the energy distribution within the HSF. Using a distributed
consensus approach, the nano-network then matches the found configuration to
the most probable EM wave traits, via a static lookup table that can be created
during the HSF manufacturing. Realistic simulations demonstrate the potential
of the proposed scheme. Moreover, we show that the proposed workflow is the
first-of-its-kind embedded EM compiler, i.e., an autonomic HSF that can
translate high-level EM behavior objectives to the corresponding, low-level EM
actuation commands.Comment: Publication: Proceedings of ACM NANOCOM 2019. This work was funded by
the European Union via the Horizon 2020: Future Emerging Topics call
(FETOPEN), grant EU736876, project VISORSURF (http://www.visorsurf.eu
XR-RF Imaging Enabled by Software-Defined Metasurfaces and Machine Learning: Foundational Vision, Technologies and Challenges
We present a new approach to Extended Reality (XR), denoted as iCOPYWAVES,
which seeks to offer naturally low-latency operation and cost-effectiveness,
overcoming the critical scalability issues faced by existing solutions.
iCOPYWAVES is enabled by emerging PWEs, a recently proposed technology in
wireless communications. Empowered by intelligent (meta)surfaces, PWEs
transform the wave propagation phenomenon into a software-defined process. We
leverage PWEs to i) create, and then ii) selectively copy the scattered RF
wavefront of an object from one location in space to another, where a machine
learning module, accelerated by FPGAs, translates it to visual input for an XR
headset using PWEdriven, RF imaging principles (XR-RF). This makes for an XR
system whose operation is bounded in the physical layer and, hence, has the
prospects for minimal end-to-end latency. Over large distances,
RF-to-fiber/fiber-to-RF is employed to provide intermediate connectivity. The
paper provides a tutorial on the iCOPYWAVES system architecture and workflow. A
proof-of-concept implementation via simulations is provided, demonstrating the
reconstruction of challenging objects in iCOPYWAVES produced computer graphics
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Phase-matched multi-layer based polarisation-independent spot-size converter for silicon nanowire
The efficient coupling of optical power from a silicon nanowire (NW) to an optical fibre is challenging for both the quasi-TE and quasi-TM polarisations. Here, we propose a polarisation-independent spot-size converter (PI-SSC) based on phase-matched multi-layer waveguides for efficient coupling between a silicon NW and an optical fibre for both the polarisations. The fabrication process of the proposed PI-SSC is compatible with the complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) process. The optimisation for the proposed PI-SSC is studied by using a numerically efficient algorithm, combining a rigorous H-field based full-vectorial finite element method (VFEM) and the least squares boundary residual (LSBR) method. The simulation results show that using an eleven-layer based PI-SSC, the coupling losses between a silicon NW and a lensed fibre of radius 2 μm can be reduced to only 0.34 dB and 0.25 dB for the quasi-TE and quasi-TM polarisations, respectively. Furthermore, the output multi-layer is horizontally tapered, which further reduces the coupling loss for both the polarisations and the end face is easy to be polished
Software-defined reconfigurable metasurfaces for programmable wireless environments
Programmable reconfigurable metasurfaces are expected to constitute a key element in the future programmable wireless environments. Here we discuss the design and fabrication of a programmable, reconfigurable and multifunctional metasurface able to operate as all-angle perfect absorber, beam steering and beam focusing device, accounting also for all aspects imposed by the programmability incorporation
Topological Extraordinary Optical Transmission
The incumbent technology for bringing light to the nanoscale, the near-field
scanning optical microscope, has notoriously small throughput efficiencies - of
the order of 10^(-4) - 10^(-5), or less. We report on a broadband, topological,
unidirectionally-guiding structure, not requiring adiabatic tapering and in
principle enabling near-perfect (ideally, ~100%) optical transmission through
an unstructured single (POTUS) arbitrarily-subdiffraction slit at its end.
Specifically, for a slit width of just lambda_eff / 72 (lambda_0 / 138) the
attained normalized transmission coefficient reaches a value of 1.52, while for
a unidirectional-only (non-topological) device the normalized transmission
through a lambda_eff / 21 (~lambda_0 / 107) slit reaches 1.14 - both, limited
only by inherent material losses, and with zero reflection from the slit. The
associated, under ideal conditions, near-perfect optical extraordinary
transmission (POET) has implications, among diverse areas in wave physics and
engineering, for high-efficiency, maximum-throughput nanoscopes and
heat-assisted magnetic recording devices.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Dielectric loaded surface plasmon waveguides for datacom applications
International audienceWe first report on design, fabrication and characterizations of thermally-controlled plasmonic routers relying on the interference of a plasmonic and a photonic mode supported by wide enough dielectric loaded waveguides. We show that, by owing a current through the gold lm on which the dielectric waveguides are deposited, the length of the beating created by the interference of the two modes can be controlled accurately. By operating such a plasmonic dual-mode interferometer switch, symmetric extinction ratio of 7dB are obtained at the output ports of a 2x2 router. Next, we demonstrate ber-to-ber characterizations of stand-alone dielectric loaded surface plasmon waveguide (DLSPPW) devices by using grating couplers. The couplers are comprised of dielectric loaded gratings with carefully chosen periods and duty-cycles close to 0.5. We show that insertion loss below 10dB per coupler can be achieved with optimized gratings. This coupling scheme is used to operate Bit-Error-Rate (BER) measurements for the transmission of a 10Gbits/s signal along a stand-alone straight DLSPPW. We show in particular that these waveguides introduce a rather small BER power penalty (below 1dB) demonstrating the suitability of this plasmonic waveguiding platform for high-bit rate transmission