nano 2008-05-11 20:47
March of the Metamaterials
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[b][color=Blue]Manipulating radiation with metamaterials is becoming possible at ever-higher frequencies. From SPIE Professional, January 2008.[/color][/b]
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[img]http://img160.imageshack.us/img160/8865/meta7b4501ra1.png[/img]
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It's interesting to see how technology evolves. Over the past 20 years or so, diffractive optics, thin films, and photonic crystals have all come and gone as fashionable elements for manipulating light. All of these are kinds of nanotechnology (even though they were around before the term itself became so fashionable) and all manipulate radiation using sub-wavelength features. In addition, all exploit the raw material properties of individual fringes, films, or planes--usually optical density or refractive index--in order to create an optical effect.
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However superficially similar, metamaterials are conceptually very different. The idea is not to exploit the underlying properties of the chemicals used (though they're crucial in material design), but rather to create completely new material properties. This is done by creating structures that respond to the incoming radiation actively rather than passively, setting up some kind of oscillation or field that then changes how the light propagates through it.S0bVUvUS
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A classic example of such a material is the split-ring resonator structure (Figure 1 below) developed by David Smith and his colleagues (then at the University of California, San Diego, now at Duke University, NC).
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[img]http://img254.imageshack.us/img254/3968/coverfig17b5b48ox3.jpg[/img]
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Figure 1: This material, designed by David Smith, has a negative refractive index at microwave frequencies.yiWm/e4h
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Two concentric copper circles with splits in the top of one and the bottom of the other constitute the active element of this structure. As radiation (in this case, in the microwave band) propagates through, energy is picked up by electrons in the metal that then circulate and cause a current to flow. At the same time, the gap in the circle creates a capacitance producing a resonating field that affects the microwave propagation. The result is that the material has a negative magnetic permeability and electrical permittivity, and so a negative refractive index.L5z]r?d2D
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Since none of the constituents have this property on their own -- nor, for that matter, do any other elements, compounds, or crystals found in nature?this is a true metamaterial.
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In optics, negative refractive index is an extremely interesting property. It literally means that light entering a denser medium bends in the opposite direction to the positive direction we're used to (see Figure 2). Forty years ago, Victor Veselago showed that, if such a material could be created, it could be used to build a completely flat lens that would nevertheless focus light.
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However, it took Imperial College theoretical physicist Sir John Pendry to figure out that such a lens could not only focus, but focus beyond the diffraction limit; unlike in positive-index lenses, high-frequency features are not lost to evanescent waves.
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Figure 2: Artist's rendering of a negative refraction in a new semiconductor metamaterial developed at Princeton. (Figure by Kevin Bullis)
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Because of its revolutionary nature, Pendry's discovery took a long time to receive acceptance, even from his Imperial colleagues. He says, "When I had the idea that the Veselago lens could be perfect, given the right choice of parameters, I naturally turned to Chris Dainty who is famous for his work on classical optics. I wanted some straight criticism and knew that Chris would not pull his punches.3F`nf%DU*va
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"As expected, his first reaction was extreme skepticism. But as we worked through his objections, it became clear that if my theory was wrong, it was for subtle and interesting reasons. In fact, it is correct for subtle and interesting reasons!"n8q L8|'g,R
Pendry also came up with the idea that the negative index could be used as a cloaking device, bending light in a somewhat similar way to a mirage (Figure 3).
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[img]http://img372.imageshack.us/img372/6554/coverfig37ce2a4hk6.jpg[/img]
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Figure 3: One way of cloaking an object is to make light flow around it like a stream of water, a function that can be performed using a negative refractive index material.-}E1x N3}W
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His collaborator David Smith, by this time at Duke, implemented his device for microwaves with impressive -- and now well-known -- results (Figure 4). jk B!VOX/r3N
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However, the cloak shares a problem with all metamaterials: Its properties are frequency dependent. This means that one designed to work at microwave frequencies will not be cloaked in the visible or RF, and will be poorly cloaked at some frequencies within the microwave band. Worse, a recent study by Zhichao Ruan and his colleagues at the Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden and Zhejiang University in China says that the ideal cylindrical cloak -- if it could be implemented -- would be sensitive to even tiny perturbations. Nevertheless, the concept has attracted significant attention so aided
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[img]http://img186.imageshack.us/img186/6246/coverfig47e7346cu5.jpg[/img]
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Figure 4: David Smith and his colleagues successfully applied the cloaking idea using microwaves. Though an imperfect material, it unfortunately creates an imperfect cloak (and even a perfect cloak is not robust).
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