1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to electromagnetic cloaking and more particularly to using metamaterials to achieve electromagnetic cloaking.
2. Brief Description of Prior Developments
Electromagnetic cloaking is an advanced stealth technology which allows an object to be partially or wholly invisible to parts of the electromagnetic spectrum.
The prior art has recently suggested a number of optical metamaterials that owe their refractive properties to the way they are structured rather than to the substances which compose them.
U.S. Published Patent Application 2008/0165442 by Cai et al., for example, discloses a method and apparatus for cloaking in which an object to be clocked is disposed such that the cloaking apparatus is between the object and an observer. The appearance of the object is altered and, in the limit, the object cannot be observed, and the background appears unobstructed. The cloak is formed of a metamaterial where the properties of the metamaterial are varied as a function of distance from the cloak interfaces, and the permittivity is less than unity. The metamaterial may be fabricated as a composite material having a dielectric component and inclusions of particles of sub-wavelength size, so as to have a permeability substantially equal to unity.
Other prior art references disclosing electromagnetic cloaking using metamaterials are as follows:
Such recently suggested metamaterial-based coatings (cloaks) may, however, operate only in some pre-selected very narrow frequency ranges of the electromagnetic spectrum, due to very strong dispersion properties of the metal components used in the metamaterials.
A need, therefore, exists for a coating which would reduce visibility of an object in a given, relatively wide electromagnetic frequency range.
The present invention comprises a metal-dielectric composite, in which the dielectric component is made of a material exhibiting anomalous dispersion in a wide wavelength range (in such manner that its dielectric permittivity and refractive index increase with the increase of the wavelength of light), meanwhile the metal dielectric permittivity is negative in the infrared and its magnitude increases with the wavelength. As a result, the average refractive index of the metal-dielectric composite may be kept constant in a wide wavelength range at a level between n=0 (at the inside boundary of the coating) and n=1 (at the outside boundary), depending on the local composition of the metamaterial. Such distribution of the refractive index accompanied by very low overall dispersion would create conditions of total transmission (that is, zero reflection) for the external illumination, and total internal reflection for thermal radiation generated by a heated object inside the cloak. This metamaterial coating provides previously unavailable suppression of visibility of an object in a wide wavelength range, including practically important range of the infra red radiation generated by heat (1-14 μm). The object can be a vehicle or tank with a running engine.
The present invention is further described with reference to the accompanying drawings wherein:
a) and 4(b) are, respectively graphs showing anomalous refractive behavior of the PFCB-BP Teflon as presented in Ballato et al., JOSA B 20, 1838-1843 (b) calculated effective dielectric constant of the metal-dielectric composite metamaterial for different relative volume ratios of gold fm (we assume dAU=fmdPFCB-BP), wherein these calculations demonstrate that the effective dielectric constant of the metamaterial may be kept approximately constant in a wide 6-12 μm wavelength range;
Referring to
Referring to
Such distribution of the refractive index accompanied by very low overall dispersion would create conditions of total transmission (that is, zero reflection) for the external illumination, and total internal reflection for thermal radiation generated by a heated object inside the cloak. This metamaterial coating provides previously unavailable suppression of visibility of an object in a wide wavelength range, including practically important range of the infra red radiation generated by heat (1-14 μm). The object can be a vehicle or tank with a running engine.
The described method allows us to reduce visibility of an object in a wide wavelength range (not just at one fixed frequency), as shown in
Our invention is supported by the numerical calculations of the effective refractive index of a multilayer gold/Teflon metamaterial presented in
εeff=(1−fm)εb+fmεa
Those skilled in the art will appreciate other embodiments of our invention are the following:
Any low-loss metal may be used as a component of the composite metamaterial.
Any dielectric exhibiting anomalous dispersion may be used as a component of the composite metamaterial.
The dispersion of either or both the metal and the dielectric components of the composite metamaterial may be adjusted by nanostructuring or nanopatterning. For example, it may be achieved by producing various arrays of holes in the dielectric or metal layer. The metamaterial cloak can be deposited straight on the vehicle/tank surface or on the metal/plastic strips hung as “blinds”-type over an anti-RPG cage.
While the present invention has been described in connection with the preferred embodiments of the various figures, it is to be understood that other similar embodiments may be used or modifications or additions may be made to the described embodiment for performing the same function of the present invention without deviating therefrom. Therefore, the present invention should not be limited to any single embodiment, but rather construed in breadth and scope in accordance with the recitation of the appended claims.
This application claims rights under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) from U.S. Application Ser. No. 61/286,553 filed Dec. 15, 2009, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61286553 | Dec 2009 | US |