This application relates generally to the field of materials having negative indexes of refraction, sometimes referred to as “left-handed materials.”
In 1968, Victor Veselago predicted that media with simultaneously negative dielectric permittivity and magnetic permeability would have an effective refractive index with a negative value. In the same work, he suggested that in such a material all physical phenomena directly related to phase velocity would be reversed. Specifically, the reversal of Snell's law, Cherenkov's radiation, and the Doppler effect were predicted. The characteristic of having simultaneously negative dielectric permittivity and magnetic permeability values creates several challenges in the design and fabrication of so-called negative index materials (NIMs). For example, although negative dielectric constants can be found in a variety of plasmonic materials (e.g., Ag, Au, Cu, and the like) or polar materials (e.g, SiC) materials, no naturally occurring substance is known to exhibit magnetism at sufficiently high frequencies (GHz to optical).
A variety of resonant structures have been proposed to obtain the nontrivial value of magnetic permeability desired in NIMs. However, the intrinsic presence of a resonance in these structures leads to extremely high (resonant) losses in the NIM. Another drawback of the resonant-based designs is their high sensitivity to fabrication defects.
Photonic crystals have also been shown to have a negative value of effective refractive index in the GHz frequency range. Because the typical size of inhomogeneity in these structures is on the order of the wavelength, however, the value of the effective dielectric constant strongly depends on the direction of light propagation. Such an anisotropy of the refraction index produces severe deterioration in image quality in a photonic crystal-based NIM lens, and makes subwavelength resolution in these systems practically unachievable. Furthermore, the crystalline nature of the material requires extremely high accuracy during the fabrication step, thus limiting the possible NIM structures to the GHz-frequency domain.
Accordingly, there is a need for new structures exhibiting a negative refractive index and methods for manufacturing such structures.
Disclosed below are representative embodiments of materials and structures that have a negative refractive index (also known as “left-handed” materials (LHMs) or structures or as “negative-index materials” (NIM) or structures). Also described are exemplary methods for making such materials and structures, and exemplary environments and applications for the disclosed embodiments. The described materials and structures, and methods for making and using such materials and structures, should not be construed as limiting in any way.
One exemplary embodiment is a waveguide structure comprising a first waveguide border element having a first substantially planar surface, and a second waveguide border element spaced apart from the first waveguide border element and having a second substantially planar surface. This exemplary embodiment further comprises a core material positioned between the first substantially planar surface and the second substantially planar surface. The core material has a positive in-plane dielectric constant and a negative perpendicular-to-plane dielectric constant. Furthermore, the first waveguide border element, the second waveguide border element, and the core material form a waveguide exhibiting a negative index of refraction for electromagnetic radiation in a frequency range. In certain implementations, the waveguide of this embodiment (or any embodiment disclosed herein) exhibits the negative index of refraction for electromagnetic radiation in the frequency range of about 1×109 Hz to 1×1015 Hz (e.g., 3×1012 Hz to 7.5×1014 Hz) or in the wavelength range of about 1×10−7 m to 1×10−1 m. The core material can comprise a composite of inclusions having a negative dielectric constant embedded in a host material having a positive dielectric constant. The core material may comprise inclusions distributed substantially homogenously in a host medium, substantially spheroidal inclusions anisotropically distributed in a host material, substantially wire-shaped inclusions having major axes that are substantially aligned with one another in a host material, or a material with an anisotropic effective electron mass. The core material may also comprise a layered structure. At least some of the layers of the layered structure may have thicknesses that are less than the wavelengths in the frequency range. At least two of the layers may contain materials with respective dielectric constants having opposite signs for at least one polarization of electromagnetic radiation. In certain implementations, at least one of the waveguide border elements is solid, liquid, gaseous, or a vacuum.
Another disclosed embodiment is a waveguide configured to propagate electromagnetic radiation in a waveguide plane. This embodiments comprises a core having opposing substantially planar surfaces and a positive magnetic permeability. In this embodiment, the thickness of the core is selected such that the core exhibits a negative refractive index for incident electromagnetic waves in a desired frequency range. The core can have a positive dielectric constant in the selected frequency range in directions substantially parallel to the waveguide plane, and a negative dielectric constant in the selected frequency range in directions substantially perpendicular to the waveguide plane. The core can also comprise a material with an anisotropic effective electron mass, nanowire inclusions in a host material, or interchanging layers of materials having a negative dielectric constant and materials having a positive dielectric constant.
Another disclosed embodiment is a composite comprising a host medium and a plurality of anisotropically-shaped inclusions embedded in the host medium. In this embodiment, the inclusions are substantially oriented in a common direction such that the composite exhibits a positive dielectric constant along a first plane and a negative dielectric constant along a second plane perpendicular to the first plane for incident electromagnetic radiation within a range of wavelengths. Further, the inclusions and the host medium of this embodiment have positive magnetic permeabilities. In some implementations, the composite is a substantially planar slab sandwiched between two conductive planar surfaces. Further, in certain implementations, the inclusions have a negative dielectric constant and the host medium has a positive dielectric constant. The inclusions can be formed from either a plasmonic material or doped semiconductor (e.g., gold, silver, copper, aluminum, and/or silicon carbide), and the host medium can be substantially a dielectric. Further, in certain implementations, the inclusions are substantially wire-shaped. The composite can be part of a structure having a negative index of refraction for electromagnetic radiation frequencies in the range (e.g., a lens).
Another disclosed embodiment is a composite comprising a host medium, and a plurality of isotropically-shaped inclusions embedded in the host medium. In certain implementations, the inclusions are anisotropically distributed throughout the host medium such that the composite exhibits a positive dielectric constant along a first plane and a negative dielectric constant along a second plane perpendicular to the first plane for incident electromagnetic radiation within a range of wavelengths. Further, the inclusions and the host medium can have positive magnetic permeabilities. In certain implementations, the inclusions have a negative dielectric constant and the host medium has a positive dielectric constant. The inclusions can be formed from either a plasmonic material, polar materials, or doped semiconductor (e.g., gold, silver, copper, aluminum, or silicon carbide), and the host medium can be substantially a dielectric. In certain implementations, the inclusions comprise apertures in the host medium. Further, in some implementations, the inclusion size is substantially equal to or less than the range of wavelengths. The composite can be part of a structure having a negative index of refraction for electromagnetic radiation frequencies in the range (e.g., a lens).
Yet another disclosed embodiment is a composite comprising a plurality of layers, where the plurality of layers includes a first layer having a positive dielectric constant and a second layer adjacent the first layer that has a negative dielectric constant. In this embodiment, the composite exhibits a positive effective dielectric constant along a first plane and a negative effective dielectric constant perpendicular to the first plane for incident electromagnetic radiation within a range of wavelengths. Further, the respective thicknesses of the first and the second layers are less than the wavelengths in the range of wavelengths. The first layer can be formed from either a plasmonic material or doped semiconductor (e.g., gold, silver, copper, aluminum, or silicon carbide) and the second layer can be formed from substantially a dielectric (e.g., silicon or gallium arsenide). The composite can be part of a structure having a negative index of refraction for electromagnetic radiation frequencies in the range (e.g., a lens).
Any of the disclosed embodiments can be used in a wide variety of imaging, sensing, and communication systems. Further, any of the disclosed embodiments can be used in methods for imaging an object or methods for modifying amplitude and/or phase information of electromagnetic radiation.
The foregoing and other objects, features, and advantages of the disclosed technology will become more apparent from the following detailed description, which proceeds with reference to the accompanying figures.
I. General Considerations
As used in this application and in the claims, the singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the” include the plural forms unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Additionally, the term “includes” means “comprises.” Moreover, the terms “planar surface” and “substantially planar surface” refer to surfaces that are generally planar but may include one or more surface deviations or curves that do not significantly alter the mode propagation of electromagnetic radiation through the associated structure.
Disclosed below are representative embodiments of materials and structures that have a negative refractive index (also known as “left-handed” materials (LHMs) or structures or as “negative-index materials” (NIM) or structures). Also described are exemplary methods for making such materials and structures, and exemplary environments and applications for the disclosed embodiments. The described materials and structures, and methods for making and using such materials and structures, should not be construed as limiting in any way. Instead, the present disclosure is directed toward all novel and nonobvious features, aspects, and equivalents of the various disclosed embodiments, alone and in various combinations and sub-combinations with one another. The disclosed technology is not limited to any specific aspect, feature, or combination thereof, nor do the disclosed materials, structures, and methods require that any one or more specific advantages be present or problems be solved. For the sake of simplicity, the attached figures may not show the various ways in which the disclosed apparatus and methods can be used in conjunction with other systems, methods, and apparatus.
The disclosed technology has a number of applications in the fields of optics, imaging, sensing, and communications. For example, the disclosed technology can be used to form a flat lens that can be used in a variety of different display, sensor, or other such applications. For example, the disclosed technology can be implemented as a lightweight, compact, flat lens having a negative index of refraction with little or no spherical aberration. A material or structure having a negative index of refraction (which is substantially matched to the outside dielectric environment) can be used, for instance, for subdiffraction-resolution imaging in the near or far fields. Other applications for the disclosed technology include, but are not limited to, subwavelength, high-resolution imaging for nanolithography. For example, one or more components at least partially comprising embodiments of the disclosed technology can be included in a microlithography system. The materials or structures can also be applied to the field of optical electronics. For instance, optical interconnects at least partially comprising embodiments of the disclosed technology can be used in an optical processor. The materials or structures may also be used in applications where materials having unique optical properties are desirable (e.g., stealth materials used to control or reduce signatures produced by aircraft or other vehicles).
The disclosed technology is not limited, however, to any particular application. For example, embodiments of the disclosed technology can be used as part of any device or system where electromagnetic radiation is desirably managed (e.g., on the nanoscale or microscale). For example, embodiments of the NIM structures can be used in imaging systems to modify or restore amplitude and/or phase information of electromagnetic radiation. It should also be understood that the disclosed technology is not limited to any specific wavelength. For example, the disclosed embodiments or their equivalents can be used, for example, in radio-frequency, THz, infrared, or optical devices.
II. Analytical Description of Exemplary NIM Structures
In this section, exemplary embodiments of NIM structures based on a waveguide architecture are described. Some of the exemplary structures discussed herein comprise a strongly anisotropic dielectric core positioned between two substantially planar waveguide walls, which can be metal or dielectric (including, for example, liquid or gaseous media and vacuums). In certain embodiments, the structures are non-magnetic and non-resonant (that is, non-periodic). Further, certain embodiments can be used at frequencies in the optical and infrared range. Additionally, in contrast to conventional composite resonance-based NIMs, some of the described embodiments can be homogeneous and do not require a resonance to achieve a negative refractive index. In the next section, the theoretical foundation for the exemplary waveguide architecture is discussed, including a derivation of the conditions for its right- and left-handed response and for the excitation of surface waves (polaritons).
A. Theoretical Foundation for Negative Refraction in Exemplary Waveguide Architectures
The exemplary structure illustrated in
A wave propagating in the exemplary waveguide 100 of
The {x, y, z} components of ordinary (E(o), H(o)) and extraordinary (E(e), H(e)) waves propagating in the (y, z) direction can be represented by the following expressions:
where k=ω/c, and prime (′) denotes the differentiation with respect to x. The field E0(e|o)(x, y, z; t)=E0(e|o)(x)e−iωt+ik
E0(e|o)″+(e|o)
with the conventional boundary conditions for tangential (y, z) components of the electric field corresponding to the waveguide walls. For illustrative purposes, perfectly conducting waveguide boundaries are assumed. As explained below with respect to
Equation (2) yields a series of solutions (modes) defined by the corresponding boundary conditions. For example, for “ideal metal” boundary conditions, Equation (2) yields: E0(e|o)(x)=Am(e|o) cos() with =(2m+1)π/d, and E0(e|o)(x)=Am(e|o)sin(), with =2mπ/d (where m is an integer number). Note that the structure of the mode in the x direction is described by the parameter , which for the case of perfectly conducting walls considered here is determined by the waveguide thickness d and does not depend on the dielectric properties of the core. In general, each waveguide mode has its own dispersion relation:
kz(e|o)
where,
∈(e)=∈⊥;∈(o)=∈81;v(e|o)=1−(e|o)
Note that due to different geometries, the TM and TE modes described herein are somewhat different from the conventional waveguide solutions presented in common textbooks. For discussion purposes, the focus is on a planar waveguide unbounded in the (y, z) plane with a strongly anisotropic core in contrast to bounded in the (x, y) directions by a “tubular” structure with isotropic filling where waves can propagate in the z direction. It is straightforward, however, to obtain the well-known TE (Ez=0) and TM (Hz=0) “isotropic tubular” solutions as the linear combination of the waves from Equation (2). Also, as an alternative to the formalism-presented herein, the exemplary system can also be described in terms of a generalized dielectric tensor with spatial dispersion. See, e.g., Agranovich, V. M., et al., “Linear and Nonlinear Wave Propagation in Negative Refraction Metamaterials,” Phys. Rev. B. 69, 165112 (2004).
An arbitrary wave inside the exemplary waveguide 100 illustrated in
From Equation (3), it can be seen that a propagating solution (described by real kz and ky) occurs when the corresponding parameters ∈ and v are of the same sign. The first case where ∈>0 and v>0 results when an isotropic material is inside the planar (transmitting) waveguide. The second case where ∈>0 and v<0 corresponds to the so-called “subcritical waveguide,” which does not support propagating modes and reflects all “incident” radiation. The third case where ∈<0 and v>0 can be realized in a waveguide with an isotropic core and describes a perfectly conducting interior, which again does not support the propagation of waves. Finally, the fourth case where ∈<0 and v<0 (and which is the focus of many of the embodiments of this disclosure) can be realized for an extraordinary wave in a strongly anisotropic material. For example, the waveguide 100 illustrated in
While Equation (3) defines the magnitude of the phase velocity of the mode, the sign of the phase velocity cannot be determined by Equation (3) alone. To define the sign of the phase velocity (and consequently the “handedness” of the media), consider the refraction of a wave at the interface between a transparent isotropic media (“right-handed” media) and a media with ∈<0 and v<0 inside the same waveguide. For this example, assume also that the interface coincides with the coordinate plane z=0.
First consider the special case of the normal (z) propagation of a TM-polarized wave. Since in such a wave Hz=Hx=0, neither refracted nor reflected ordinary waves are excited. Since for ky=0, the components Hy and Ex are related to each other by Hy=((k∈⊥)/kz)Ex (see Equation (2)), the requirement for continuity of tangential fields across the boundary z=0 shows that the sign of kz should coincide with that of ∈⊥. This indicates that media with ∈<0 and v<0 are left-handed.
The analysis of a general case of an obliquely incident wave (illustrated in
Results for the example in
From the results in
Another class of phenomena commonly associated with NIMs involves the propagation of surface waves, also known as polaritons, at the left- and right-handed media interface. See, e.g., Pendry, J. B., “Negative Refraction Makes a Perfect Lens,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 85, 3966 (2000); Agranovich, V. M., et al., “Linear and Nonlinear Wave Propagation in Negative Refraction Metamaterials,” Phys. Rev. B. 69, 165112 (2004). In the following calculations, it is noted that the surface wave on the non-magnetic interface has a TM structure. See, e.g., Landau, L. D., et al, Course of Theor. Phys., vol, 8, 2nd ed., Reed Ltd. (1984). The fields and the electromagnetic constant of right-handed media (which fill the region z<0 in the exemplary structure shown in
In the following discussion, the following polariton solutions are searched for: (E, H)(−)∝exp[ikyy+ξ(−)z] and (E, H)(+)∝exp[ikyy−ξ(+)z] with real ky and positive ξ(−|+) (the “anti-polariton” solution that corresponds to negative ξ(−|+) and that exponentially grows away from the interface exists in a finite region of space).
While the NIM region has ∈⊥<0, ∈∥>0, the “right-handed” medium can be constructed by either ∈⊥>0, ∈∥>0 or by ∈⊥>0, ∈∥<0. These two combinations of the dielectric constants lead to different conditions for polariton propagation. Specifically, for the case where ∈∥(−)>0, ∈⊥(−)>0, which is typically realized in an isotropic right-handed medium, the polaritons are only possible for ky=0 and have the dispersion relation:
v(−)/∈⊥(−)=v(+)/∈∥(+) (5)
Such waves however assume propagation along the x direction.
The existence of these waves in the waveguide geometry illustrated in
∈∥(−)v(−)=∈∥(+)v(+) (6)
This equation again relates to k. When Equation (6) is satisfied, the surface wave exists for any given |ky|2>∈vk2, and the relation between ky and ξ is given by Equation (3), where the following substitution is made: kz2=−ξ2. Note that a similar situation takes place in the 3-D geometry on the boundary between the right-handed medium (∈(−)>0, μ(+)>0) and the “conventional” LHM (∈(+)<0, μ(+)<0), where for the same frequency the polaritons exist for any wavevector provided that ∈(−)=−∈(+), μ(−)=−μ(+).
The existence of surface waves for a wide range of wavevectors makes super-lensing possible. See, e.g., Pendry, J. B., “Negative Refraction Makes a Perfect Lens,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 85, 3966 (2000). The evanescent components, which carry the information about the subwavelength features of the source, exponentially decay away from the object plane. Their resonant enhancement by a slab of either planar LHM (such as an embodiment described herein) or 3-D LHM (described, for example, in Pendry, J. B., “Negative Refraction Makes a Perfect Lens,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 85, 3966 (2000) and Veselago, V. G., “The Electrodynamics of Substances with Simultaneously Negative Values of ∈ and μ,” Soviet Physics Uspekhi 10, 509 (1968)) can be represented as a resonant coupling of the original evanescent wave to the surface modes on both interfaces of the LHM lens. In such a process, the original evanescent wave excites an anti-polariton mode (a surface mode growing away from the interface) on the front interface, which in turn excites the true-polariton mode on the back interface of the slab. The part of this surface mode exponentially decaying away from the lens represents the LHM-enhanced evanescent wave.
This concept is illustrated in schematic diagram 500 of
B. Expanded Analysis of Electromagnetic Characteristics of Exemplary NIM Structures Having Strong Anisotropy
For purposes of this section and its subsections, reference will be made to the exemplary geometry shown in
Propagation in the exemplary waveguide 600 is allowed in the y and z directions, while the waveguide border element occupy the regions |x|>d/2. Furthermore, the exemplary waveguide core 610 is assumed to be a homogeneous, nonmagnetic (μ=1) material. The exemplary core 610 further has a uniaxial anisotropic dielectric constant with dielectric permittivities ∈⊥ and ∈∥ along and perpendicular to the optical axis, respectively. The optical axis of the core material (C) is assumed to be perpendicular to the direction of the wave propagation in the media (C|x). Therefore, despite the anisotropy of the system, the effective refractive index of propagation in the planar geometry is isotropic.
As more fully discussed above, it can be shown that any wave propagating in such a system can be represented as a series of different waveguide modes. Each such mode is characterized by its polarization and structure in x direction. Namely, one can distinguish two fundamentally different kinds of modes. The modes of the first kind (known as TE or ordinary waves) have their E vector in the (y, z) plane. Therefore, the propagation of such waves depends only on ∈∥ (see, for example,
In the subsections below, further aspects of the exemplary NIM structure based on a waveguide architecture (such as waveguide 600) are described. The analytical descriptions presented below are limited to the case of single-mode propagation, though it should be understood that the descriptions nonetheless provide complete information about the linear properties of the waveguide structure since an arbitrary wave packet in the system can be represented as a linear combination of modes. For example, the numerical simulations of the imaging properties of exemplary NIM structures were based on this property.
As noted above, the propagation of a mode in a planar waveguide can be described by the free-space-like dispersion relation:
ky2+ky2=∈vk2 (7)
where ∈ is ∈∥ for TE modes and ∈⊥ for TM modes, ky and kz are the propagation components of the wave vector, and k=ω/c (with ω and c being the free-space angular frequency of the radiation and the speed of light in a vacuum, respectively). The propagation constant v is given by:
and the parameter κ defines the mode structure in the x direction. (Note that the parameter κ is sometimes written as in this disclosure.)
As follows from Eq. (7), the phase velocity of a propagating mode is equal to
vp=nk, (9)
where the effective refraction index n2=∈v. Note that similar to the case of the plane-wave propagation in free space, the refraction index contains a product of two (mode-specific) scalar constants. A transparent structure has both propagation constants of the same sign. The case of positive ∈ and v corresponds to conventional (positive refraction index) material. The case of negative ∈ and v describes a negative index material (NIM), where phenomena directly related to phase velocity (for example, Snell's law) are reversed. As shown below, NIM behavior can be also illustrated by comparing the Poynting vector Sz and the wavevector kz.
As more fully explained above, the mode in the exemplary waveguide architecture shown in
The electric (UE) and magnetic (UH) field contributions to the energy density of a mode in weakly dispersive material (|∈/ω|>>|d∈/dω|) can be given by UE=(1/8πd)∫(D·E*)dx and UH=(1/8πd)∫(H·H*)dx, respectively (where the asterisks denote the complex conjugation). Using the explicit mode structure for TE and TM waves, the following relationships can be obtained:
where A0 is the mode amplitude. Thus, extending the similarity between the waveguide system described here and free-space propagation, the EM energy of a propagating wave is positive and contains equal (or substantially equal) contributions from the electric and magnetic components of the field. It can also be observed that the TE mode is in some sense very similar to the conventional plane wave propagating in the isotropic homogeneous dielectric. For instance, energy density of the TE waves is equal (or substantially equal) to that of the plane waves and there is no wave propagation in material with ∈∥<0. In contrast to this behavior, the sign of the dielectric permittivity alone does not impose limitations on the propagation of TM modes.
Another characteristic of the energy transport in the EM system is the average energy flux given by the propagating component of the Poynting vector S=(c/4π) [E×H]. Selecting the direction of the wave propagation as z axis, the following can be obtained:
It can be seen from Equation (12) that the relationship between the direction of the phase velocity and direction of the energy flux is defined by the sign of the dielectric constant (for a given mode polarization). In particular, ∈>0 means n>0 propagation, whereas ∈<0 signifies the NIM case. Further, the medium should be transparent. In other words, the propagation constants ∈ and v should be of the same sign.
As can be seen from Eq. (7), the NIM condition can be satisfied for TM waves when ∈∥∈⊥<0 (that is, when the in-plane and perpendicular-to-plane dielectric constants have different signs). When ∈∥∈⊥<0, a material or structure is referred to herein as having “strong dielectric anisotropy” or having a “strongly anisotropic dielectric constant.” Occasionally, and as will be readily discernible from the context, such materials or structures having strong dielectric anisotropy are sometimes referred to as simply being “anisotropic.” Although the term “strongly” is often used, it should be understood that the relative difference between the dielectric constants ∈∥ and ∈⊥ in the exemplary structures will vary widely from implementation to implementation and may be small.
In this subsection, certain characteristics of practical implementations of the exemplary systems are examined. Specifically, this discussion concerns a waveguide architecture wherein a strongly anisotropic core material is surrounded by metallic walls. The electromagnetic properties of metals at high frequencies are dominated by the dynamics of the free-electron plasmalike gas. Following the approach described in E. M. Lifshitz, et al., Course of Theoretical Physics, Vol. 10 (Reed, 1984), it is possible to write down the high-frequency effective permittivity of metal in Drude form:
where the constant term ∈∞ describes the contribution of the bound electrons, τ is responsible for EM losses due to (inelastic) processes, and Ωpl=Nee2/meff is the plasma frequency with Ne, e, and meff being the free-electron concentration, charge, and effective mass, respectively. Note that for ω<Ωpl/((∈∞)1/2), the permittivity of the metal becomes negative ∈′m<0. (For purposes of this discussion, single and double primes denote the real and imaginary parts, respectively.) For most metals of relatively high conductivity (e.g., Ag, Al, Au) the plasma frequency is of the order of 10 eV and ∈∞≈1, which means that ∈′m is negative from optical to gigahertz frequencies. The losses, given by the parameter ∈″m/|∈′m|<<1 are typically small in these spectral ranges.
Similar to the case of perfectly conducting waveguide walls, the structure of the modes in the finite-wall-conductance system can be derived from the dependence of the longitudinal (z) field component on the x coordinate, which has cos(κX) or sin(κx) behavior, depending on its symmetry. The value of the mode parameter κ can be given by the in-plane (y,z) field components' continuity throughout x=±d/2 planes. For the symmetric (cosine) mode profile, the following can be obtained:
In the limit of ∈m→−∞, these equations yield the values κ0=π(2j+1)/d from the previous subsection. As noted, these values correspond to the well-known condition of zero mode magnitude at the waveguide boundary. In the limit of sufficiently large |∈m|, it is possible to find the correction to the above values of the mode parameter κ. Specifically,
As the mode parameter κ corresponds to an inverse confinement length of the mode in the x direction, the negative K correction signifies the “mode expansion” into the waveguide wall region. Such a mode expansion is illustrated in the diagrams 700 and 710 of
The immediate effect of such a change in the mode structure is the change of the effective phase velocity, given by the refraction index:
In Equation (16), v0=1−κ02/(∈∥k2). As was described above, the sign of the refraction index for the TM polarization has to be selected positive for ∈⊥>0 and v>0, and negative for ∈⊥<0 and v<0.
Penetration of the mode into the waveguide wall region has another effect on the wave propagation. Namely, the finite value of ∈mn introduces an additional absorption into the system with respect to the core material. As a result, the magnitude of a mode will exponentially decay as it propagates through the system. Such an attenuation can be related to the imaginary part of the effective refractive index through E∝exp(−n″kz). In the limit of small absorption in the metal (∈″m/|∈′m|<<1), the “waveguide-induced” mode decay can be described by:
It can also be obersved that in agreement with the causality principle, the losses in the system are positive, regardless of the sign of the refractive index. Using Equation (17), it can be estimated that for wavelengths λ≧850 nm, the losses introduced by silver waveguide walls are substantially small (n″/n≲0.01).
III. Exemplary Physical Embodiments of the NIM Structures
In this section, exemplary embodiments of the NIM structures are more specifically discussed. Several of the exemplary embodiments are based on the waveguide architecture introduced above (as shown, for instance, in
In several of the described embodiments, the structures are non-magnetic (e.g., the core is formed of materials having a positive magnetic permeability). Further, several of the described structures are non-resonant. For instance, some of the described embodiments do not require a resonance to achieve a negative refractive index.
In particular embodiments, the strong anisotropy of the dielectric constant can be obtained using a core material having a layered structure, a core material with aligned wire structures, or other anisotropic nanoplasmonic systems. The structures can also be comprised of materials with strongly anisotropic effective carrier mass or other compositions and/or materials.
In certain embodiments of the disclosed technology, the class of nanoengineered media known as “metamaterials” can be used to achieve the desired anisotropy. For example, in exemplary composites, nanostructured particles are used to achieve the desired electromagnetic properties. In particular embodiments, and in order to realize the desired anisotropy, a combination of plasmonic or polar particles (having ∈<0) and dielectric media (having ∈>0) are used. In general, the characteristic size of inhomogeneities in the exemplary composites and the typical separation between particles embedded in the composites are smaller than the wavelength of incident radiation. Thus, the exemplary composites typically support plane-wave-like modes. The EM properties of these modes can be described, for example, in terms of the effective dielectric constant ∈eff:
D(r)α=∈(r)α,βE(r)β=∈eff
where the angled brackets denote the averaging over the microscopically large (multiparticle) and macroscopically small (subwavelength) spatial area, where the Greek indices denote Cartesian components, and where the summation over repeated indices is assumed.
Since the size of a particle a typically enters Maxwell equations in the combination ka, size-related effects play a minor role in the considered quasi-static averaging process. Therefore, the exemplary embodiments described in this section can be considered as being highly tolerant to size variation. Further, because the desired characteristics of the composites originate from the averaged (or effective medium) properties of the metamaterials, fabrication of the exemplary embodiments does not typically require any specific periodicity of the particle arrangement. Instead, only the average concentration may be controlled during the fabrication step.
In the following subsections, two particular designs of strongly anisotropic composites are described in further detail. The described embodiments are suitable for, though not limited to, the optical and infrared spectrum ranges. Instead, the described embodiments can be used for a wider range of electromagnetic radiation (e.g., for wavelengths from 1×10−7 m to 3×10−1 m).
A. Exemplary Layered Systems
In certain embodiments, the NIM structure is based on a stack of interlacing layers. For example, specific implementations comprise interlaced plasmonic (∈pl<0) (e.g., Ag, Au, Al) and dielectric (∈d>0) (e.g., Si, GaAs) layers. Other implementations comprise interlaced polar layers (∈pl<0) (e.g., SiC) and dielectric layers (∈d>0) (e.g., Si, GaAs) layers. For purposes of this discussion, it is assumed that the layers are generally aligned in the y-z plane of a waveguide. An example layered system 800 having layers 810 with a negative dielectric constant and layers 812 with a positive dielectric constant is illustrated schematically in
To compute the effective dielectric constant ∈eff for exemplary embodiments of the layered structures, it can be noted that Ey, Ez, and ∈Ex are continuous throughout the system, leading to:
The effective permittivities for several exemplary layered composites are shown in
Although the anisotropy ∈⊥∈∥<0 can be achieved in a layered system, actual realizations of materials with ∈∥>0 and ∈⊥<0 that are suitable for high-frequency NIM are exhibit have substantial absorption. On the other hand, materials with ∈∥<0 and ∈⊥>0 (achieved, for example, by a repeated deposition of Ag—Si layers) form low-loss media. While such a configuration has a positive refraction index, it can be used to concentrate propagating modes in subwavelength areas.
In the following paragraphs, the electromagnetic properties of exemplary structures formed of interchanging layers of dielectric and plasmonic (polar) materials with dielectric constants ∈d>0, and ∈pl<0, and thicknesses ad, apl, respectively, are described in further detail. The wave propagation in such a system (also known as a 1-D photonic crystal) can be given by the dispersion relation:
cos [κ(ad+apl)]=cos(kdad)cos(kplapl)−γ sin(kdad)sin(kplapl), (20)
where kd2=∈dω2/c2−ky2−kz2, kpl2=∈plω2/c2−ky2−kz2, and the parameter γ is equal to γTM=1/2((∈pl/∈d)(kd/kpl)+(∈d/∈pl) (kpl/kd)) and γTE=1/2((kd/kpl)+(kpl/kd)) for TM and TE modes, respectively. In the limit of thin layers, and a relatively thick (although still subwavelength) waveguide |kd(ad+apl)|<<1, |kpl(ad+apl)|<<1, |κ(ad+apl)|<<1, the above dispersion relation can be further simplified via Taylor expansion to a form describing the “effective” dielectric constants:
These values of effective permittivities, derived here for a photonic crystal system, are substantial identical to the ones which can be obtained using the “effective medium theory” (EMT). Since the EMT corresponds to the first-band response of a photonic crystal system (which typically is least affected by the crystalline defects or lack of periodicity), Equations (21) can be used to describe an arbitrary layered system with the only control parameter being the relative (volume) concentration of plasmonic layers Npl=apl/(ad+apl). It should be noted, however, that the condition |κ(ad+apl)|<<1, which defines the limits of applicability of EMT, can be viewed as a limiting factor, defining the minimum size of a planar waveguide with a negative refractive index. The presence of the strong anisotropy of permittivity in the layered plasmonic-dielectric materials is illustrated in
B. Exemplary Aligned Wire Structures
Another exemplary system exhibiting desirable NIM characteristics comprises an array of aligned or substantially aligned wires (e.g., nanowires or nanotubes) in a dielectric host.
where Ein=(2∈d/∈d+∈pl)E0 is the field inside the plasmonic inclusion and E0 is the excitation field.
To check the validity of the MGA, the two-dimensional analog of the coupled-dipole approach can be used to numerically solve Maxwell's equations in the nanowire geometry. See, e.g, Podolskiy, V. A., et al., “Plasmon modes and negative refraction in metal nanowire composites,” Opt. Express 11, 735-745 (2003); Podolskiy, V. A., and Narimanov, E. E., “Nanoplasmonic approach to strongly anisotropic optical materials,” in Conference on Lasers and Electro-optics/Quantum Electronics Conference/Photonics Applications Systems Technologies, OSA Trends in Optics and Photonics Series, Optical Society of America (2005), paper JThC3; and Podolskiy, V. A., et al., “Resonant light interaction with plasmonic nanowire systems,” J. Opt. A, Pure Appl. Opt. 7, S32-S37 (2005).
For example, in this approach, each metallic wire can first be represented as an array of point (2-D) dipoles, positioned in the nodes of a digitization mesh and numbered by a single index. The excitation field, acting on a selected point dipole can then be assumed to be the sum of a homogeneous excitation field, and the field scattered by all other dipoles. Thus, the dipole moment of dipole with index i is coupled to the dipole moments of all other dipoles through the following coupled-dipole equations:
where the regular part of the quasistatic 2-D Green's function Ĝ is given by:
where the dipole polarizability a0 is defined as follows:
and where the Greek indices denote the Cartesian components, ri is the position of a dipole i, R2=r·r, and R0 (which formally corresponds to the radius of a single dipole in the units of mesh size) is a fitting parameter. In simulations that were performed, R0≈1/√{square root over (π)}≈0.56, which corresponds to the condition that the total area of dipoles in the simulations is substantially identical to the total area of wires in the original system.
The solution of the coupled-dipole equations provides information about the electromagnetic field distribution in the system, and can be used to find the effective permittivity of a composite structure. The agreement between numerical simulations and the MGA results is shown in
In the following section, an expanded discussion of the electromagnetic characteristics of the exemplary aligned architecture introduced above is provided. This discussion shows, for example, that the stretching/compression of the wire structures (e.g., by about 10%) can dramatically affect the electromagnetic properties of the system and, in some cases, change the sign of the components of permittivity tensor.
The geometry of the exemplary wire composites considered is shown in
<Dα>=∈αβeff<Eβ>. (26)
In Equation (26), the anguled brackets denote the average over a microscopically large (multi-wire), macroscopically small (subwavelength) region of the space, the Greek indices corresponding to Cartesian components, and the summation over the repeated index is assumed. If both ∈in and ∈out are isotropic, the normal axes of the tensor of effective dielectric permittivity coincide with the coordinate axes. Thus, in the exemplary geometry, the permittivity tensor becomes diagonal:
∈α,βeff=δαβ∈ββeff, (27)
with δαβ being the Kronecker delta function.
Expressions for the components of the effective permittivity ∈xxeff, ∈yyeff, ∈zzeff can now be derived. Specifically, using the continuity of the Ez component, Equation (27) yields:
∈zzeff=N∈in+(1−N)∈out. (28)
Note that the single parameter that determines the z component of the permittivity in the effective medium regime is the nanowire concentration N.
In-plane (x, y) components of the permittivity tensor can be found using the Maxwell-Garnett approximation (MGA). In this approach, the nanowire concentration is considered to be small and therefore the local field in the exemplary aligned wire structure is considered to be homogeneous across a nanowire. Consequently, the field inside the nanowire Ein is also homogeneous and can be related to the local excitation field Eex via
with {nx, ny}={ry/(rx+ry), rx/(rx+ry)} being the depolarization factors determined by the nanowire cross-section. A combination of Equations (27) and (29) yields the following expression for the in-plane components of permittivity:
with Eout being the average field between the nanowires as described below. As seen from Eq. (30), the effective-medium response of the nanowire composite can be determined by nanowire cross-section and average concentration of the nanowires N. Further, the effective medium properties are also influenced by the nanowire distribution (given by the parameters lx, ly), which affect both Ein and Eout. To calculate the effect of distribution anisotropy on the permittivity tensor, a microscopically large, macroscopically small region of the composite subjected to the incident field E0 can be considered. In the limit N<<1 considered here, the excitation field acting on a nanowire in the sample Eex will contain the major contribution from external field E0 and the feedback field scattered by all other nanowires in the structure {circumflex over (χ)}E0. Such a feedback field will in turn contribute to the excitation field in the system, and will consequently result in the secondary excitation {circumflex over (χ)}2E0. The direct summation of these series yields the equilibrium state Eex;α=[δαβ−χαβ]−1E0;β. For rectangular, triangular, and other highly-symmetrical lattices, as well as for a wide-class of random nanowire micro-arrangements, the feedback tensor becomes diagonal, so that
Specifically, for rectangular lattices, the straightforward summation of dipole fields yields:
where the lattice distortion vector {γl;x, γl;y}={lx,/ly, ly/lx} is introduced, and where the function
with summation going over all pairs of i,j except coordinate origin. Note that the feedback parameter disappears for the isotropic nanowire distribution lx=ly yielding the well-known MGA result. The average field across the typical nanowire cell, Eout can be described by:
with shape vector {γl;x, γl;y}={rx,/ry, ry/rx}.
To study the limitations of the MGA technique, 3-D Maxwell equations were numerically solved with COMSOL Multiphysics 3.2 and compared with the results of the analytical approach described above. In particular, two types of numerical simulations were performed. In the first set of numerical experiments, the quasi-static response of the exemplary aligned wire structures was studied. FIGS. 18 and 19A-D show the agreement between the direct solution of Maxwell equations and the MGA approach presented above for concentrations N≲0.3 and deformations |γr;α−1|, and |γl;α−1|≲0.3. In particular,
The numerical simulations indicate that the quasi-static material properties can be described by average parameters (N; lα; rα) and are almost unaffected by local nanowire arrangements. This particular property indicates that the exemplary strongly anisotropic aligned wire structures and other similar inclusion-based designs are highly tolerant to potential fabrication defects. Further, even 10% anisotropy in inclusion shape or distribution may dramatically affect material properties and result in a change of the sign of dielectric permittivity. Thus, optical components (e.g., polarizers, beam shapers, and so on) can be created having widely controllable optical-mechanical properties. Strongly anisotropic aligned wire structures can also be used for high-performance polarization-sensitive sensing and fluorescence studies, as well as for a wide class of ultra-compact waveguides since the material properties may be tuned between ∈≈0 and |∈|>>1.
To investigate the effects related to nonlocal material response, the x-direction wave propagation through a planar waveguide was simulated with an exemplary composite core consisting of 10% Ag nanowires in a Si host.
with kx being the modal wavevector, c being speed of light in the vacuum, d being the waveguide thickness, and ω=2π/λ. In particular
From
The discussion above demonstrates how an aligned wire composite can be used to achieve strong anisotropy at optical and IR frequencies with a controlled effective permittivity ranging from ∈<<−1 to ∈≈0 to ∈>>1. Further, the analytical techniques can be readily applied to dielectric, plasmonic, and polar-wire composites at optical, IR, and THz frequencies, and can be further extended to the cases of non-alligned inclusions, anisotropic ∈in and ∈out, and 3D composites similar to what have been done for isotropic-arrangement cases in, for example, Levy, O., et al., “Maxwell-Garnett Theory for Mixtures of Anisotropic Inclusions: Application to Conducting Polymers,” Phys. Rev. B 56, 8035 (1997); Lakhtakia, A., et al, “The Role of Anisotropy in the Maxwell-Garnett and Bruggeman Formalisms for Uniaxial Particulate Composite Media,” J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys. 30, 230 (1997); and Milton, G. W., The Theory of Composites, Cambridge U. Press (Cambridge, UK 2002).
C. Exemplary Embodiments Using Materials With an Effective Electron Mass Anisotropy
As discussed, certain embodiments of the disclosed left-handed materials desirably have a strongly anisotropic dielectric response. To implement these embodiments, a material with an effective electron mass anisotropy can be used. For example, monocrystalline bismuth is one such material and can be used in embodiments of the disclosed technology.
The high-frequency dielectric constant of a (semi-)conductor material containing a substantial amount of free electrons or holes is typically dominated by the dynamics of the free charge carriers. The resulting response is plasma-like, with the dielectric constant being adequately described by the Drude model:
where ∈0 is the (frequency-independent) contribution of the bound electrons, Γ describes inelastic processes, and the plasma frequency ωp is defined by the free-charge-carrier concentration N and the effective mass meff. Further,
See, e.g., Landau, L. D., et al, Course of Theor. Phys., vol, 8, 2nd ed., Reed Ltd. (1984).
As can be seen from Equations (35) and (36), the effective dielectric constant changes sign when the excitation frequency crosses the plasma frequency. See, e.g., Kittel, C. Introduction to Solid State Physics (Wiley, New York 1976). Also, the anisotropy of the effective mass leads to the anisotropy of the plasma frequency, and correspondingly, to the anisotropy of the dielectric constant. The strongly anisotropic dielectric constants can therefore be obtained by selecting a material that has strongly anisotropic effective carrier mass for a system that operates at a frequency between the plasma frequencies corresponding to the different effective mass directions.
For example, a thin monocrystalline bismuth film can be used (e.g. having the trigonal axis (C3) perpendicular to the film surface). The strong anisotropy of the effective masses of the electrons and holes in this semimetal (by a factor of up to ˜100 for the electron pockets) leads to different values of the plasma frequency depending on the direction of the electric field. For instance, in one exemplary configuration considered, ωp,⊥=187 cm−1 for the electric field perpendicular to its C3 crystalline axis, and ωp,∥=158 cm−1 for the electric field parallel to the C3 axis. See, e.g., Boyle, W. S., et al., “Far Infrared Studies of Bismuth,” Phys. Rev. 120, 1943 (1960). Therefore, for the frequencies ωp;∥<ω<ωp;⊥ (corresponding to the THz domain), ∈⊥<0 and ∈∥>0.
Another property that can be realized in left-handed systems based on bismuth film is low material loss. For example, bismuth mono-crystalline systems can yield the carrier mean free path at liquid helium temperatures on the order of millimeters. See, e.g., Friedman, A. N., et al., Am. Phys. Soc. Ser. II 4, 168 (1959); Reneker, D. H., “New Oscillatory Absorption of Ultrasonic Waves in Bismuth in a Magnetic Field,” Phys. Rev. Letters 1, 440 (1958); Reneker, D. H., “Ultrasonic Attenuation in Bismuth at Low Temperatures,” Phys. Rev., 115, 303 (1959). As a result, the typical imaginary part of the dielectric constant of Bi can reach values on the order of 10−6. For example,
D. Alternative Inclusion-Based Embodiments
In addition to the embodiments described above having nanowires embedded in a dielectric host, other composites having inclusions embedded in a host material can be used to achieve the desired left-handed optical characteristics. For example, randomly distributed inclusions (e.g., nanoparticles) with a negative dielectric constant and having a variety of shapes can be embedded into a transparent dielectric host having a positive dielectric constant. The negative ∈ in these embodiments can be achieved both in optical and infrared frequency ranges by using plasmonic (e.g., Ag, Au, and the like) or polar (e.g., SiC, and the like) materials to at least partially form the inclusions.
In the following analytical descriptions of such composites, it is assumed that the typical size of the inclusions is much smaller than the wavelength, that the inclusions have an elliptical shape, and that the average inclusion concentration is small. Thus, the field inside the inclusion Ein can be considered to be homogeneous, and the field inside the dielectric host can be considered to have two components—a homogeneous part E0, and a “dipole” component Ed. The effective dielectric constant of the composite can be calculated using:
where ∈m and ∈d are the dielectric constants of the inclusion and host materials, and p is the average inclusion concentration.
It can be shown that for the case of evenly distributed spherical particles, the value <Ed>=0, so that Equation (37) yields the well-known Maxwell-Garnett result, which can be extended for the case of evenly distributed spherical inclusions with a strongly anisotropic dielectric constant. See, e.g., Levy, O. et al., “A Maxwell-Garnett Theory for Mixtures of Anisotropic Inclusions: Applications to Conducting Polymers,” Phys. Rev. B 56, 8035 (1997).
If the inclusions have an anisotropic shape (for example, ellipsoidal), or if the average separation between the inclusions is anisotropic (this can be achieved, for example, by stressing (or deforming) the composite with an isotropic inclusion concentration), Ed does not disappear and can be estimated using:
where n is the so-called depolarization factor, ad and ai describe the anisotropy of the inclusion shape and distribution correspondingly, and the function I is obtained from a direct integration of a dipole field over the elliptical cell.
In particular, if the system is represented by metallic-dielectric layers stacked in the x-direction using nx=1, ny=nz=0, the following relationships are obtained:
In
More specifically,
In addition to the exemplary structures described above, other structures for realizing the desired left-handed properties are also possible. For instance, a layered structure based on multiple semiconductor quantum wells (where the mobility of the electrons is different in the x direction and the y-z plane) can be used. See, e.g., Shvets, G. “Photonic approach to making a material with a negative index of refraction,” Phys. Rev. B 67, 035109 (2003). Additionally, a planar transmission line LHM technique can be used. See, e.g., Iyer, A. K., et al., “Experimental and theoretical verification of focusing in a large, periodically loaded transmission line negative refractive index metamaterial,” Optics Express 11, 696 (2003).
E. Fabrication Considerations
The disclosed structures can be formed through a variety of techniques. For example, embodiments of the inclusion-based or aligned wire designs can be fabricated by depositing metal inclusions or nanowires into a dielectric host using known e-beam or ion-beam lithographic deposition techniques, colloid depositions techniques, or plasma despostions. Ion beam or e-beam shaping of dielectric, metallic, or pre-manufactured nanolayered materials can also be performed. In certain embodiments, these techniques are used to form dielectric (including vacuum or aperture) inclusions inside a metallic host. Electrochemical techniques, selective etching or other chemical processes, or any other suitable nanofabrication technique can also be used.
Embodiments of the layer-based designs can similarly be fabricated using a wide variety of suitable techniques. For example, such embodiments can be fabricated using chemical vapor deposition (CVD), metalorganic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD), or plasma deposition of the metallic and dielectric layers. Further, lithographic techniques as described above and thermal evaporation techniques can also be used. Still further, for certain embodiments, crystal growth methods can be used.
The initial design and on-going analysis of the material can be performed, for example, numerically, via mode-matching, Finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) simulations or via solution of coupled-dipole equations (CDEs) as described above. See, e.g., Podolskiy, V. A., et al., “Plasmon Modes in Metal Nanowires,” Journal of Nonlinear Optical Physics and Materials 11, 65 (2002); Landau, L. D., et al, Course of Theor. Phys., vol, 8, 2nd ed., Reed Ltd. (1984); Purcell, E. M., et al., Astrophys. J. 405, 705 (1973); Draine, B. T., “Discrete dipole approximation and its application to interstellar graphite grains,” Astrophys. J. 333, 848 (1988). For instance, the techniques for implementing the solutions of CDEs described in Podolskiy, V. A., et al., “Plasmon Modes in Metal Nanowires,” Journal of Nonlinear Optical Physics and Materials 11, 65 (2002).
Using the combination of CDEs and the generalized Maxwell-Garnett approach described above, one can design and physically model a system with a strong anisotropy of the effective dielectric constant at desired frequencies (for example, optical frequencies). Once the physical parameters are determined, the NIM structure can be fabricated using any of the above-described techniques.
IV. Imaging Characteristics of Exemplary Embodiments of the NIM Structures
A substantially planar system with a strongly anisotropic core supports the propagation modes with a negative refraction index even when the waveguide thickness is smaller than the wavelength. Using the small (on the scale of a wavelength) variation of a waveguide thickness d in these systems, it is possible to achieve further compression of propagating free-space modes in the x direction. Due to such a compression, the local intensity of a pulse will grow ∝1/d2—a phenomenon which can be beneficial for nm-scale nonlinear photonics and all-optical processing. The energy confinement in the lateral (y, z) directions can be achieved using the effect of planar lensing, common in materials with negative refractive index, based on the reversal of Snell's law in these systems. Planar lensing is illustrated below using the example of imaging a double-slit system with the planar waveguide geometry.
In general, imaging by an arbitrary optical system can be reduced to isolating mode propagation in such a system. Specifically, the spatial resolution of any monochromatic optical system can be related to its ability to restore the broad wavevector (ky) spectrum emitted by a source. The components of this spectrum can be separated into two fundamentally different parts. The waves with |ky|<|ωn|/c will propagate away from the source, and the relative phase difference between these waves will increase as the distance between the source and the point of observation is increased. In principle, the information about the “thick” (≧|2n|) features of the source, contained in these waves, can be accessed at an arbitrary point in space by compensating for this phase difference. The information about the “fine structure” of the source (features ≲λ/|2n|), however, is contained in the part of the spectrum with |ky|≧|ωn|/c. The corresponding waves, known as evanescent waves, exponentially decay away from the source. These exponentially decaying waves (along with information they contain) can be directly accessed in the near-field proximity to the source. Alternatively, some part of the evanescent spectrum can be restored by NIMs via resonant excitation of surface waves. Such restoration, however, can be suppressed by the material absorption. Further, the boundary between the propagating and evanescent parts of the spectrum is defined by both wavelength λ and index of refraction n of a material around the source. Therefore, it is possible to achieve the desired subwavelength far-field resolution using materials with relatively large refraction indices.
Simulations of energy emitted by a double-slit source were also performed, the results of which are shown in the respective diagrams 2900, 2902, 2904, 2906 of
As explained above, this spectrum contains the contributions from two fundamentally different types of waves: the ones where |ky|<|nω/c|, which propagate away from the source, and the ones with |ky|>|nω/c|, known as evanescent waves. The latter carry the information about subwavelength features (<λ0/|2n|) of the source, and exponentially decay away from the source. The evanescent components can be restored (and correspondingly, the compression of radiation beyond the diffraction limit λ0/|2n| can be achieved) in the near-field proximity of the source. See, e.g., Poldolskiy, “Near-sighted Superlens,” Optics Letters 30, 75 (2005). Far-field imaging and energy compression are naturally limited by the conventional diffraction limit.
The exemplary left-handed system simulated in
The imaging performance of the exemplary system is shown in
The far-field image formation in the focal plane (z=5 μm) and the appearance of the diffraction limit can be observed in
To better illustrate the imaging performance; the material absorption has been neglected in the calculations described above. However, it should be noted that the presence of relatively weak material losses do not substantially affect the resolution at the far-field limit of the system, and result only in a suppression of local intensity at the focal plane. In
In the illustrated simulations, a source of EM radiation was located at the origin (inside the RHM part of the structure), and its radiated wave was represented as a series of propagating TM modes with the same frequency and mode parameter . The transmission and reflection coefficients were determined for each radiation component at the front (z=2λ) and back (z=6λ) interfaces of the LHM insert, and the EM field throughout the system was computed.
The corresponding diagrams 3100, 3102, 3104 in
More specifically,
In each of the diagrams shown in
Having illustrated and described the principles of the illustrated embodiments, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the embodiments can be modified in arrangement and detail without departing from such principles. For example, the inclusion-based embodiments may comprise dielectric inclusions (e.g., apertures) embedded in a metallic host. Moreover, any of the waveguide embodiments may include additional boundaries (e.g., along the y-z plane, thereby enclosing the core material). Furthermore, the disclosed technology is not limited to any particular radiation frequency range.
In view of the many possible embodiments to which the principles of the disclosed invention may be applied, it should be recognized that the illustrated embodiments are only preferred examples of the invention and should not be taken as limiting the scope of the invention. Rather, the scope of the invention is defined by the following claims. We therefore claim as our invention all that comes within the scope and spirit of these claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/681,077 filed May 13, 2005, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
This invention was made with government support under DMR-0134736 and ECS-0400615 awarded by the National Science Foundation. The government has certain rights in the invention.
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