The invention relates to cloaking devices.
Due to their ability to manipulate electromagnetic waves, metamaterials have been extensively studied in the past fifteen years. They have resulted in several novel concepts and promising applications, such as cloaking devices, concentrators, wormholes and hyper lenses.
Among all potential applications, invisibility cloaks have especially received considerable attention. Up to now, the main theoretical tool used for designing invisibility cloaks has been transformation optics/conformal mapping. According to Fermat's principle, an electromagnetic wave will travel between two points along the path of least time. In a homogeneous material, this path is just a straight line. However, in an inhomogeneous material, the path becomes a curve, because waves travel at different speeds at different points. Thus, one can control the path of waves by appropriately designing the material parameters (electric permittivity and magnetic permeability). In the case of cloaking, a metamaterial surrounding the target can be used to force light to bypass a region of space, effectively isolating it from incoming electromagnetic waves.
Using transformation optics, the first experimental demonstration of cloaking was achieved at microwave frequencies. However, transformation optics usually leads to highly anisotropic and inhomogeneous material parameters. In addition, extreme material parameter values, such as negative or near-zero values, are often required.
To obtain extreme values for the permeability, split-ring resonators (SRRs) with magnetic resonances have been used. Such resonances are strongly dispersive and result in cloaks working only in a narrow frequency range. Most metals are also highly “lossy” at optical frequencies, which prohibits a simple scaling of SRRs down to the nanoscale.
This Background is provided to introduce a brief context for the Summary and Detailed Description that follow. This Background is not intended to be an aid in determining the scope of the claimed subject matter nor be viewed as limiting the claimed subject matter to implementations that solve any or all of the disadvantages or problems presented above.
Recently, a refinement of the transformation optics strategy was put forward. Termed ‘hiding under the carpet’, it works not by routing light around a given scatterer, i.e., object to be cloaked, but by transforming its reflection pattern into that of a flat plane. With a well-designed material, reflected waves appear to be coming from a flat plane and the scatterer thus becomes invisible.
A major drawback of current cloaking devices is that they are large in size. Metasurfaces or frequency selective surfaces, as opposed to metamaterials, have many advantages, including of taking up less physical space than metamaterials. However, a metasurf ace is not the same as the surface of a meta-material. Rather, a metasurface is a thin layer with a sub wavelength thickness (less than the wavelength of the incident light, and generally significantly less, e.g., 1/10 the wavelength). In this way, meta-materials may be made very light, flexible, and so on. Such materials may be particularly important due to the design afforded by generalized Snell's laws of reflection and refraction. In such surfaces, wave propagation can be controlled using a thin coating layer with a properly designed phase gradient over the surface. Many applications may be realized from metasurf aces, such as reflectarrays, flat lenses, and hologram-based flat optics. More recently, total cross-polarization control has also been demonstrated.
Systems and methods according to present principles employ metasurfaces as components in a “hiding under the carpet” device. In one implementation, a dielectric metasurface with a tailored phase gradient may be employed in “carpet cloaking”. In more detail, a single extremely thin (e.g., λ/10 or λ/12) all-dielectric metasurface has been shown to be sufficient to accomplish invisibility, where λ is the wavelength of expected incident light. For example, if it is desired to cloak objects from electromagnetic waves in the microwave spectrum, a metasurface may be employed that is thinner than the microwave wavelength, or even thinner, e.g., 1/10 or 1/12 the microwave wavelength expected. The dielectric surface may include, e.g., an array of elements such as cylinders arranged on a substrate. Other shapes may also be used, e.g., rectangular solids, cubes, and the like, so long as the dimensionality requirements as described below are met, e.g., that the size be appropriate for the incident light and that the dimensions be variable in a way to effectively provide or create a phase distribution to the incident light so that the reflected wave can be configured as desired to provide the desired cloaking effect. Once the object is covered with such a metasurface, observers cannot distinguish it from a flat surface.
By using an extremely thin dielectric metasurface, distorted wavefronts are reshaped to mimic the reflection pattern of a flat ground plane. To achieve this, the reflection angle should generally be equal to the incident angle everywhere (or at least in most locations, e.g., over 95%) on the object. To achieve this, the required phase gradient is calculated and employed to reconstruct in an appropriate way the phase of the reflected waves, and this determined phase gradient is used to design a metasurface as a cloaking device, in this way cloaking the object sitting on the ground plane from an incoming plane wave. The design works at least in part by providing wavefronts with a local additional phase to compensate for the phase difference induced by the geometrical distortion.
The metasurface may be designed to work at frequencies from microwaves to optics using low-loss, sub-wavelength dielectric resonators. The design has been verified by full-wave time-domain simulations.
In one aspect, the invention is directed towards a cloaking device for an object configured to cloak the object from incident electromagnetic waves having a wavelength or range of wavelengths, including: a metasurface, the metasurface having a thickness less than the wavelength of the incident light, the metasurface configured to provide a phase distribution to the incident electromagnetic waves such that the incident electromagnetic waves are reflected in such a way that the metasurface appears substantially flat.
Implementations of the invention may include one or more of the following. Themetasurface may be constructed such that a phase distribution results such that incident electromagnetic waves with frequencies between a microwave regime and a visible light regime are reflected in such a way that the metasurface appears flat. In particular, incident microwaves are reflected in such a way that the metasurface appears flat. Themetasurface may be configured to cover the object to be cloaked, the object having a shape expressed by z(x), and where the phase distribution provided by the metasurface is according to an equation below, where k0 is an angular frequency of the incident electromagnetic wave, θG is a global incident angle expected, and const is chosen from a known phase of a flat ground plane:
ϕ(x)=2k0z(x)cos θG+const
The phase distribution may be such that the metasurface appears flat regardless of the shape of the object.
The constant above may be selected to correlate to a phase of a background that the metasurface is emulating.
Themetasurface may include a plurality of elements, each including a dielectric disposed on a substrate.
The elements may be cylinders, and a height of the cylinders may be employed to provide the phase distribution. The dielectric may be a ceramic including a high permittivity ceramic, e.g., one permittivity values ranging from about 10 to 1000. The ceramic may have a low loss tangent, e.g., ranging from about 0 to 10−2. The substrate may include a low refractive index material or a transparent material. One exemplary substrate is Teflon®. The substrate also may have a low loss tangent. A refractive index of themetasurface may be substantially continuously varied, and in the case of discrete cylinders, may be discreetly but substantially continuously varied. The phase distribution provided by the metasurface may be linear with respect to frequency and cosine-like with respect to global incident angle.
Themetasurface may be passive or may include one or a plurality of active elements. Formetasurface is with active elements, themetasurface may further include an incident wave angle sensor layer configured to provide a signal feedback to the plurality of active elements of the metasurface. Elements of the metasurface may then be configured to generate a phase distribution based on information about the incident wave angle received from the incident wave angle sensor layer.
The appearance of being substantially flat may in one implementation mean that variations in perceived flatness are no greater than a range of about a few fractions of a degree to a few degrees, e.g., 0.5 and 5°.
In another aspect, the invention is directed towards a method of cloaking an object including covering an object with the device as noted above.
In a further aspect, the invention is directed towards a method for designing a cloaking device for an object, including: receiving a shape of an object to be cloaked; and configuring a metasurface such that the metasurface provides a phase distribution configured such that electromagnetic rays incident on the metasurface are reflected in such a way that the metasurface appears flat.
Implementations of the invention may include one or more of the following. The configuring may include configuring the phase distribution to be linear with respect to frequency and cosine-like with respect to global incident angle. The shape of the object to be cloaked may be expressed by z(x), and the phase distribution may be configured to be according to the equation below, where k0 is an angular frequency of the wave, θG is a global incident angle, and const is chosen from a known phase of a flat ground plane:
ϕ(x)=2k0z(x)cos θG+const
Advantages of the invention may include, in certain embodiments, one or more of the following. Systems and methods according to present principles in some implementations overcome a major drawback of metamaterial-based cloaking devices, i.e., that they are large in size and heavy, because a large space is needed to progressively bend light. In contrast, the cloaking devices according to present principles may constitute a single extremely thin surface that is smaller than 1/10 the wavelength of the incident wave and smaller than bulky cloaking systems by more than two orders of magnitude. Systems and methods according to present principles can advantageously employ ceramics, which are generally light and convenient to configure.
A drawback of prior systems is that they use metals that are lossy. Cloaks that are lossy reflect light at a lower intensity than what hits their surface, and lead to a sharp drop in brightness. This aspect leads to their being discerned, thus defeating the cloaking attempt. The cloaking devices according to present principles have the advantage of overcoming this fundamental drawback as well, as the same employ metasurfaces that are more compact, slimmer, less lossy, lighter, and potentially wearable. Such structures can also be made reconfigurable. The approach of systems and methods according to present principles is general and can be applied to hide any object on a ground plane using, e.g., a metasurface of class C1 (first derivative continuous). Moreover, this approach of bending electromagnetic waves with metasurf aces can be used not only for carpet cloaks but also for light focusing to make flat optics devices such as thin solar concentrators, quarter-wave plates, and spatial light modulators. Systems and methods according to present principles can also be used in interior design and art.
Other advantages will be understood from the description that follows, including the figures and claims.
This Summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts in a simplified form. The concepts are further described in the Detailed Description section. Elements or steps other than those described in this Summary are possible, and no element or step is necessarily required. This Summary is not intended to identify key features or essential features of the claimed subject matter, nor is it intended for use as an aid in determining the scope of the claimed subject matter. The claimed subject matter is not limited to implementations that solve any or all disadvantages noted in any part of this disclosure.
The patent or application file contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawing(s) will be provided by the Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee.
Like reference numerals refer to like elements throughout. Elements are not necessarily to scale unless otherwise noted.
To achieve carpet cloaking of an object, i.e., mimicking the reflection pattern of a flat ground plane, the reflection angle has to be equal to the incident angle everywhere on the object, or for that matter on the metasurface providing the cloaking. In this way, an observer will just see a flat ground plane and the object will be invisible and thus effectively cloaked.
A metasurface may be generally designed for a particular wavelength of incident electromagnetic waves, or range of wavelengths. For example, to cloak an object from radar waves, microwaves would be employed, and the sizes of the elements forming the metasurface described below, e.g., cylinders, would be sized accordingly, e.g., 1/10 the wavelength of the incident light (as used in the simulation designed below). To cloak an object from optical waves, much smaller elements would be used as part of the metasurface.
In more detail, and referring to
where σ indicates the standard deviation of the Gaussian curve and provides a measure of its width.
To illustrate a cloaking mechanism, two cases are considered. In
To control the reflection angle, the generalized Snell's law of reflection is used:
ki Is the wave vector in the incident medium and ϕ(x) is the phase distribution. From Eq. (2), it can be seen that the reflection angle is entirely controlled by the phase gradient. Various phase gradients can be achieved with a graded metasurface. For example, a suitable phase gradient on the plane can be designed to ensure that the reflected ray in
Treating each point on the Gaussian cloaking surface locally as a flat plane, the entire cloaking surface can be parameterized by a local incident angle θL that is x-dependent and that is distinct from the global incident angle θG (see
The phase gradient can then be expressed as a function of the cloaking surface shape z(x):
Finally, after integration the phase distribution ϕ(x) is given by:
ϕ(x)=2k0z(x)cos θG+const (5)
where const is chosen from the known phase of the flat ground plane. This constant may be chosen to mimic the phase of the background that the metasurface needs to emulate. For example, the const is pi when the background is metallic.
From Eq. (5), it can be seen that in the limit of a flat scatterer, the phase distribution is identically constant as it should be. By providing the appropriate phase distribution, as dictated by Eq. 5, an arbitrary object can be hidden by a scattering metasurface by making the scattering metasurface look like a flat ground plane using a metasurface of class C1, where such a surface is one described by a function whose first derivative is continuous. However, surfaces with discontinuous derivatives may be embedded under ones with continuous derivatives.
The construction of a device to take advantage of such principles is now described.
Referring to
The elements described above are generally finite-sized subwavelength resonators whose modes can be used to provide the necessary phase. Elements which are dielectrics have certain advantages. For example, as noted above, the use of loss-free dielectric resonators can lead to applications in optics, whereas metals are lossy in these wavelength ranges. In addition, the systems described here can also be realized at higher frequencies by simply picking a proper class of sub-wavelength metasurface elements. A large phase-shift can be achieved by the disclosed technology using dielectric cylinders employing a metasurface with lower permittivities, e.g., such as Si or TiO2. However, any nonabsorbing dielectric can be used, and the particular choice of dielectric or combination of dielectric is thus chosen based on the frequency range of interest. Such materials may be used to achieve near infrared/optical Mie resonances.
Table I below indicates exemplary materials and dimensions, though it will be understood given this disclosure that these values will vary depending on implementation and expected wavelength of incident wave, and thus where an exemplary range is given, values outside the range may also be employed for a given circumstance:
As noted in one implementation the phase distribution was discretized with 25 cylinders. Values in parentheses below are from this designed device. In this implementation, the elements 18 are cylinders having a circular cross-section and a fixed diameter (D=0.58 in) and the substrate 16 has a fixed thickness (t=0.23 in). The metasurface may also be periodic along y (in the figure only the periodicity along x is shown) with a sub-wavelength unit cell (w=1.16 in). The cylinders may be made of a high-permittivity ceramic (εr=41±0.75) with a low loss-tangent (tan δ=1.10−4) and as noted may be embedded in a material having a low index or even a transparent material, e.g., a Teflon® substrate (εr=2.1) with an equally low loss-tangent (tan δ=2.10−4). In this way, the metasurface is almost lossless.
In the implementation noted, the object is described by a Gaussian function as per Eq. 1. Its standard deviation a is in this implementation four times the unit cell width (σ=4.64 in), while its amplitude A is the same as the unit cell width (A=1.16 in). Finally, the global incident angle θG is chosen to be 45 degrees and the polarization of the incident wave is along the y axis (i.e., TE-polarized). The polarization of the reflected wave is the same as that of the incident wave in this implementation. It will be understood that variations may be seen of the above dimensions, and the same dependent on materials as well as on the wavelength ranges expected to be incident. In addition, the cylinders can be replaced with rectangular shaped solids, cubes, and the like.
To obtain a suitable phase gradient and phase distribution, a local variation in cylinder height was designed and configured, and in this implementation was the only geometrical parameter that was varied. As shown in
As can be seen from Table II, to hide the object under the cloaking metasurface, the phase distribution covering the 0-to-2 π range is needed for different local incident angles.
Table II below illustrates samples of calculated z(x), θL(x), ϕ(x) and h(x) on the scatterer.
To determine if the required phase coverage was achievable for different local incident angles θL, with the designed dielectric cylinders, the phase shift was simulated as a function of both local incident angle and cylinder height. Results are shown in
As can be seen from
To compute the phase shift from a single metasurface element, it is assumed that its response can be approximated by that of an infinitely periodic array. In the case of the designed implementation, this is a particularly good approximation because the cylinders are made of a high permittivity material that concentrates the field and, as a result, the coupling between unit cells is weak enough to consider each unit cell as independent. Furthermore, since the phase gradients are small, neighboring cylinders are of comparable dimensions. Thus, the total field of the whole system can be treated as the superposition of the response of each unit cell as follows from Huygens principle, and carpet cloaking can be realized.
Using the above procedure, in a general method of designing a cloaking device, and referring to the flowchart 20 of
The system has also been modeled using computer simulations. In particular, the structure shown in
In
As a refinement of the above-noted technique, it is noted that additional distortions may be due to the fact that the metasurface corrects the local phase and cloaks primarily in the far field, as well as because use was made of a hypothetical plane wave of infinite extent filling all space in the simulations. In any actual device, the phase distribution needed on the metasurface will change with different global incident angles θG (the metasurface as described above was designed for θG=45 degrees). To address this, an angular sensitivity study was performed.
Further refinements can also be had. For these refinements, sensitivity analysis may be performed by computing the partial derivatives with respect to x, θ, and k0. For example:
From Eqs. (5)-(6), several conclusions can be drawn.
First, the phase distribution sensitivity with respect to frequency is independent of frequency itself. Thus, there need be no special considerations for different frequency ranges. Second, the phase distribution sensitivity with respect to global incident angle is a maximum for grazing incidence (θ=π/2). Thus, it is generally harder to cloak a scatterer for large angles of incidence. Finally, the phase distribution sensitivity with respect to position is, somewhat surprisingly, independent of position itself, for large slopes. All of this implies that a cloaking device can be configured to work for a large range of global incident angles and can be broadband if the phase distribution on the metasurface is linear with respect to frequency and cosine-like with respect to global incident angle.
For example, a square metal metasurface has an intrinsic cosine-like property. When the incident angle changes, the reflection phase will change as well. By designing suitable elements, e.g., particles, for each position, the metasurface can provide phase compensation with respect to the incident angle and can work for a broad range of angles
Furthermore, by using active metasurf aces and adding an incident wave angle sensor layer which gives feedback to, and can cause changes in, the cloaking metasurface, the metasurface can operate at all angles.
In this case, and referring back to
For example, in
The passive metasurface can work at broad angles such as 0° to 60° from the normal, and can be broadband. For example,
Construction of the metasurface elements atop the substrate may be performed in a number of ways. For example, ceramic dielectrics may be fabricated from pressing powders, followed by grinding and slicing. Lithographic methods may also be used to process dielectrics or metals to form the resonators (elements).
What has been described is an extremely thin dielectric metasurface carpet cloak. The geometrical scheme presented is general and can be used for any surface of class C1 and for frequencies up to the visible. The proposed design flow gives a powerful recipe to design metasurface cloaks for a given geometry. A specific design has been presented and cloaking performance has been shown to be robust with respect to surface discretization. The observed wavefronts reflected from the proposed metasurface have been shown to be quasi-planar, with little to no distortion. With this design, observers will only see a flat ground plane, and the scatterer will be invisible and thus effectively cloaked. In addition, despite being designed for 45 degrees, accepting a phase advance/delay of 3% of the period results in an angular bandwidth of ±6 degrees.
Other applications will also be understood from this disclosure. Such applications may include hiding vehicles such as airplanes from radar or from unmanned areal vehicles (UAV). Systems and methods according to present principles can also be used in interior design to construct a virtual environment from thin engineered carpets. Applications can also be expected in art and jewelry protection/modification.
In addition to making a carpet cloaking device, the technology can also be employed in light focusing to make flat optics devices such as thin solar concentrators, quarter-wave plates, and spatial light. For example, in
In addition, while the use of dielectrics has been detailed here, the invention is not limited to only such materials. In general, cloaking structures can be made with any resonator, e.g., dielectric or metallic. And while it is generally desired for the object covered with a cloaking metasurface to appear as a flat plane, a deviation from “flatness” may be acceptable and still provide sufficient cloaking. The extent to which variations can occur depends on the size of the elements chosen to implement the cloak. Typical variations can be, depending on implementation, a few degrees or a few fractions of degrees.
Making these surfaces reconfigurable, the systems and methods described here are expected to be applicable to flexible devices.
While the invention herein disclosed is capable of obtaining the objects and goals hereinbefore stated, it is to be understood that this disclosure is merely illustrative of the presently preferred embodiments of the invention and that no limitations are intended other than as described in the appended claims. Many other applications may also be envisioned given this disclosure.
This application claims benefit of priority of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/248,651, filed Oct. 30, 2015, entitled “Thin and Light Dielectric Metasurface Invisibility Cloaking Devices and Related Applications in Wave Focusing, Interior Design, and Art”, which application is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
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20100225562 | Smith | Sep 2010 | A1 |
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20190170484 A1 | Jun 2019 | US |
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