In this patent application, we describe an invisible structure and how it can be applied. The structure is invisible at the frequency band, where it is designed to work. In other words, the structure can be invisible at RF frequencies, but visually it can be seen.
Previously, invisibility devices have been invented for cloaking large objects [1-4] at or below the radio frequency range. There the cloak is a spherical object made with special material. Inside the cloak, there is a hole where the object which is made invisible is placed.
The drawback of these devices is, that it is very narrow band. Because of the narrow bandwidth, it does not work for signals.
Another related study involves reduction of forward scattering from cylindrical objects using hard surfaces [5]. There the wave is guided around the hided object. The device is broad-band, but works only for one angle of incidence. Therefore the radiation source can not be placed near the object which is made invisible. It can be used to hide struts from electromagnetic wave coming from one direction, but it can not be used to construct invisible supporting walls.
As far as we know, no-one has considered the advantage of invisible structure. Invisible structure can work for example as a supporting structure or as a mechanical shield, but still to be invisible for electromagnetic radiation. If an antenna is placed behind such an invisible structure, the radiation of the antenna can pass the structure freely. At the same time, the material can be a supporting structure or it can give a mechanical cover for the antenna. The novel structure is also broad band and it works for signals.
Wires can be placed inside the structure while maintaining the invisibility. For example the mechanical strength of the structure can be increased by adding metallic wires. Also electric wires can be placed inside the structure and still the material is invisible.
How Invisible Structure Works
Invisibility
The invisible structure passes the electromagnetic radiation through freely. It simulates free space, or any material surrounding it. In practice, there is always some un-idealities. Despite of this, the invisibility properties can be optimized for a desired application.
Reflection Free
The invisible structure minimizes the back scattering. This is because the invisible structure can be impedance matched with any surrounding material. For example ordinary window glass does have back scattering. This can be seen as mirror reflections from the window.
Mechanically Strong
The advantage of solid invisible structure is that it can be a part of a bigger construction. At the radio frequency range, materials which have the reflection constant near that of the free space are typically mechanically soft materials and they can not be used as supporting structures for heavy objects. The invisible structure can contain large amount of metallic wires, which makes it stronger than any ordinary material witch wave propagation properties close to air.
Broad Band
The invisible structure works for signals, because it is a broadband device. Real-life electromagnetic signals have always finite frequency band with. That is to say, signals have energy in a continuous range of frequencies. The invisible structure can be designed to work in a desired frequency band with. Then both the transmission line network and the matching layer are matched to work at this frequency band.
Two and Three-Dimensional Realizations
For a special use, the invisible structure can be simplified. Sometimes it might be enough to hide the structure from only one angle of incident and one polarization. In that case two dimensional invisibility is enough.
The invisible structure has two and three dimensional realizations. The three dimensional realization corresponds to three dimensional transmission-line network, which has three dimensional connections. Two dimensional network has connections in a plane.
Basic Design
An illustration of the invisible structure is presented in
Invisible structure construct of three parts:
1) A transmission line network, where transmission lines are connected either in 2D plane or in 3D space
2) A matching device on the boundary of the structure and the surrounding space
3) Any supporting structures which can be placed inside the transmission line network
The matching device can be an antenna array between the surrounding space and the transmission-line network. The transmission line network simulates the surrounding space. The wave propagation is as close to the free space propagation as possible. The transmission line network is dense compared to the wavelength of the electromagnetic wave. Transmission lines are connected so that the wave can propagate freely to all directions inside the structure.
Strengthened Structure
All three- two- and one-dimensional transmission line networks have holes between the transmission-line segments. In these holes, any material can be placed. Inside the structure, strengthening wires can be added. In
The strengthening can be done with objects with arbitrary shape, as long as they fit inside the transmission line network. For example, wires in
Other Designs
Any material can be placed between the transmission lines. This can be applied for example to hide electric cables. For example in
Verification for Transmission Line Network
The transmission-lines and antennas can be freely chosen according to the application. The impedance match between the free space and the transmission line network can be achieved with a dense antenna array. In this section, the transmission line network is studied separately by assuming that it is surrounded with matched antennas. In the next section, it is shown, that antennas can be matched to the structure.
As an example, an invisible cylinder with metallic strengthening wires is studied. An illustration of the cylinder with the antenna array around it is presented in
This structure is designed so that it is invisible for electromagnetic radiation which is parallel to the metallic wires. The other polarization is not that important from practical point of view. That polarization is not reflected strongly from a stack of thin metallic wires as presented in
The structure was studied with several independent numerical methods to verify the invisibility of the structure.
Time Domain Simulations
At first, a cylinder transmission line network was studied using FDTD method. There at the end of each transmission line element, there is a antenna which is assumed to be perfectly matched to the free space surrounding the cylinder. As a comparison, scattering from a lattice of metallic wires as in
The invisible structure is constructed with transmission line network with periodicity of 8 mm. The diameter of the invisible cylinder is 12 cm. The structure is designed to work frequencies near 6 GHz.
In
The same lattice of metallic wires, which was simulated in
These simulations show, that the invisible structure highly reduces both forward and backward scattering for signal excitation compared to the reference object.
Frequency Domain Simulations
In addition to time domain simulation, the structure was studied with finite element based method with commercial software Comsol Multiphysics. In this case, the transmission line network was simulated as a homogeneous object with impedance matched to the free space. In that case a cylinder formed with transmission line section of certain inductance and capacitance, the structure is simplified to be formed with solid material with corresponding effective permittivity and permeability. The purpose of these simulation is to show independently from the previous method that if the antenna array can be matched to the transmission line network, the structure works as an invisible material.
In
In
It is shown, that the transmission line network has significantly smaller scattering as a lattice of metallic wires. These wires can be placed inside the structure. As a result, the material is equally strong as the original stack of metallic wires, but its scattering is highly reduced.
Verification for the Antenna Array
The matching device around the transmission line network can be made with any antennas which are small enough to be connected with the transmission line network. They also need to be matched at the frequency band where the cylinder is made invisible. For this geometry, horn-type antennas were found to be suitable.
A section of the transmission line network with matched antennas and the metallic wire grid inside was simulated with HFSS software. The illustration of the transmission line network and antennas is presented in
As a comparison, a structure consisting of metallic wires without the transmission line network and antennas was studied. The reflection and transmission of a wave from the lattice of wires is shown in
In
As far as we know, there has been no attempts to create a structure, which is invisible itself. One reason is, that only recent advances in the area of metamaterial design has made it possible to even consider this possibility.
Prior art scientific publications related to invisibility devices [1-4] have very different purpose: they are designed to hide objects. In addition, they are too narrow band to work for signals. The realization is also very different.
Forward scattering has been reduced previously also using hard surfaces [5,6].
There a metallic cylinder can be made invisible using hard surface cover. The structure is broad band, but works only for single angle of incidence. The wave does not penetrate inside the hard surface cover. Therefore wall-like objects, where wave would travel through the invisible material, can not be constructed. Because the device works only for single angle of incidence, the source can not be placed near the object which is made invisible.
Strategic and Economical Issues
The invisible structure offers a novel material for any support or covering structure for any antenna application. It allows to construct large, solid and strong objects which are still invisible for electromagnetic radiation in a desired frequency band. Because there has been no such structures available, we believe that there is also economical interest for this innovation.
Examples of the Use
The new invisible structure can be used in many applications. For instance, for airport masts (supporting antennas etc.) it is important to minimize radar signal reflections from these structures. It is even more difficult problem for ships, especially military ships, because radars need to be positioned in a clattered environment among many metallic supports. These supports could be made “invisible” for radars with the use of our invention.
Another application example refers to the design of large reflector antennas, for instance, for radioastronomy. Here, the primary source (often, a horn antenna) should be positioned at the focal point of the reflector. Support structures (usually metal struts) reflect and scatter part of the radiated/received field, increasing the side-lobe level of the antenna. Our invention could dramatically modify the degrading effect of supporting struts on the antenna operation
It is shown numerically using several different frequency and time domain based electromagnetic simulation methods, that
1) The invisible material is broadband and therefore works for signals
2) Antenna array can be matched to the transmission line network
3) Inside the invisible material, metallic wires can be placed to mechanically strengthen the structure
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WO2008/148929 | 12/11/2008 | WO | A |
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