Metamaterial

From Free net encyclopedia

In electromagnetism (covering areas like optics and photonics), a meta material (or metamaterial) is an object that gains its (electromagnetic) material properties from its structure rather than inheriting them directly from the materials it is composed of. This term is particularly used when the resulting material has properties not found in naturally-formed substances.

In order for its structure to affect electromagnetic waves, a metamaterial must have features with size comparable to the wavelength of the electromagnetic radiation it interacts with. For visible light, this is on the order of one micrometre; for microwave radiation, this is on the order of one decimetre. An example of a visible light metamaterial is opal, which is composed of tiny cristobalite (metastable silica) spheres. Photonic bandgap materials are an example of an artificial visible light metamaterial. Microwave frequency metamaterials are almost always artificial, constructed as arrays of current-conducting elements (such as loops of wire) that have suitable inductive and capacitive characteristics.

J. B. Pendry was the first to imagine a practical way to make a left-handed metamaterial (LHM). 'Left-handed' in this context means a material in which the 'right-hand rule' is not obeyed, allowing an electromagnetic wave to convey energy in the opposite direction to wave propagation. Pendry's initial idea was that metallic wires aligned along propagation direction could provide a metamaterial with negative permittivity (ε<0). Note however that natural materials (such as ferroelectrics) were already known to exist with negative permittivity. The challenge was to construct a material that also showed negative permeability (µ<0). In 1999, Pendry demonstrated that an open ring ('C' shape) with axis along the propagation direction could provide a negative permeability. In the same paper, he showed that a periodic array of wires and ring could give rise to a negative refractive index.

The analogy is as follows: Natural materials are made of atoms, which are dipoles. These dipoles modify the light velocity by a factor n (the refractive index). The ring and wire units play the role of atomic dipoles: the wire acts as a ferroelectric atom, while the ring acts as an inductor L and the open section as a capacitor C. So the whole ring can be considered as a LC circuit. When the electromagnetic field passes through the ring, an induced current is created and the generated field is perpendicular to the magnetic field of the light. There is a magnetic resonance so the permeability is negative, and the index is negative too.

Negative refractive index

Image:Metarefraction.jpg

Very nearly all materials encountered in optics, such as glass or water, have positive values for both permittivity <math>\epsilon</math> and permeability <math>\mu</math>. However, many metals (such as silver and gold) have negative <math>\epsilon</math> at visible wavelengths. A material having either (but not both) <math>\epsilon</math> or <math>\mu</math> negative is opaque to electromagnetic radiation (see surface plasmon for more details).

Although the optical properties of a transparent material are fully specified by the parameters <math>\epsilon</math> and <math>\mu</math>, in practice the refractive index <math>N</math> is often used. <math>N</math> may be determined from <math>N=\sqrt{\epsilon\mu}</math>. All known transparent materials possess a positive index because <math>\epsilon</math> and <math>\mu</math> are both positive.

However, some engineered metamaterials have <math>\epsilon<0</math> and <math>\mu<0</math>; because the product <math>\epsilon\mu</math> is positive, <math>N</math> is real. Under such circumstances, it is necessary to take the negative square root for <math>N</math>. Physicist Victor Veselago proved that such substances are transparent to light.

Metamaterials with negative <math>N</math> have numerous startling properties:

One common metamaterial is the Swiss roll.

Such metamaterials follow a "left-hand rule".

The first Superlens (an optical lens employing negative refraction with vastly improved microscopic resolution) was created and demonstrated in 2005 by Xiang Zhang et al of UC Berkeley, as reported in the April 22 issue of the journal Science [1]

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