Related topics: solar cells · light

Zero-index metamaterials and the future

In the realm of materials science, electromagnetic (EM) metamaterials have emerged as a revolutionary class of engineered composites capable of manipulating electromagnetic waves in ways never before possible. Unlike their ...

A magnetically actuated acoustic metamaterial

Space coiling acoustic metamaterials are static and require manual reconfiguration for sound-field modulation. In a new report published in Communications Materials, Christabel Choi, and a team of scientists in computer science ...

Metamolecule metamaterial fabrication with 3D co-assembly

Metamaterials, famously likened to Harry Potter's invisible cloak, are artificial nano structures designed to manipulate light properties. However, the practical application of this technology in everyday life depends on ...

Physicists develop a metamaterial that can count

A block of rubber that can count to ten and even remember the order in which it is pressed—physicists Martin van Hecke and Lennard Kwakernaak (Leiden University and AMOLF Amsterdam) have published about this latest metamaterial ...

Smart material prototype challenges Newton's laws of motion

For more than 10 years, Guoliang Huang, the Huber and Helen Croft Chair in Engineering at the University of Missouri, has been investigating the unconventional properties of "metamaterials"—an artificial material that exhibits ...

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Metamaterial

Metamaterials are exotic composite materials that display properties beyond those available in naturally occurring materials. Instead of constructing materials at the chemical level, as is ordinarily done, these are constructed with two or more materials at the macroscopic level. One of their defining characteristics is that the electromagnetic response results from combining two or more distinct materials in a specified way which extends the range of electromagnetic patterns because of the fact that they are not found in nature.

The term was coined in 1999 by Rodger M. Walser of the University of Texas at Austin. He defined metamaterials as

macroscopic composites having a manmade, three-dimensional, periodic cellular architecture designed to produce an optimized combination, not available in nature, of two or more responses to specific excitation.

In a paper published in 2001, Rodger Walser from the University of Texas, Austin, coined the term metamaterial to refer to artificial composites that "...achieve material performance beyond the limitations of conventional composites." The definition was subsequently expanded by Valerie Browning and Stu Wolf of DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) in the context of the DARPA Metamaterials program that started also in 2001. Their basic definition: Metamaterials are a new class of ordered composites that exhibit exceptional properties not readily observed in nature. While the original metamaterials definition encompassed many more material properties, most of the subsequent scientific activity has centered on the electromagnetic properties of metamaterials gains its properties from its structure rather than directly from its composition."

Electromagnetics researchers often use the term metamaterials more narrowly, for materials which exhibit negative refraction. W. E. Kock developed the first metamaterials in the late 1940s with metal-lens antennæ and metallic delay lenses.

With a negative refractive index researchers have been able to create a device known as a cloaking device, or an invisibility cloak, which is not possible with natural materials. Refraction is the bending of light as it moves through some transparent medium, such as the lenses of eyeglasses, or a glass of water. Something such as a finger through the glass may look greater or smaller. A pencil stuck in a glass of water seems to sharply bend at an angle. At each bend the light through the glass brakes inward, and the index of refraction in natural materials has a positive value. A negative refractive index is when light brakes outward, and bends outward in a thicker medium. In 1967, when metamaterials were first theorized by Victor Veselago, they were thought to be bizarre and preposterous. Usually when a beam of light is bent entering a glass of water it keeps faring in a straight line at the angle that it entered, and the index of refraction is constant. Suppose one could shape the index over the medium's span: With metamaterials it can be controlled so that the object becomes invisible—a negative refraction index. Ames Laboratory in Iowa created a metamaterial of index of −0.6 for red light (780 nanometers). Previously, physicists were only successful in bending infrared light with a metamaterial at 1,400 nm, which is outside the visible range.

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