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      Recent advances in bianisotropic boundary conditions: theory, capabilities, realizations, and applications

      1 , 1
      Nanophotonics
      Walter de Gruyter GmbH

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          Abstract

          In recent years, new functionality and unprecedented wavefront control has been enabled by the introduction of bianisotropic metasurfaces. A bianisotropic metasurface is characterized by an electric response, a magnetic response, and an electro-magnetic/magneto-electric response. In general, these metasurfaces consists of an array of metallic or dielectric particles located within a subwavelength thick host medium, and are approximated and modeled as infinitely-thin, idealized sheet boundaries defined along a surface. An appropriate sheet boundary condition which effectively models the tangential field discontinuity due to the array of magnetoelectric inclusions is the Generalized Sheet Transition Condition or GSTC. Several forms of the GSTC appear in literature. Here, we present each interpretation and show how they are related. Synthesis approaches unique to each form are overviewed. By utilizing the GSTC in metasurface design, new possibilities emerge which are not possible with conventional design techniques incorporating only electric or only magnetic responses. Since the metasurfaces are designed using bianisotropic boundary conditions, they must be realized using particles which contain magnetoelectric responses. This review article discusses the design of metasurfaces using the GSTC, and the bianisotropic particles used to realize GSTC’s. Further, it discusses new and recent applications that have emerged due to bianisotropy, and future prospects in metasurface design using bianisotropic boundary conditions. The intent is to provide a comprehensive overview of metasurface design involving bianisotropy and for this review article to serve as a starting point for engineers and scientist that wish to introduce bianisotropy into metasurface design.

          Most cited references129

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          Metamaterial Huygens' surfaces: tailoring wave fronts with reflectionless sheets.

          Huygens' principle is a well-known concept in electromagnetics that dates back to 1690. Here, it is applied to develop designer surfaces that provide extreme control of electromagnetic wave fronts across electrically thin layers. These reflectionless surfaces, referred to as metamaterial Huygens' surfaces, provide new beam shaping, steering, and focusing capabilities. The metamaterial Huygens' surfaces are realized with two-dimensional arrays of polarizable particles that provide both electric and magnetic polarization currents to generate prescribed wave fronts. A straightforward design methodology is demonstrated and applied to develop a beam-refracting surface and a Gaussian-to-Bessel beam transformer. Metamaterial Huygens' surfaces could find a wide range of applications over the entire electromagnetic spectrum including single-surface lenses, polarization controlling devices, stealth technologies, and perfect absorbers.
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            Metamaterial electromagnetic cloak at microwave frequencies.

            A recently published theory has suggested that a cloak of invisibility is in principle possible, at least over a narrow frequency band. We describe here the first practical realization of such a cloak; in our demonstration, a copper cylinder was "hidden" inside a cloak constructed according to the previous theoretical prescription. The cloak was constructed with the use of artificially structured metamaterials, designed for operation over a band of microwave frequencies. The cloak decreased scattering from the hidden object while at the same time reducing its shadow, so that the cloak and object combined began to resemble empty space.
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              Reciprocal Relations in Irreversible Processes. I.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Nanophotonics
                Walter de Gruyter GmbH
                2192-8614
                2192-8606
                October 26 2021
                October 26 2021
                : 0
                : 0
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Electrical and Computer Engineering Department , University of Michigan , Ann Arbor , MI 48109 , USA
                Article
                10.1515/nanoph-2021-0401
                07f1f07f-faa7-474b-899d-3d0298c05e1b
                © 2021

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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