610 likes | 1.07k Views
Metamaterials as Effective Medium. Negative refraction and super-resolution. Previously seen in “optical metamaterials”. Sub-wavelength dimensions with SPP Negative index Use of sub-wavelength components to create effective response Super-resolution imaging. d d. d m.
E N D
Metamaterials as Effective Medium Negative refraction and super-resolution
Previously seen in “optical metamaterials” • Sub-wavelength dimensions with SPP • Negative index • Use of sub-wavelength components to create effective response • Super-resolution imaging
dd dm Metamaterials as sub-wavelength mixture of different elements When two or more constituents are mixed at sub-wavelength dimensions Effective properties can be applied • New type of artificial dielectrics • Negative refraction in non-magnetic metamaterials • Super-resolution imaging
Pendry’s artificial plasma • Motivation: metallic behavior at GHz frequencies • Problem: the dielectric response is negatively (close to) infinite • Solution: “dilute” the metal The electrons density is reduced * The effective electron mass is increased due to self inductance Lowering the plasma frequency, Pendry, PRL,76, 4773 (1996)
Simple analysis of 1D and 2D systems • Periodicity or inclusions much smaller than wavelength • 2+1D or 1+2D (dimensions of variations) • Effective dielectric response determined by filling fraction f 2D-periodic (nano-wire aray) 1D-periodic (stratified) 3D? a • Averaging over the (fast) changing dielectric response
Stratified metal-dielectric metamaterial • Two isotropic constituents with bulk permittivities • Filling fractions f for e1,1-f for e2 • 2 ordinary and one extra-ordinary axes (uniaxial) • 2 effective permittivities Note: parallel=ordinary • For isotropic constituents • effective fields a
Stratified metal-dielectric metamaterial: Parallel polarization E k a Boundary conditions
Stratified metal-dielectric metamaterial: Normal polarization E a
Nanowire metal-dielectric metamaterial • Two isotropic constituents with bulk permittivities • Filling fractions f for e1,1-f for e2 • 2 ordinary and one extra-ordinary axes • 2 effective permittivities Note: parallel=extraordinary
Nanowire metamaterial: Normal polarization polarization E • More complicated derivation • Homogenization (not simple averaging) • Assume small inclusions (<20%) • Maxwell-Garnett Theory (MGT) (metal nanowires in dielectric host)
Strongly anisotropic dielectric Metamaterial For most visible and IR wavelengths
Broad band Example: nanowire medium medium 60nm nanowire diameter Ag wires 110nm center-center wire distance Al2O3 matrix Effective permittivity from MG theory um um
Wave propagation in anisotropic medium Uniaxial Maxwell equations for time-harmonic waves Det(M)=0,
Wave propagation in anisotropic medium Extraordinary waves (TM) Ordinary waves (TE) E • Electric field along y-direction • does not depend on angle • constant response of ex H H E • Electric field in x-z(y-z) plan • Depend on angle • combined response of ex,ez
Extraordinary waves in anisotropic medium kz isotropic medium e=1 kx e=1.5 anisotropic medium ‘Hyperbolic’ medium kz For ex<0 kz kx kx
Energy flow in anisotropic medium isotropic medium kz normal to the k-surface e=1 kx e=1.5 ‘Indefinite’ medium anisotropic medium kz kz kx and and are not parallel are not parallel Is normal to the curve! kx * Complete proof in “Waves and Fields in Optoelectronics” by Hermann Haus
Refraction in anisotropic medium kz What is refraction? e e=1 kx e=1.5 Conservation of tangential momentum kz Hyperbolicair Negative refraction! kx
Broad band Refraction in nanowire medium medium Ag wires Al2O3 matrix um Effective permittivity from MG theory um Negative refraction for l>630nm
Refraction in layered semiconductor medium • SiC • Phonon-polariton resonance at IR Negative refraction for 9>l>12mm
Hyperbolic metamaterial “phase diagram” Type II dielectric Type I Ag/TiO2 multilayer system
propagation propagation x x • extreme material properties • epsilon near-zero • Diffraction management • Resolution limited by loss • Low-loss • Broad-band • resolution limited by periodicity Effective medium at different regimes We choose propogation by X=normal (suitable for Nanowires) X=parallel Suitable for stratified medium
propagation x Conditions Normal-X direction (kx<<p/D) X=normal (suitable for Nanowires) kz kx • Low loss • moderate e values • Limited by periodicity • Low diffraction management • diffraction management improves with em • no near-0 e
propagation x Conditions for Normal Z-direction kr kx • Good diffraction management • near-zero e • Limited by ? For large range of kx
propagation x Effective medium with loss… (Long wavelengths) Very low loss at low k Moderate loss at high k High loss! End of class
Limits of indefinite medium for super-resolution • Open curve vs. close curve • No diffraction limit! • No limit at all… • Is it physically valid? kr kx • Reason: approximation to homogeneous medium! • What are the practical limitations? • Can it be used for super-resolution?
Exact solution – transfer matrix (1) Maxwell’s equation
Exact solution – transfer matrix (2) Boundary conditions
Exact solution – transfer matrix (3) Combining with Bloch theorem
Beyond effective medium: SPP coupling in M-D-M • “gap plasmon” mode • deep sub-l “waveguide” • symmetric and anti-symmetric modes Metal Metal Symmetric: k<ksingle-wg Antisymmetric: k>ksingle-wg
metal dielectric z x Beyond effective medium: SPP coupling in M-D-M • Abrupt change of the dielectric function • variations much smaller than the wavelength • Paraxial approximation not valid! • Need to start from Maxwell Equations • TM nature of SPPs • Calculate 3 fields Hamiltonian-like operator: Eigenmode problem: • Eigen vectors EM field • Eigen values Propagation constants
Kx=p/D Kx=0 1 1 1 Magnetic Tangential Electric Magnetic Tangential Electric -1 -1 0.97 Plasmonic Bloch modes Ag=20nm Air=30 nm l=1.5mm
Metamaterials at low spatial frequencies The homogeneous medium perspective Averaged dielectric response Can be <0 Hyperbolic dispersion!
Metamaterials at low spatial frequencies The homogeneous medium perspective Averaged dielectric response Can be <0 Hyperbolic dispersion!
Use of anisotropic medium for far-field super resolution Conventional lens • Superlens can image near- to near-field • Need conversion beyond diffraction limit • Multilayers/effective medium? • Can only replicate sub-diffraction image by diffraction suppression • Solution: curve the space Superlens
dd dm The Hyperlens • Metal-dielectric sub-wavelength layers • No diffraction in Cartesian space • object dimension at input a • Dq is constant • Arc at output Magnification ratio determines the resolution limit.
Optical hyperlens view by angular momentum • Span plane waves in angular momentum base (Bessel func.) • resolution detrrmined by mode order • penetration of high-order modes to the center is diffraction limited • hyperbolic dispersion lifts the diffraction limit • Increased overlap with sub-wavelength object