
Innovative Composite Opens Terahertz Frequencies to Many Applications
Date: Thursday, April 17, 2008 @ 23:45:07 UTC Topic: Science
A frequency-agile metamaterial that for the first time can be tuned
over a range of frequencies in the so-called “terahertz gap” has been
engineered by a team of researchers from Boston College, Los Alamos
National Laboratory and Boston University.
The team incorporated semiconducting materials in critical regions of tiny elements – in this case metallic split-ring resonators – that interact with light in order to tune metamaterials beyond their fixed point on the electromagnetic spectrum, an advance that opens these novel devices to a broader array of uses, according to findings published in the online version of the journal Nature Photonics.
“Metamaterials no longer need to be constructed
only out of metallic components,” said Boston College Physicist Willie
J. Padilla, the project leader. “What we've shown is that one can take
the exotic properties of metamaterials and combine them with the unique
prosperities of natural materials to form a hybrid that yields superior
performance.”
Padilla and BC graduate student David Shrekenhamer, along with
Hou-Tong Chen, John F. O'Hara, Abul K. Azad and Antoinette J. Taylor of
Los Alamos National Laboratory, and Boston University's Richard D.
Averitt assembled a single layer of metamaterial and semiconductor that
allowed the team to tune terahertz resonance across a range of
frequencies in the far-infrared spectrum.
The team's first-generation device achieved 20 percent tuning of
the terahertz resonance to lower frequencies – those in the
far-infrared region –addressing the critical issue of narrow band
response typical of all metamaterial designs to date.
Constructed on the micron-scale, metamaterials
are composites that use unique metallic contours in order to produce
responses to light waves, giving each metamaterial its own unique
properties beyond the elements of the actual materials in use.
Within the past decade, researchers have sought ways to
significantly expand the range of material responses to waves of
electromagnetic radiation – classified by increasing frequency as radio
waves, microwaves, terahertz radiation, infrared radiation, visible
light, ultraviolet radiation, X-rays and gamma rays. Numerous novel
effects have been demonstrated that defy accepted electromagnetic
principles.
“Metamaterials demonstrated negative refractive index and up until
that point the commonly held belief was that only a positive index was
possible,” said Padilla. “Metamaterials gave us access to new regimes
of electromagnetic response that you could not get from normal
materials.”
Prior research has shown that because they rely on light-driven
resonance, metamaterials experience frequency dispersion and narrow
bandwidth operation where the centre frequency is fixed based on the
geometry and dimensions of the elements comprising the metamaterial
composite. The team believes that the creation of a material that
addresses the narrow bandwidth limitations can advance the use of
metamaterials.
Enormous efforts have focused on the search for materials that
could respond to terahertz radiation, a scientific quest to find the
building blocks for devices that could take advantage of the frequency
for imaging and other applications.
Potential applications could lie in medical imaging or security
screening, said Padilla. Materials undetectable through x-ray scans –
such as chemicals, biological agents, and certain explosives – can
provide a unique “fingerprint” when struck by radiation in the
far-infrared spectrum. Metamaterials like the one developed by the
research team will facilitate future devices operating at the terahertz
frequency.
In addition to imaging and screening, researchers and high-tech
companies are probing the use of terahertz in switches, modulators,
lenses, detectors, high bit-rate communications, secure communications,
the detection of chemical and biological agents, and characterization
of explosives, according to Los Alamos National Laboratory.
Links:
Nature Photonics: http://www.nature.com/nphoton/journal/ Source: Boston College Via: http://www.physorg.com/news127644763.html
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