Publication | Open Access
Exploiting the dispersion of the double-negative-index fishnet metamaterial to create a broadband low-profile metallic lens
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Citations
18
References
2015
Year
Optical DesignEngineeringNegative-index MetamaterialAcoustic MetamaterialOptic DesignMetasurfacesMetamaterialsFiber OpticsMetamaterial LensesElectromagnetic MetamaterialsOptical PropertiesDouble-negative-index Fishnet MetamaterialOptical SystemsHigh Impedance SurfacesPhotonicsOphthalmologyOptical AntennasAntennaClassical OpticsMillimeter Wave TechnologyFishnet MetamaterialRadiation DiagramApplied PhysicsOptical SciencesDynamic Metamaterials
Metamaterial lenses with close values of permittivity and permeability usually display low reflection losses at the expense of narrow single frequency operation. Here, a broadband low-profile lens is designed by exploiting the dispersion of a fishnet metamaterial together with the zoning technique. The lens operates in a broadband regime from 54 GHz to 58 GHz, representing a fractional bandwidth ~7%, and outperforms Silicon lenses between 54 and 55.5 GHz. This broadband operation is demonstrated by a systematic analysis comprising Huygens-Fresnel analytical method, full-wave numerical simulations and experimental measurements at millimeter waves. For demonstrative purposes, a detailed study of the lens operation at two frequencies is done for the most important lens parameters (focal length, depth of focus, resolution, radiation diagram). Experimental results demonstrate diffraction-limited ~0.5λ transverse resolution, in agreement with analytical and numerical calculations. In a lens antenna configuration, a directivity as high as 16.6 dBi is achieved. The different focal lengths implemented into a single lens could be potentially used for realizing the front end of a non-mechanical zoom millimeter-wave imaging system.
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