Publication | Open Access
An electrical analogy to Mie scattering
59
Citations
27
References
2016
Year
EngineeringElectrical AnalogyMetamaterialsElectromagnetic CompatibilityGraphene NanomeshesNanoelectronicsMie ScatteringComputational ElectromagneticsNanophotonicsMaterials ScienceElectromagnetic WavePhysicsNanotechnologyBallistic GrapheneCircular PotentialsGraphene Quantum DotGraphene FiberWave ScatteringApplied PhysicsLight ScatteringGrapheneGraphene Nanoribbon
Mie scattering is an optical phenomenon that appears when electromagnetic waves, in particular light, are elastically scattered at a spherical or cylindrical object. A transfer of this phenomenon onto electron states in ballistic graphene has been proposed theoretically, assuming a well-defined incident wave scattered by a perfectly cylindrical nanometer scaled potential, but experimental fingerprints are lacking. We present an experimental demonstration of an electrical analogue to Mie scattering by using graphene as a conductor, and circular potentials arranged in a square two-dimensional array. The tabletop experiment is carried out under seemingly unfavourable conditions of diffusive transport at room-temperature. Nonetheless, when a canted arrangement of the array with respect to the incident current is chosen, cascaded Mie scattering results robustly in a transverse voltage. Its response on electrostatic gating and variation of potentials convincingly underscores Mie scattering as underlying mechanism. The findings presented here encourage the design of functional electronic metamaterials.
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