BACKGROUND
[0001] A retroreflector is a device which reflects an electromagnetic wave in the direction
of incidence. Passive retroreflection of electromagnetic waves, from radio to optical
frequencies, has practical applications in communication with satellites and unmanned
aerial vehicles, remote sensing, target labeling, navigation safety and radiation
cross section (RCS) / visibility enhancement. In communication and other applications,
characteristics of desirable retroreflectors include the ability to (i) operate at
large angles of oblique incidence, (ii) retroreflect transverse electric (TE)- and
transverse magnetic (TM)-polarized electromagnetic (EM) radiation. Further desirable
characteristics of retroreflectors include (iii) low retroreflector profiles, (iv)
light weight, (v) low loss, (vi) low cost and (vii) manufacturability.
[0002] The simplest retroreflection structure is a metallic plate, which retroreflects with
high efficiency at near-normal incidence, or small incident angles, and (much) lower
efficiency at large incident angles. Other metallic structures — such as a cylinder
or a sphere — also exhibit retroreflection. As expected, other metallic structures
feature weaker retroreflection strengths, but the retroreflection levels remain the
same as the incident waves' direction varies in the azimuthal plane for the cylinder,
and across all angles for the sphere.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0003] Aspects of the present disclosure are best understood from the following detailed
description when read with the accompanying figures. It is noted that, in accordance
with the standard practice in the industry, various features are not drawn to scale.
In fact, the dimensions of the various features may be arbitrarily increased or reduced
for clarity of discussion.
Figures 1A-I are diagrams of retroreflectors, in accordance with some embodiments.
Figures 2A-B are diagrams of single-plane-wave reflections off a metasurface in accordance
with some embodiments.
Figures 3A-3C are diagrams of spatial and spectral transformation of a plane wave's
transverse (y-directed) wave vector, in accordance with some embodiments.
Figure 4A is a diagram of a monostatic RCS measurement of a metasurface, in accordance
with some embodiments.
Figure 4B is a flow diagram of a method of designing and making a metasurface, in
accordance with some embodiments.
Figure 5A is a diagram of a metasurface, in accordance with some embodiments.
Figure 5B is a diagram of a simulated monostatic RCS measurement of a metasurface,
in accordance with some embodiments.
Figure 5C is a diagram of an effective area of a metasurface, in accordance with some
embodiments.
Figure 6A is a diagram of a truncated TM-reflective metasurface, in accordance with
some embodiments.
Figure 6B is a diagram of a simulated RCS measurement of a TM-reflective metasurface,
in accordance with some embodiments.
Figure 6C is a comparison diagram of the monostatic RCS measurement of two surfaces,
in accordance with some embodiments.
Figure 7 is a diagram of a monostatic RCS setup, in accordance with some embodiments.
Figure 8A is a diagram of a unit cell of a TM-reflective metasurface, in accordance
with some embodiments.
Figure 8B is a diagram of reflection coefficient of a metasurface with a slot array,
in accordance with some embodiments.
Figure 8C is a diagram of a metasurface unit cell used for Floquet simulation, according
to some embodiments.
Figures 9A-9C are diagrams of simulated RCS measurements from a TM metasurface, according
to some embodiments.
Figures 10A-C are diagrams of simulated RCS measurements of metasurfaces, in accordance
with some embodiments.
Figure 11A is a diagram of a monostatic RCS measurement, in accordance with some embodiments.
Figure 11B is a diagram of a bistatic RCS measurement setup, in accordance with some
embodiments.
Figure 12 is a comparison chart of an RCS measurement, in accordance with some embodiments.
Figure 13 is a diagram of a bistatic RCS measurement of a TE-reflective metasurface,
in accordance with some embodiments.
Figure 14 is a diagram of a monostatic RCS measurement for a TM-reflective metasurface,
in accordance with some embodiments.
Figure 15 is a diagram of a bistatic RCS measurement for a TM-reflective metasurface,
in accordance with some embodiments.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0004] The following disclosure provides many different embodiments, or examples, for implementing
different features of the provided subject matter. Specific examples of components,
values, operations, materials, arrangements, or the like, are described below to simplify
the present disclosure. These are, of course, merely examples and are not intended
to be limiting. Other components, values, operations, materials, arrangements, or
the like, are contemplated. For example, the formation of a first feature over or
on a second feature in the description that follows may include embodiments in which
the first and second features are formed in direct contact, and may also include embodiments
in which additional features may be formed between the first and second features,
such that the first and second features may not be in direct contact. In addition,
the present disclosure may repeat reference numerals and/or letters in the various
examples. This repetition is for the purpose of simplicity and clarity and does not
in itself dictate a relationship between the various embodiments and/or configurations
discussed.
[0005] Further, spatially relative terms, such as "beneath," "below," "lower," "above,"
"upper" and the like, may be used herein for ease of description to describe one element
or feature's relationship to another element(s) or feature(s) as illustrated in the
figures. The spatially relative terms are intended to encompass different orientations
of the device in use or operation in addition to the orientation depicted in the figures.
The apparatus may be otherwise oriented (rotated 90 degrees or at other orientations)
and the spatially relative descriptors used herein may likewise be interpreted accordingly.
[0006] Figure 1A is a diagram of a corner cube 105, according to some embodiments. A corner
cube is a highly efficient metallic retroreflection structure. By connecting two (or
three) metallic plates at right angles, one forms a reflection structure where the
incoming wave is reflected two (or three) times and achieves retroreflection. Theoretical
and experimental works show that the corner cube provides efficient retroreflection
with incident angles in the range of ±15°, where a "normal" incidence angle is 0°.
Corner cubes are large structures, with a depth that is appreciable compared to the
size of the aperture, and do not support retroreflection beyond a maximum angle of
45°. Some corner cubes alter the polarization of the incident EM wave. Corner cube
dimensions are reduced by building a sheet of corner cubes using a 2-dimensional (2D)
array of small trihedral corner cubes, while having appreciable retroreflection with
incident angles in the range of ±30°. Even low-dimension corner cubes are not efficient
at high-incident angle (e.g., large oblique angle) EM waves.
[0007] Another class of retroreflectors involves dielectric and/or plasmonic materials.
For a random array of spherical (or near-spherical) scatterers, coherent back scattering
occurs to strengthen retroreflection. Under favorable conditions, a retroreflection
strength as high as 40% has been observed. A similar effect occurs for random rough
surfaces. Surfaces with random arrays of spherical or near spherical reflectors, or
randomly rough surfaces, encourage multiple scattering, and thereby strengthen the
retroreflected wave component which achieves phase-alignment across multiple paths.
[0008] Figure 1B is a diagram of a cat's-eye retroreflector 110, according to some embodiments.
A cat's eye retroreflector is a convex dielectric lens placed one focal length away
from a (ideally parabolic) mirror. Cat's-eye retroreflectors have a depth that is
comparable to the lateral size of the retroreflector. Because the incident EM wave
is focused on a considerably smaller area at the location of the mirror, a cat's-eye
retroreflector is useful for performing switching and encoding on an electromagnetic
signal. Some embodiments of a cat's-eye retroreflector with a multistage lens have
achieved highly-efficient retroreflection across ±15° of incident angle range. Some
embodiments of a cat's-eye retroreflector have an array of microlenses and micromirrors
and, while having a low profile, achieve efficient retroreflection across an incident
angular range of ±30°.
[0009] Figure 1C is a diagram of a Luneberg lens retroreflector 115, according to some embodiments.
A Luneberg lens retroreflector replaces a convex lens of the cat's-eye retroreflector
with a lens-mirror spacing of a Luneburg lens, one arrives at the Luneburg lens retroreflector.
Some embodiments of Luneberg lens retroreflectors have efficient retroreflection across
an incident angular range of about ±50°. A Luneburg lens retroreflector is limited
by its large size, heavy weight and relatively expensive fabrication. More exotic
metallodielectric retroreflectors have been proposed.
[0010] Figure 1D is a diagram of an Eaton lens 120, according to some embodiments. Eaton
lens 120 performs retroreflection by trapping EM waves within the structure of the
reflector and uses a high degree of internal reflection to redirect the EM waves through
the lens from an input end to an output end, and from thence toward a target in line
with the output end of the lens. Further examples of metallodielectric retroreflectors
include retro-reflection super-scatterer implemented through the transformation optics
approach, and a plasmonic superscatterer, a superdirective small antenna, impedance
matched by metal and dielectric shells of precise thickness. Such retroreflectors
involve high precision manufacturing and materials controls.
[0011] Figure 1E is a diagram of a Van Atta array retroreflector 125, according to some
embodiments. The Van Atta array is a practical and low profile wide angle retroreflector
for RF electromagnetic waves, with a surface designed to efficiently couple to the
incident and reflected waves, where crossed transmission-line connections between
antenna areas_reverse the phase front on the surface of the retroreflector. Thus together,
the Van Atta array antennas and their connections reverse the phase front along the
surface of the retroreflector to achieve retroreflection. Van Atta arrays work in
1D and 2D configurations, and on both planar and curved surfaces, and for a wide incident
angular range of over ±60°. However, the Van Atta array relies on the near-resonant
operation of antenna elements. Hence the operation bandwidth of a Van Atta array is
limited by the antenna elements, and the incident angular range of retroreflected
EM waves is regulated by the element factor. The element factor is the electric field
pattern produced by a single cell (element) which defines the angular base band and
angular bandwidth for the reflective response. In the example above, for the Van Atta
array, the angular base band ranges from about -60° to about +60°, and has a narrow
angular bandwidth of about ±5° at 0° or ±1° at +60° or -60°. Similarly, extension
of Van Atta array retroreflection beyond the mm-wave regime is difficult because of
limitations of the antenna elements and the transmission lines between antenna elements.
Additionally, the complexity of routing between antennas rapidly increases with increasing
antenna array size. This makes the Van Atta array impractical for a retroreflector
with an aperture length of several wavelengths and beyond.
[0012] Figures 1F-1H are examples of gratings that are configured to interact with incident
EM waves. Figure IF is an echellete grating 130, according to some embodiments of
the present disclosure. Echellete grating 130 has peaks 132 and troughs 134, with
a period 136 between adjacent peaks 132 and/or adjacent troughs 134 of the echellete
grating 130. Figure 1G is a groove grating 140, according to some embodiments of the
present disclosure. Groove grating 140 includes peaks 142 and troughs 144 configured
to interact with incoming electromagnetic (EM) radiation (EM waves) and to manipulate
the reflection of an incident EM wave according to the pattern and dimensions of the
groove peaks and troughs. Figure 1H is a strip grating 150 according to some embodiments
of the present disclosure. Strip grating 150 includes a backing metallic layer 152,
on which a dielectric layer 154 rests, with metallic islands 156 on the top surface
of the dielectric layer (the side opposite the backing metallic layer 152). The pattern
of metallic islands 156 on the top surface 158 of the dielectric 154 regulates the
reflection characteristics of incident EM wave.
[0013] Figure 1I is a top-view of a metasurface 160 configured to reflect incident EM waves
from the metasurface 160. Metasurface 160 includes a periodic array 162 of surface
structures 164 configured to interact with incident EM waves and to manipulate the
EM waves upon reflection from the metasurface 160. In metasurface 160, each periodic
array 162 includes a set of non-repeating surface structures. In some embodiments
of metasurfaces, the periodic array includes some repeated surface structures, separated
across the metasurface. In some embodiments of metasurfaces, the periodic array includes
line structures that extend upward from a base layer of the metasurface. In some embodiments,
of metasurfaces, the periodic array includes holes (slots, lines, grooves, and so
forth) that extend into the metasurface base layer. In some embodiments, the metasurface
includes a combination of line structures that extend upward from a base layer of
the metasurface, and a set of holes that extend into the metasurface base layer. In
some embodiments, the metasurface is a single material. In some embodiments, the metasurface
is a stack of materials, with features of one material covered in (or extending into)
another material. In some embodiments, the period array 162 is longer in a first direction
163 on the metasurface than in a second direction 161 of the metasurface.
[0014] Metasurfaces such as metasurface 160 are versatile tools in EM wave manipulation.
By tuning the surface impedance as a function of position across the metasurface,
metasurfaces perform wave operations which modify the amplitude, phase, polarization
and propagation direction of an incident wave are performed in a passive manner. Passive
wave operations are performed as an incident EM wave strikes and reflects from a metasurface,
without any active EM wave generation to interact with the incident or reflected wave.
Metasurfaces with linear phase variants represent low profile and cost-effective structures.
The angle of reflection from a metasurface is regulated according to the structure
of (or structural elements in) the metasurface. Metasurfaces, being inherently two-dimensional,
provide more freedom in waveform manipulation than gratings, which are inherently
one-dimensional. Until the present disclosure, metasurfaces have featured finely discretized
surface impedance profiles implemented by element cells of size
λ/8 (e.g., one eighth of a wavelength) or smaller. For such finely discretized surface
impedance profiles to interact with EM waves having higher frequencies involves high-precision
fabrication. Metasurfaces with highly-precise structural elements are generally more
expensive to manufacture, less robust after manufacture, and/or difficult or impossible
to scale to shorter wavelengths. As of this disclosure, there is little information
about near-grazing (i.e., large incident angle) metasurface operation, including little
or no information about power efficiency of near-grazing metasurface operations.
[0015] The present disclosure describes the design and manufacture of embodiments of metasurfaces
with near-grazing angle retroreflection for both TE and TM polarized EM waves. A TE
polarized EM wave has the electric field vector perpendicular to the plane of incidence,
and a TM polarized EM wave has the magnetic field vector perpendicular to the plane
of incidence. In some embodiments, metasurfaces with near-grazing retroreflection
include a subwavelength array of rods (for TE waves) and / or slots (for TM waves)
backed by a ground plane. In some embodiments of metasurfaces described herein, the
metasurface includes a grating with a(n ultra-coarse) discretization of two cells
per grating period. Embodiments of metasurfaces with two cells per grating period
alleviate, to a large degree, the need for small features. Such metasurfaces also
present opportunities to design and manufacture metasurfaces with highly reflection
efficiency, robust surfaces, cost effectiveness, and ease of scaling to mm-wavelengths
and THz frequencies. The remainder of the present disclosure presents a metasurface
design methodology and describes embodiments of metasurfaces and full-wave simulation
results for TE and TM retroreflection metasurfaces. For embodiments of TM-reflective
metasurfaces, the present disclosure examines origins of spurious reflections not
observed for embodiments of TE-reflective metasurfaces. The present disclosure also
includes methods and results of monostatic and bi-static radiation cross section (RCS)
experiments that validate the metasurface design methodology presented herein. Diagrams
of RCS measurements have nodes that correspond to the intensity of an EM wave that
is reflected from the metasurface. Some nodes correspond to specular reflection, some
nodes correspond to retroreflection, and some nodes correspond to spurious reflection
in a direction other than the incident angle θ
i or the reflected angle θ
r or a negative of the reflection angle -θ
r.
[0016] The present disclosure discusses the reflective properties of embodiments of a periodic
metasurface with aggressively discretization for reflecting both TE and TM waves.
In some embodiments, the reflective metasurfaces includes two cells per grating period
to perform the EM wave reflection. In some embodiments, the reflection of TE and TM
waves is retroreflection of an incident EM wave. In some embodiments, the reflection
is at an angle that corresponds to neither a retroreflection angle nor to a specular
reflection angle. Simplification of a retroreflective metasurface by using larger
feature sizes and more aggressive discretization allows for easier, lower cost design
and fabrication of a metasurface. Simulation and measurement of a binary Huygens'
metasurface, discretized to have two elements per unit cell, is described below. In
some embodiments, a metasurface has a number of cell elements that is greater than
two elements per unit cell, according to an incident EM wave desired to be reflected
from the metasurface. According to some embodiments, the upper limit of the number
of elements in a unit cell is regulated by the size or area of a desired reflective
metasurface and the configuration of EM wave reflection intended form the reflective
metasurface. Dimensions of a reflective element of a metasurface unit cell are governed
by the wavelength of the incident EM wave. A number of reflective elements in a metasurface
unit cell is not so large that the reflective elements no longer serve to reflect
the incident EM wave. In an embodiment of a metasurface, the simulated and measured
metasurface retroreflects an incident plane wave at 82.87°. In some embodiments, the
simulated results for a 2D infinite structure have a reflection power efficiency of
94% for TE polarization, and 99% for TM polarization. In some embodiments, measured
retroreflection has a reflection power efficiency of 93% for both TE and TM polarizations.
In some embodiments, the metasurface is configured to reflect an incident plane wave,
having an incident angle θ
i at a predetermined reflection angle θ
r where θ
i = -θ
r (e.g., retroflection). According to some embodiments, the incident angle ranges as:
90° > θ
i ≥ 0°. In some embodiments, a metasurface is configured to reflect an incident plane
wave at a predetermined reflection angle θ
r , where θ
r ≠ θ
i and θ
r ≠ - θ
i (e.g., neither retroreflection nor specular reflection). A range of reflection angles
for a reflected EM wave, from an incident EM wave with an incident angle θ
i , as given above, ranges as 89.5° > θ
r ≥ 0°. Some embodiments of controlled-reflection metasurfaces are configured to retroreflect
incident one or more incident EM waves at one or more arbitrary reflection angles.
In some embodiments, the reflection of an EM wave is adjusted to reflect either TE
or TM waves. In some embodiments, the reflection of an EM wave is adjusted to reflect
both TE and TM waves.
METASURFACE DESIGN METHODOLOGY
[0017] Metasurface design as presented herein is performed using a surface impedance approach.
To design a reflective metasurface, one first begins by determining the surface impedance
(and reflection coefficient) profile of the reflective metasurface, followed by examining
the effects of discretization on the performance of the metasurface.
A. Surface Impedance Analysis
[0018] Figure 2A is a diagram 200 of a single plane TM wave 202 reflection in the
yz plane, off a metasurface 204 at z = 0. TM wave 202 has an incident electrical component
Ei 206 that is parallel to the metasurface, and the incident magnetic component
Hi, 208 that is perpendicular to the metasurface. Similarly, TM plane wave 202 has the
reflected electrical component 210
Ei is parallel to the metasurface and the reflected magnetic component 212
Hi, is perpendicular to the metasurface. Incident angle θ
i 214 of TM wave 202 is the same as reflection angle θ
r 216, indicative of specular reflection of the incident EM wave from metasurface 204.
Incident angle θ
i 214 and reflected angle θ
r 216 are both positive angles, measured from the z-axis in the yz-plane.
ki 218 is the incident wave number (vector), and
kr 220 is the reflected wave number (vector).
[0019] Figure 2B is a diagram 240 of a single plane TE wave 242 reflection in the
yz plane, off a metasurface 244 at z = 0. TE wave 242 has an incident electrical component
Ei 246 that is perpendicular to the metasurface and an incident magnetic component
Hi, 248 that is parallel to the metasurface. Similarly, TE plane wave 202 has a reflected
electrical component 250
Ei that is perpendicular to the metasurface and a reflected magnetic component 252
Hi, that is parallel to the metasurface. Incident angle θ
i 254 of TE wave 242 is the same as reflection angle θ
r 256, indicative of specular reflection of the incident EM wave from metasurface 244.
Incident angle θ
i 254 and reflected angle θ
r 256 are both positive angles, measured from the z-axis in the yz-plane.
ki 258 is the incident EM wave number (vector) and
kr 260 is the reflected wave number (vector).
[0020] In some embodiments, the incident angle of the EM wave is the same as the reflected
angle of the reflected EM wave, and the reflection is called specular reflection.
When an EM wave retroreflects back along the incident direction to an EM source, the
reflected angle θ
r is negative because the reflected angle is measured in an opposite rotational direction
from the z-axis [
θr = ―
θi] in the yz-plane. Thus, for "pure" retroreflection, directly back to an EM wave source,
the reflection angle is a negative of the incidence angle of the EM wave. Plain metal
surfaces exhibit specular reflection. Some embodiments of metasurfaces described herein
exhibit both specular reflection, and retroreflection (e.g., major nodes of reflected
signal are present in a RCS measurement of a metasurface, as with Figures 10A-C, below).
The reflective characteristics of the metasurface are related to the geometry and
physical composition of the metasurface, which determine the angle at which an incident
EM wave, or incident radiation, reflects from the metasurface. Some metasurfaces described
herein are configured to reflect at a single incident angle (or, a window of angles
around a main incident angle). Some metasurfaces described herein are configured to
reflect at multiple main incident angles, according to layouts and compositions of
the elements in unit cells of the metasurface. In some instances, metasurfaces described
herein are configured to reflect EM waves approaching a metasurface at multiple incident
angles, away from the metasurface at a single reflection angle, according to some
embodiments.
[0021] Equations (1)-(14) describe the method of analyzing surface impedance using TM incident
polarization, to make metasurfaces with controlled reflection and/or retroreflection.
In Figure 2A, electric (
Ei) and magnetic (
Hi) portions of an incident plane wave are described by equations 1 and 2, and the electric
(
Er) and magnetic (
Hr) portions of a reflected plane wave are described by equations 3 and 4, below:

and

where:
θi = is the angle of incidence of the incident EM waveform,
θr = is the angle of reflection of the EM waveform,
Ei0 = is the incident electric field,
Er0 = is the reflected electric field,
y = is the y component in the x-y-z coordinate system,
z = is the z component in the x-y-z coordinate system,
j = is an imaginary number,
η = is the total energy density used in the conversion from the magnetic field to electric
field in free space,
k0 = is the incident wave number (vector),
x̂ = is unit vector component in the x direction,
y = is unit vector component in the y direction, and
ẑ = is unit vector component in the z direction
[0022] Here
k0 =
2p=
λ0 is the spatial frequency the wave and
l0 is the free-space wavelength.
ƒ is a constant phase offset between the incident and reflected waves
at y = 0, which remains arbitrary for the moment. The incident and reflected electric
(
Ei,tan ,
Er,tan) and magnetic (
Hi,tan ,
Hr,tan) fields tangential to the surface (at
z=0+) are hence described as follows:

and

[0023] The two relationships introduced hereinafter simplify the derivation that follows.
In equation (9), below:

Δ is defined as the phase difference between the incident and reflected plane waves.
Equation (10), below,

relates the incident and reflected plane wave amplitudes for reflection metasurfaces.
Equations (9) and (10) are used to calculate the surface impedance as a function of
a location on the metasurface. The surface impedance of a metasurface is used to generate
a desired reflection based upon the prescribed incidence of an EM wave, as given below
in Equation (11):

[0024] For the case of retroreflection,
θr = -
θi ⇒ cos
θr = cos
θi. Redefining
θ = |
θi| = |
θr|, Equation (11) becomes:

where Z
0,TM =
ηcos
θ is the wave impedance for the incident and reflected waves in TM polarization.
[0025] In some embodiments, a description of reflection coefficients is preferable to a
description of surface impedances. In an embodiment of single plane wave retroreflection,
the reflection coefficient is described by Equation (13), below:

[0026] A corresponding relationship for the TE polarization is found by following a procedure
similar to the procedure of Equations (1)-(13). For the TE-polarized single wave reflection
scenario described by FIG. 2B, the surface impedance is given in Equation (14):

[0027] Equation (14) reduces to Equation (15) when describing retroreflection:

where Z
0,TE =
η/cos
θ is the wave impedance for TE-polarized incident and reflected waves. The reflection
coefficient which corresponds to the surface impedance of equation (13), above, is
given in Equation (16):

[0028] Relationships akin to Equations (11) and (14) have been derived, to various degrees
of generality. In some embodiments, a coefficient profile of a metasurface is correctly
approximated by using equations (12) and (16) for a linear phase gradient. The preceding
analysis shows, with the full rigor of Maxwell's equations, that retroreflection of
the full power of an incident plane wave, at any incidence angle, and with either
TM or TE polarization, is possible. Moreover, such full power retroreflection is achievable
using an aptly designed
passive metasurface with surface impedances described by equations (11) and (14), or equivalently
with reflection coefficients described by (12) and (16).
B. Discretization and Retroreflection Metasurfaces
[0029] Implementation of a discretized metasurface, having subwavelength-sized cells, each
of which is implemented to achieved the desired electromagnetic property (e.g. surface
susceptibility or surface impedance, is more facile than the implementation of a continuous
metasurface), and coarser discretization (having cells of greater-than subwavelength-sized
cells), is possible for selected reflection surfaces. Coarse discretization benefits
metasurface design by, first, reducing the mutual coupling between metasurface elements,
and second, by relaxing the tolerances of a retroreflective metasurface, allowing
for cost-effective (e.g., less expensive) and robust metasurface fabrication for incident
EM wave well into the mm-wave frequencies. A brief discussion of design of an aggressively
discretized retroreflection metasurface is provided below.
[0030] Figure 3A is a spectral diagram 300 of the transformation of a plane wave's transverse
(y-directed) wave vector 302, as the plane wave is reflected from a periodic metasurface.
Arrows indicate the spatial frequencies of possible spectral components, but arrow
lengths do not reflect the relative amplitudes of these components.
[0031] In Figure 3B, is a diagram 320 spatial frequencies 322, 324, 326, 328, and 330 of
reflections of an incident transverse (y-directed) plane wave vector 302 from a retroreflection
metasurface. These spatial frequencies map straightforwardly into the angular domain
through Equation (17)
where θ = is the angle of incident,
k0 = is the incident wave number (vector), and
ky = is the component of the wave number (vector) in the y direction.
[0032] Figure 3C is a diagram 340 of the spectral components 342, 344, 346, and 348 of reflected
wave vector 302. Note that the arrows that represent the spectral components do not
represent the amplitudes or phases of the spectral components. As seen, the spectral
components 342-348 represent a series of diffraction orders which reflect in different
directions. The transverse spatial frequencies of diffracted orders are described
by Equation (18):

where:
kmy = represents the diffraction order wave number (vector),
kiy represents the incident wave number (vector) in the y direction,
m represents the diffraction order number,
kg represents the spatial frequency of the metasurface, and
Λg represents the period of the metasurface.
[0033] To generate a retroreflection metasurface, the m=-1 diffraction order is tuned into
the retroreflection order by choosing Λ
g appropriately:

[0034] For a metasurface which implements the surface impedance profile described by Equations
(11) and (14), power diffraction increases for the retroreflection mode and vanishes
for other propagating modes.
[0035] With Λ
g, and thereby
kg, fixed to achieve retroreflection at a predefined angle, there exists a fixed number
of reflected
propagation waves, which are described by:

where

is the ceiling (round up) operator,
k0 = is the incident wave number (vector), and
kg = represents the spatial frequency of the metasurface.
[0036] In some embodiments, increasing metasurface discretization involves reducing the
number of cells
N of the metasurface period.
Maximizing metasurface discretization involves reducing the number of cells N cells per metasurface
period as much as possible, while still providing sufficient degrees of freedom to
tune the amplitude and phase of each diffraction order. The degree of such maximization,
and the number N of cells per metasurface period to achieve the maximization, is demonstrable
using Fourier analysis. For a retroreflector, the number of cells
N for metasurface discretization is simplified to:

where

is the rounding operator. Combining equations (17), (19), and (21), for a sufficiently
large angle incidence, the number of cells per metasurface period is found to be:

[0037] Hence for angles of incidence beyond 19.5°, the retroreflection metasurface can be
most aggressively discretized to have only
two cells per grating period. A case for minimum discretization concurs with the article published
by
A. Hessel, J. Schmoys, and D. Y. Tseng, Bragg-angle blazing of diffraction gratings,
J. Opt. Soc. Am., vol. 65, no. 4, pp. 380-383, Apr 1975. Application of Equations (13) and (16) shows that the two cells exhibits near-full
reflection amplitude (e.g., "perfect" reflection, or reflection of nearly 100% of
the incident EM waveform) and 180° relative phase shift. A description of the design
and simulation of TE and TM metasurfaces which achieve near-full reflection amplitude
and 180° relative phase shift follows below.
METASURFACE SIMULATION AND DESIGN
[0038] Figure 4A is a diagram of a retroreflection model 400 from a metasurface 402 with
incident 404 and reflected 406A, 406B EM waves, according to some embodiments. Reflected
EM wave 406A is a retroreflected EM wave, returning along the incident direction of
incident EM wave 404. Reflected EM wave 406B is a specular reflected EM wave. Incident
angle θ
i 408 is measured from a reference line 410 normal to a top surface of metasurface
402. In retroreflection, when incident angle θ
i 408 is positive (θ
i >0) and is on one side of reference line 410, specular reflected EM wave 406B has
a reflection angle θ
r,spec 409 that is positive (θ
r,spec >0) on the opposite side of reference line 410. Thus, reflected wave 406A has a reflection
angle (θ
r,retro > -θ
i). Incident and reflected EM waves shown in retroreflection model 400 are contained
in a reflection plane 412 described by the
yz plane (see z-axis 421 and y-axis 422), with the x-axis 423 being perpendicular to
reflection plane 412.
[0039] Whereas a smooth surface reflects incident EM waves 404 in the specular direction
(see 406B), a controlled-reflection metasurface is configured to reflect light in
a direction other than the specular direction. Some embodiments of controlled-reflection
metasurfaces reflect incident EM waves (see incident wave 404) in the retro direction
(see, e.g., reflected EM wave 406A). Some embodiments of controlled-reflection metasurfaces
reflect incident EM waves the retro direction, back toward an EM wave source (not
shown). For a TE polarized wave, the E-field points to the x-direction; for a TM polarized
wave, the
H-field points to the x-direction. In the present disclosure, design of a metasurface
that emanates two diffraction orders — the specular (
m = 0) and retroreflection (
m = -1) orders, is presented. By appropriate metasurface design it is possible to significantly
suppress specular reflection and hence create an efficient retroreflector. The present
disclosure discusses a 24GHz incident wave impinging on a metasurface at a near-grazing
incident angle of
θi = 82.87°. It is noteworthy that the example incident angle and EM wave frequency
are merely intended for clarity of discussion of the principles involved with designing
and making controlled-reflection waves. Other incident angles and wave frequencies
are envisioned within the scope of the present disclosure. Substituting the incident
angle and EM wave frequency into equation (19), the metasurface period Λ
g is found to be:

[0040] The unit cell size
Uy is determined by Equation (24) for a metasurface period discretized into two cells:

[0041] Figure 4B is a flow diagram of a method 440 of designing and making a metasurface
with controlled-reflection characteristics, according to some embodiments of the present
disclosure. A metasurface design is determined by performing an operation 442 in which
the incident angle of the EM waves that are to reflect from a metasurface is selected
to determine the metasurface configuration. In some embodiments, the incident angle
of EM waves to reflect from the metasurface ranges from about 10° to about 88°. In
some embodiments, the incident angle of EM waves is greater than 75° and less than
90°.
[0042] Method 440 proceeds with operation 444, in which at least one reflection angle is
selected for the EM waves incident to the metasurface. In some embodiments, the reflection
angle is negative, and the EM wave reflects generally back toward the EM wave source
or horn. In some embodiments, the reflection angle is equal to the negative incidence
angle of the EM wave (e.g.,
θr = -
θi ). In some embodiments, the reflection angle is positive, but has a different magnitude
than the incidence angle.
[0043] Method 440 proceeds with an optional operation 446, in which the metasurface is divided
into regions according to a number of incident angles and reflected angles selected
in operations 442 and 444, previously.
[0044] Method 440 proceeds with operation 448, in which the polarizations of the EM waves
to reflect off the metasurface are selected. In some embodiments, the metasurface
is configured to controllably-reflect TE-polarized EM waves. In some embodiments,
the metasurface is configured to controllably-reflect TM-polarized EM waves. In some
embodiments, the metasurface is configured to controllably-reflect both TE- and TM-polarized
EM waves.
[0045] When a TE-polarized incident EM wave is selected for controlled reflection, the method
440 proceeds with operation 450, wherein the shape of a conductive element of a TE-reflective
metasurface is determined. Operations associated with determining a shape of a TE-reflective
metasurface are described hereinabove, and are described further by equations (1)-(16),
associated with the determining the dimensions of both a unit cell of a metasurface
and shape / dimensions of conductive elements thereon.
[0046] When a TM-polarized incident EM wave is selected for controlled reflection, the method
440 proceeds with operation 452, wherein the shape of a conductive element of a TM-reflective
metasurface is determined. Operations associated with determining the shape of a TM-reflective
metasurface are described hereinabove, and are described further by equations (1)-(16),
associated with the determining the dimensions of both a unit cell of a metasurface
and shape / dimensions of conductive elements thereon.
[0047] Method 440 proceeds with operation 454, wherein it is determined whether all regions
and all polarizations, as determined in operations 442-446, have been evaluated to
determine the metasurface design or layout. When not all regions or polarizations
have been evaluated, the method proceeds to operation 448.
[0048] Method 440 proceeds with operation 456, wherein the metasurface elements are combined
into a metasurface layout by region, in order to perform the controlled reflection
that is sought after operations 442-446 have been completed. According to some embodiments,
a first region of a metasurface is configured to controllably-reflect both the incident
TE- and TM-polarized portions of an EM wave at a same reflection angle. In some embodiments,
a first region of a metasurface is configured to controllably-reflect both incident
TE- and TM-polarized portions of an EM wave, where TE-polarized EM waves are reflected
at a first reflection angle and TM-polarized EM waves are reflected at a second reflection
angle. In some embodiments, a first region of a metasurface is configured to specularly
reflect one portion (or polarization) of an incident EM wave, and controllably-reflect
a majority of the other portion (or polarization) of the incident EM wave. In some
embodiments, a first region of a metasurface is configured to reflect an incident
EM wave (both TE and TM polarizations) at a first reflection angle and a second region
of the metasurface reflects the incident EM wave (both TE and TM polarizations) at
a second reflection angle, different from the first reflection angle. In other words,
the present disclosure provides a methodology of designing a metasurface that allows
for reflecting portions of more than one EM wave, at more than one incident angle,
at more than one reflection angle, and handling the TE and TM polarized portions of
the more than one EM wave independently.
[0049] Method 440 proceeds with operation 458, wherein a pattern of conductive (metallic)
elements on a top surface of an insulating material, the pattern corresponding to
the metasurface layout, by region, formed during operation 456.
[0050] In a non-limiting embodiment, a metasurface is manufactured using a Rogers RT/Duroid
5880 laminate board with 1/2 oz. copper cladding on both sides. According to some
embodiments, the metasurface is constructed from an insulating material, or insulating
substrate, or dielectric material, with a conductive ground plane on a first, or bottom,
side of the insulating substrate, and a series of unit cells with conductive elements
located therein on a second, or top, side of the insulating substrate. According to
some embodiments, the insulating substrate is an insulator material suitable for printed
circuit board or microstrip manufacturing. According to some embodiments, the insulating
substrate is polyimide, polyethylene, polypropylene, polyisocyanate, polytetrafluoroethylene
(PTFE), fiberglass, or some other non-conductive inorganic or organic material that
electrically isolates the conductive ground plane from the conductive elements on
the top of the insulating substrate. According to some embodiments, the conductive
ground plane and the conductive elements on the top surface of the insulating substrate
are a same metal. According to some embodiments, the conductive ground plane and conductive
elements on the top surface of the insulating substrate are different metals. Some
embodiments of metasurfaces include, but are not limited to, metals such as copper,
aluminum, nickel, silver, gold, brass, and alloys of these and other metals.
[0051] A pattern of conductive or metallic elements on a top surface of an insulating material
is formed, according to some embodiments, by masking a portion of a blanket metallic
film on a top side of the insulating material, with a removable mask, and subsequently
etching the conductive or metallic layer on the top side with an acid, or by sputtering
or abrading the material away from within the openings of the removable mask. In some
embodiments, the ground plane on the bottom side of the insulating material has a
same composition and a same thickness as a conductive or metallic film on the top
side of the insulating material. In some embodiments, the ground plane is also masked,
with a blanket mask material, to protect the conductive or metallic material of the
ground plane from the etching process that forms the pattern of conductive elements
on the top surface of the insulating material during operation 458. According to some
embodiments, a first region, having a first layout, and a second region, having a
second layout, are formed in a same pattern forming operation.
TE METASURFACE ELEMENT DESIGN
[0052] For the TE polarization, a reflection coefficient is implemented using a ground-backed
dipole array. A ground-backed dipole array contains Huygens' source characteristics
when operated in reflection mode. Further, by tuning the length of the dipole one
can vary the phase of Γ
TE by a phase range approaching 360°, with minimal loss.
[0053] Figure 5A is a diagram of a metasurface unit cell 500, where the metasurface is TE-reflective
and includes a ground-backed dipole array. Metasurface unit cell 500 has a cell thickness
502
Sz with a unit cell length 504
Ux and a cell width 506
Uy. The ground-backed dipole 508 has a dipole length 510
Px and a dipole width
Py. According to a non-limiting embodiment, the metasurface unit cell 500 is made on
a Rogers RT/Duroid 5880 Laminate board from Rogers Corp., with a cell thickness
Sz = 1.575mm and 1/2 oz. copper cladding. According to some embodiments, and as described
above in Equation (23), an aggressively discretized unit cell for retroreflection
of an incident a square cell profile, where
Ux = Uy = 3.15mm, and where the ground-backed dipole has a square dipole profile
Px = Py = 0.5mm. According to some embodiments, a ground-backed dipole is a conductive element
on a top surface of an insulating material, as described hereinbelow, that is discontinuous
from conductive elements in unit cells of the metasurface that adjoin the unit cell
containing the ground-backed dipole. For example, ground-backed dipole 508 is surrounded
by an air gap at a top surface of an insulating material, as shown in Figure 5A.
[0054] Figure 5B is a diagram of a simulated RCS measurement 520 the TE reflection coefficient
Γ
TE as a function of the dipole length for unit cell 500 described by Figure 5A, using
Ansys HFSS full-wave electromagnetic simulation. Unit cell 500 has periodic boundaries
in the
x and y directions, with phase shifts corresponding to an incident wave at
θi = -82.87°, a Floquet waveport from the +z boundary, but with a dipole length ranging
from
Px = 1.5mm to 3mm for simulation purposes. Simulation results show a phase change approaching
360° with relatively low energy loss (less than 5% for nearly according to the diagram
520). As noted in diagram 520, operation points
Px1 = 2.16 mm and
Px2 = 2.35 mm differ in phase by about 180°. Thus,
Px1 = 2.16 mm and
Px2 = 2.35 mm are selected to be the operating points of a retroreflection metasurface
for TE polarizations.
[0055] Figure 5C is top view of an effective area or active area of a two cell TEretroreflective
metasurface 540, according to some embodiments. In some embodiments, TE-reflective
metasurface element 542 has a cell length dimensions
Ux =
Uy = 3.149mm,
Sz = 1.575mm,
Py = 0.5mm, although other [see above, Figure 5A] The dipole width
Py = 1.5mm, and dipole lengths
Px1 = 2.16mm,
Px2 = 2.35mm, are configured to generate high-efficiency retroreflection of an incident
24 GHz TE polarized waveform at an incident angle of
θi = -82.87°.
SIMULATION OF PERIOD METASURFACES
[0056] After selection of the dipole cell lengths
Px1 and
Px2, the dipoles are placed adjacent to each other and the scattering properties of the
resultant binary Huygens' metasurface are simulated. Figure 5C shows a top view of
one period of this metasurface. A first simulation of a 2D infinitely periodic extension
of the metasurface is performed using the Floquet simulation described above for the
single element analysis. According to some embodiments, from the first simulation,
the scattered power into the retro and specular modes to be 94% and 6% respectively.
The first simulation demonstrates very efficient retroreflection and suppression of
specular reflection. According to some embodiments, in a second simulation the metasurface
is truncated to 136 cells in the
y-direction to simulate the scattering characteristics of a finite metasurface. The
second simulation is periodic in the x-direction — where the fields are invariant
from element to element — to conserve computational resources.
[0057] Figure 6A is a diagram of a truncated (1D finite) TM retroreflection metasurface
600 used for simulation purposes as described hereinafter in the discussion of Figures
6B-6C according to some embodiments. Metasurface 600 includes a substrate 602 and
a plurality of ground-backed dipoles 604 arranged on / embedded in a top surface 606
of substrate 602. As part of the simulation, the metasurface 600 is surrounded by
an air gap of
λ0/2 in the ±x- and ±
z-directions to simulate radiation boundaries using perfectly matched layers.
[0058] Figure 6B is a diagram 620 a simulated bistatic radiation cross section (a bistatic
RCS) measurement of the truncated TM retroreflection metasurface 600 of Figure 6A,
in the
ϕ = 90° plane (yz-plane) upon illumination of a plane wave at 82.87°, according to
some embodiments. Diagram 620 exhibits a node 622 associated with strong retroreflection,
along with a node 624 associated with weak specular reflection.
[0059] Figure 6C is a comparison diagram of the monostatic RCS 640 in the Φ = 90° plane
(yz-plane) of two surfaces. The dashed line indicates the measured signal 642 associated
with the power of a EM wave reflected from a copper plate. Peaks 644 and 646A-B are
associated with the power of an EM wave reflected from a controlled-reflection metasurface,
according to some embodiments. To clarify the method of measuring signal strengths
shown in Figure 6C, refer to Figure 7, a non-limiting embodiment of an RCS measurement
apparatus 700. In Figure 7, an emitter or horn 704 emits an EM wave 702 that strikes
metasurface 710 and reflects as a reflected EM wave 706 at an illumination angle (q)
714. Effective aperture 712 is calculated by multiplying the area of the metasurface
710 by the illumination angle (q) 714 that the horn, or emitter, makes with the normal
of the metasurface. In some embodiments of RCS measurements, the horn 704 is configured
to emit a TM polarized waveform. In some embodiments of RCS measurements, the horn
704 is configured to emit a TE polarized waveform. The radiation (or reflection) cross
section of a metasurface is determined by emitting recording the strength of the reflected
EM wave 706 as a function of the illumination angle 714. The size of an effective
aperture 712 scales with cos
θ, and the radiation cross section of metasurface 710 scales with cos
2θ. Because a metal plate illuminated from broadside (e.g., the incident angle is 0°),
reflects with 100% aperture efficiency, the monostatic RCS of a copper (or metallic)
plate provides a reference for evaluating metasurface reflection efficiency after
accounting for the size of the aperture. In a non-limiting embodiment, at an incident
angle of ±82°, a binary Huygens' metasurface achieves an RCS of -0.3dB compared to
a copper plate, equivalent to an aperture efficiency of 93%. Thus, efficient retroreflection
is achievable at and/or near the angle of designed retroreflection.
TM METASURFACE ELEMENT DESIGN
[0060] Metasurfaces that exhibit controlled reflection of TM-polarized waveforms are designed
in a manner similar to that described previously for incident TM waveforms, but with
a different metasurface element. At near-grazing angles, the electric field component
of a TM-polarized wave points predominantly in the
z-(vertical) direction with respect to the metasurface. Thus, the electric field component
of a TM-polarized waveform couples ineffectively to a metallic dipole strip elements
on the metasurface. Instead, an array of slots is used to couple to the magnetic field
component of the TM-polarized wave, the Babinet's equivalent to the dipole array of
Figure 6A.
[0061] Figure 8A is a diagram of a unit cell 800 of a metasurface 801, according to some
embodiments. In a non-limiting embodiment, metasurface 801 is a TM-reflective metasurface
with a thickness
Sz 802 with a unit cell length
Ux 804 and a cell width
Uy 806. In unit cell 800, a cell element that interacts with an incident TM-polarized
EM waveform is slot 808 having a slot length
Px 810 and a slot width
Py 812. In some embodiments, thickness
Sz = 3.175mm (125 mil). In some embodiments, the periodicity of the cell is the same
as the periodicity of the TE counterpart discussed previously
(Ux =
Uy = 3.149mm).
[0062] By adjusting the length of the dipole
Px, coupling dynamic between the ground-backed slot array and the incoming/outgoing
waves is adjusted, which in turn adjusts the reflection coefficient Γ
TM of the metasurface. By adjusting the reflection coefficient of a metasurface, the
relationship between the incident angle and reflected angle of an EM waveform is adjusted
in different embodiments of controlled reflection / retroreflective metasurfaces.
[0063] Figure 8B is a diagram 820 of simulated reflection coefficient Γ
TM of a metasurface with a slot array, as a function of the dipole length
Px ranging from 0 to 3.149 mm (the periodicity of the unit cell). Simulations of metasurface
performance were performed using the Floquet formulation as previously explained for
a TE-polarized metasurface. As can be observed, the reflection coefficient Γ
TM attains near-unity magnitude, but the phase variation of the reflected EM waveform
covers over 190°, which is a notable decrease from the near 360° phase range obtained
from the TE counterpart. The decrease in phase variation of reflected EM waveforms
is due, in large part, to the fact that by transforming the metasurface from TE to
TM operation (controlled reflection / retroreflection), the metasurface retained the
original substrate dielectric and the ground plane, whereas in a true Babinet's equivalent
the original substrate dielectric and ground plane would be replaced with a material
of greater magnetic permeability and a magnetic conductor. For diagram 820 with a
less-effective Babinet's equivalent, the reflection response shown is sufficient to
perform retroreflection and demonstrate principles of a metasurface configured for
controlled reflection of a TM-polarized waveform. Based on diagram 820, initial operation
points
Px1 = 0.8mm and
Px2 = 3.149mm are selected to perform a two-cell simulation described hereinbelow by
Figure 8C and supporting sections of the present disclosure for some embodiments of
metasurfaces designed for TM-polarized waveforms. Despite the specific dimensions
of metasurface 801, the unit cell and slot dimensions used therein are not intended
to be limiting to the scope of the present disclosure. The present embodiments addresses
all embodiments of passive controlled-reflection and/or retroreflecting metasurfaces
with ground-backed dipoles and arrays of slots, for all periodicities and unit cell
dimensions, and for all dipole and slot dimensions within the unit cells of the controlled-reflection
/ retroreflective metasurfaces.
[0064] Figure 8C is a top view of a non-limiting embodiment of a metasurface unit cell 840
used for Floquet simulation to give scattering parameters for embodiments of a 2D
infinite extension of the binary Huyugens' metasurface. Metasurface unit cell 840
is a TM-reflective element 842 with a cell length
Ux 843, an cell width
Uy 841, and a dipole 844 with a dipole length
Px1 850 and a dipole width
Py1 852. Element 842 further has slot 846 with slot length
Px2 854 and a slot width
Py2 856. In metasurface unit cell 840, cell width 841 is 3.149mm. In some embodiments,
the unit cell length ranges from 1.2 mm up to 3.2 mm, and is responsive to incident
EM waves having a wavelength ranging from about 12.5 mm to about 3.7 mm. The present
disclosure is anticipated as being applicable to EM waves having a band frequency
ranging from about 24 GHz to about 150GHz, although other band frequencies are also
considered to be within the scope of the present disclosure. According to some embodiments,
a unit cell of a controlled reflection metasurface has a length ranging from about
0.5 mm to about 3.2 mm, although cell lengths both longer and shorter than the unit
cell lengths presented above are also considered within the scope of the present disclosure.
While unit cell lengths shorter than 1mm are sometimes difficult to manufacture according
to methods described herein or methods familiar to practitioners of the art, the principle
of arbitrary reflection angles using ground-backed diodes and slot arrays as described
herein, with appropriate modifications to materials to be compatible with shorter
wavelengths (e.g., having band frequencies greater than 150GHz) are also contemplated
by the present disclosure. From the simulation, the scattered power into the retro
and specular reflection modes is 84.3% and 15.5%, respectively, of the initial EM
waveform. For the simulation disclosed herein, the dipole length
Px1 that provided the largest reflection efficiency is 1.6mm, having a reflected power
efficiency of 99.1% (retroreflection) and 0% (specular reflection), respectively.
Other dipole lengths are envisioned within the scope of the present disclosure, consistent
with the ranges of unit cell lengths disclosed hereinabove. In a non-limiting embodiment,
a slot, as described herein, refers to a dipole that extends across an entirety of
the top surface of a unit cell of a metasurface. In a non-limiting embodiment, a slot
is not electrically isolated from a conductive element of an adjoining unit cell of
the metasurface.
[0065] In some embodiments, and for purposes of simulation, the number of cells in the TM-reflective
metasurface in the
y-direction is truncated at 136 cells to simulate the scattering characteristics of
a finite metasurface. Other numbers of cells of the TM-reflective metasurface are
also envisioned for simulation purposes and for manufactured metasurfaces. For purposes
of the simulation discussed in the present disclosure, the same boundary conditions
are applied for the TM-reflective metasurface as for the TE-reflective metasurface
described previously.
[0066] Figure 9A is a diagram of a simulated RCS measurement 900 of a 136-cell structure
in the
ϕ = 90° plane (yz-plane), with a node 902 corresponding to retroreflection, and a node
904 corresponding to specular reflection. A 906 corresponds to a spurious reflection
at 37°, and appears to be related to the coupling of the incident EM wave with the
surface waves on the metasurface, which then reradiate from the metasurface.
[0067] Figure 9B is a diagram of a simulated RCS measurement 920 of the radiation pattern
of a metasurface similar to that used for the simulation results plotted in Figure
9A, with the addition of a lossy material at each end of the 1D metastructure to promote
dissipation of surface waves after the incident EM wave couples with the metasurface.
In a non-limiting embodiment of a lossy material, FR4 is lossy with regard to 24GHz
and 77GHz EM waves, according to some embodiments of the present disclosure. Other
lossy materials, whether familiar to or discoverable by practitioners of the art,
are also anticipated by and considered within the scope of the present disclosure
as being compatible with controlled-reflection, including retroreflection, metasurfaces
described herein. In Figure 9B, the simulation indicates that an incident EM wave
produces a node 922 corresponding to a strong retroreflection and a node 924 corresponding
to weak specular reflection, and further indicates that the node 906 corresponds to
spurious reflection of simulated RCS measurement 900 is greatly diminished or absent.
In Figure 9B, the strength of the node 922 (retroreflection) is reduced by 0.8db as
compared to node 902 in Figure 9A, and the strength of the node 924 (specular reflection)
is increased by 2.2dB, as compared to the node 904 in Figure 9A, by the addition of
the lossy material at the ends of the 1D metasurface. Thus, the addition of lossy
materials has the effect, in some embodiments of controlled-reflection metasurfaces,
of reduced spurious reflections, but at the cost of increased specular reflection
strength.
[0068] Figure 9C is a comparison diagram 940 that shows the simulated monostatic RCS measurement
(nodes 944, 946A-B, 948A-B), in the
ϕ = 90° plane (yz-plane) of a TE-reflective metasurface and a simulated measurement
942 of a reflection from a copper plate. In comparison diagram 940, nearly 100% retroreflection
occurs at ±82° when considering the effective aperture of the board. The dotted red
line indicates the maximum power that could be reflected given the size of the board,
and it is quite visible that the retroreflective property of the board is very efficient.
[0069] Metasurface adjustment is an important aspect of designing and manufacturing metasurfaces.
Determining a number of metasurface unit cells in a controlled-reflection metasurface
is relevant to the strength of the reflected EM waves that arise from the metasurface.
A number of metasurface elements is also relevant to the direction of the reflected
EM wave that arises from the metasurface. In Figure 9A, node 902 is a retroreflected
2.4 GHz EM wave, and is strongest (maximal) at -80°, whereas the designed angle of
retroreflection for the metasurface was -82.87°. The difference between the actual
and designed retroreflection maxima is due to the finite size of the metasurface.
In some embodiments, increasing the expected angle of incidence is one method of counteracting
the difference between measured reflection angle associated with a finite metasurface,
as compared to a designed reflection angle associated with a "perfect" or infinite
metasurface. In some embodiments, increasing the size of the metasurface shifts the
angle of reflection of an EM wave from a metasurface closer to the designed reflection
angle associated with a "perfect" or infinite metasurface. In Figures 10A-10C, the
size of the modelled metasurface increases from 100 cells to 200 cells, and the reflected
angle changes from -79 to -81° for an incident 2.4GHz EM wave.
[0070] Figure 10A is a diagram of a simulated RCS measurement 1000 of a TE-reflective metasurface
having 100 cells in a one-dimensional (1D) array. Node 1002 (retroreflection) has
a maximum or strongest intensity at -79°.
[0071] Figure 10B is a diagram of a simulated RCS measurement 1020 of a simulated TE-reflective
metasurface having 136 cells in a 1D array. Node 1022 (retroreflection) has a maximum
or strongest intensity at -80°.
[0072] Figure 10C is a diagram of a simulated RCS measurement 1040 of a simulated TE-reflective
metasurface having 200 cells in a 1D array. Node 1042
[0073] (retroreflection) has a maximum or strongest intensity at -81°. As the number of
cells in the simulated 1D array increases, the strength of the specular reflection
node decreases from specular reflection node 1004, the largest of the three nodes
presented herein following simulated RCS measurements, to node 1024 (specular reflection),
to node 1044, the smallest of the specular reflection nodes.
TE-REFLECTIVE METASURFACE REFLECTION MEASUREMENT
[0074] A TE-reflective metasurface was fabricated with 136 cells in the
y-direction (the same number of cells used for the 1D finite simulation described above
in Figure 9B), and 87 cells in the x-direction, having a total area of 428
mm ×
275mm. Two types of measurements were done; monostatic and bistatic radar cross-sections
(RCS). Figures 11A-B show the monostatic and bistatic RCS setup. According to some
embodiments, the number of cells in the
y-direction and the x-direction is variable according to the reflection accuracy, and
to the reflection
[0075] Monostatic RCS measurements described herein were carried out in an anechoic chamber,
with a vertically polarized, K-band horn on one end of the chamber, and a metasurface
on a rotatable stage 5.3m away from the horn. This distance corresponds to the far-field
of an incident EM wave. A
S11 signal is the retroreflected scattering parameter for monostatic RCS antenna. As
a reflected signal increases in strength (e.g., approaching unity), the greater the
detection distance of the reflected signal. Similarly, a stronger reflection signal
corresponds to an improved signal to noise ratio to distinguish a reflected signal
from clutter or noise signals. The
S11 signal was obtained using the time gating function on the vector network analyzer
(VNA) because the reflection due to the horn captured a major component to the
S11 signal, and thus time gating to measure the received signal around the time of interest
allowed accurate measurement of the reflection, and isolation of the metasurface from
reflections due to other sources.
[0076] Figure 11A is a schematic diagram 1100 of a monostatic RCS measurement apparatus,
according to some embodiments. Horn 1102 is a fixed transmission and receiving horn
that emits an incident EM wave, and receives a reflected EM wave, along a wave path
1104. The incident wave impacts a metasurface 1106 with an effective area comparable
to a copper plate 1108 having a different size than the metasurface 1106 that reflects
the incident wave. Metasurface 1106 is rotated by a rotation angle (θ
rot) 1110 to perform the monostatic RCS measurement. At each rotation angle 1110 of the
metasurface 1106, the intensity of reflected EM wave is measured at the horn 1102
and compared to the intensity of the reflected EM wave that would be reflected from
a copper plate having an effective area at the same rotation angle 1110. When the
actual reflected EM wave strength measured at horn 1102 is comparable to the model
EM wave, the metasurface reflection is strongly efficient.
[0077] Figure 11B is a schematic diagram 1120 of a bistatic RCS measurement apparatus, according
to some embodiments. Horn 1124 emits an incident EM wave onto a metasurface 1122 in
a reflection plane 1121, with an incident angle (θ
incident) 1128. After striking metasurface 1122, the incident EM wave becomes a reflected
EM wave and is detected at a movable receiving horn 1126. A variable angle (θ
variable) 1130 between the incident EM wave and the reflected EM wave is recorded for each
incident angle 1128 in order to measure reflection efficiency of the incident EM wave
from the metasurface 1122. According to some embodiments, there are limitations on
the variable angle measured in a bistatic RCS setup because the movable receiving
horn 1126 is only accurate to within ±4° from the fixed horn.
[0078] Figure 12 is a comparison plot 1240 of a monostatic RCS measurement of a copper plate
(lobes 1244 and 1246A-B) and the effective aperture 1242 of the metasurface, according
to some embodiments. The angle on x-axis 1250 is the angle of the wave path 1104 with
respect to the metasurface 1106. The intensity on the
y-axis 1252 is measured at the horn 1102. In Figure 12, retroreflection nodes where
at ±81° the retroreflected power is only 0.1dB smaller than the effective copper plate,
which corresponds to 98% aperture efficiency. Therefore, when considering the effective
aperture, it is seen that most of the power is coupled into an angle very close to
retroreflection.
[0079] Figure 13 is a comparison chart 1300 of a TE-reflective metasurface bistatic RCS
measurement 1302A-B and a copper plate bistatic RCS measurement 1304, according to
some embodiments. Bistatic RCS measurements were performed with an experimental setup
depicted in Figure 11B. The metasurface and/or copper plate was placed on a platform
between two arms as shown in Figure 11B. A
S21 signal is the reflected scattering parameter for a bistatic RCS measurement antenna.
In some incident angles (-82.87° in the present example, although other incident angles
are envisioned) the signal echoed by the metasurface is retroreflected. EM waves that
strike a metasurface at an angle other than the incident angle for which the metasurface
controllably reflects, the reflection is specular, or scattering. The
S21 signal received from the receiving horn was measured using a vector network analyzer
(VNA) after performing two operations. In a first operation, the
S21 background level was recorded into memory (without the metasurface on the platform),
and in a second operation, the metasurface was positioned in front of the incident
wave and the
S21 was measured again, with the subtraction of the background.
[0080] In the present example, the TE-reflective metasurface and the copper plate used to
generate comparison chart have the same surface area. The retroflection from a TE-reflective
metasurface at -82.87° corresponds to 93% of the power that specularly reflects off
a copper plate of the same size, while the specular reflection of the TE-reflective
metasurface is greatly reduced to only 10% when compared to a copper plate. Stronger
suppression at the specular angle is evidenced by the dip at +82.87°. However, the
finite size of the metasurface and the angular width of the incident beam created
appreciable reflection at an angle near the specular angle, for which the suppression
is less dramatic. We can obtain greater efficiency and retroreflection at the designed
angle of -82.87° by increasing the size of the board.
TM-REFLECTIVE METASURFACE REFLECTION MEASUREMENT
[0081] A TM-reflective metasurface was fabricated with a configuration similar to the TE-reflective
metasurface136 cells in the
y-direction (the same number of cells that were used for the 1D finite simulation)
and 87 cells in the x-direction, with a (428
mm×275
mm). We measured the monostatic and bistatic RCS of this metasurface in a similar manner
to its TE counterpart.
[0082] Figure 14 is a diagram 1400 of a monostatic RCS measurement of an effective copper
plate 1408 at ±82.87° and a TM-reflective metasurface (see nodes 1402, 1404A-B, and
1406A-B) according to some embodiments. Node 1402 is associated with specular reflection
from the metasurface, nodes 1404A-B are associated with spurious reflection from the
metasurface, and nodes 1406A-B are associated with retroreflection from the metasurface.
Comparison of the monostatic TM-reflective metasurface reflection and an effective
copper plate at ±82.87°, there is a difference of 0.2dB, which is an aperture efficiency
of 95%. Thus, the majority of the power is coupled into the retroreflected mode. Figure
14 is also consistent with simulation results, where the retroreflected power at ±82.87°
and ±37° is in the range of -18dB to -15dB.
[0083] Figure 15 is a diagram 1500 of a bistatic RCS measurement of an effective copper
plate 1504 and a TM-reflective metasurface 1502A-B, according to some embodiments.
Bistatic RCS experiments presented in Figure 15 are performed at an incident angle
of -81° rather than -82.87° to compensate for the effects of a finite metasurface.
Node 1502A is the RCS node associated with strong retroreflection, and node 1502B
is the RCS node associated with suppressed specular reflection. Node 1502A, with an
incident angle of -81°, is approximately 93% of the power that specularly reflects
off a copper plate.
[0084] We have reported binary Huygens' metasurfaces which achieve strong retroreflection
at near-grazing incidence for both TE and TM polarizations. These binary Huygens'
metasurfaces feature aggressive discretization's of only two elements per grating
period, implemented by ground-backed dipole (for the TE surface) and slot (for the
TM surface) arrays. We have reported their design procedure, and through simulations
and experiments we have demonstrated their capability to achieve strong retroreflection
and greatly suppress specular reflection. Experimental demonstration shows the achievement
of retroreflection at 90-95% aperture efficiency for both polarizations. In departure
from contemporary metasurfaces, the binary Huygens' metasurfaces introduced here boast
single layer construction, large unit-cell sizes and simple elements, which lead to
advantages in relaxed precision tolerance, simple fabrication and robust operation.
These advantages make the binary Huygens' metasurface an attractive candidate for
the design of next-generation cost-efficient, low-profile and effective retroreflectors
for mm-wave and THz frequencies.
[0085] Aspects of the present disclosure relate to a metasurface which includes a dielectric
material; a ground plane on a back side of the dielectric material; and at least one
conductive element on a top surface of the dielectric material, wherein the at least
one conductive element includes at least one of a ground-backed dipole or a slot array.
According to some embodiments, the dielectric material comprises an insulator material
for a printed circuit board. According to some embodiments, the at least one conductive
element further comprises a metal for a printed circuit board. According to some embodiments,
the metasurface is configured to have strong retroreflection of both a TM and a TE
electromagnetic (EM) wave at an incident angle greater than or equal to 0° and less
than 90°. According to some embodiments, a reflection efficiency of an incident electromagnetic
(EM) wave is less than 5% in a specular direction and greater than 95% in a retro
direction. According to some embodiments, the reflection efficiency of the TM polarized
portion of the incident EM wave and the TE polarized portion of the incident EM wave
is greater than 92% in a retro direction. According to some embodiments, the metasurface
is discretized to have not more than two elements per grating period of the metasurface.
According to some embodiments, a first element of each grating period is a ground-backed
dipole, and a second element of each grating period is a slot. According to some embodiments,
the metasurface is configured to reflect an incident electromagnetic (EM) wave at
a reflected angle that is not equal to a specular reflection angle of the incident
EM wave. According to some embodiments, the metasurface is configured to retroreflect
the incident electromagnetic (EM) wave.
[0086] Aspects of the present disclosure relate to a method of designing a metasurface to
reflect an electromagnetic (EM) wave, where the method includes selecting, for the
metasurface, an incident angle of an incident electromagnetic (EM) wave to be reflected;
selecting, for the metasurface, a reflection angle of a reflected electromagnetic
(EM) wave; and forming at least one reflective element on the metasurface, the metasurface
further comprising a conductive element separated from a ground plane by an insulating
substrate. According to some embodiments, the at least one reflective element further
comprises a ground-backed dipole or a slot array. According to some embodiments, the
incident angle is different from the reflection angle. According to some embodiments,
the reflection angle is a negative of the incident angle. According to some embodiments,
a first reflective element of the at least one reflective element is configured to
reflect only a TE-polarized portion of an incident EM wave. According to some embodiments,
a first reflective element of the at least one reflective element is configured to
reflect only a TM-polarized portion of an incident EM wave.
[0087] Aspects of the present disclosure relate to a metasurface that includes an insulating
substrate; a ground plane against a first surface of the insulating substrate; and
conducting elements on a second surface of the insulating substrate, wherein a first
set of conducting elements in a first area is configured to reflect a first incident
electromagnetic (EM) wave having a first incident angle at a first reflection angle,
and a second set of conductive elements in a second area is configured to reflect
a second incident EM wave having a second incident angle at a second reflection angle.
According to some embodiments, the first incident EM wave is the same as the second
incident EM wave, and the first reflection angle is different than the second reflection
angle. According to some embodiments, the first incident EM wave is different from
the second incident EM wave, and the first reflection angle is the same as the second
reflection angle. According to some embodiments, the first incident EM wave is different
from the second incident EM wave and the first reflection angle is different from
the second reflection angle. The foregoing outlines features of several embodiments
so that those skilled in the art may better understand the aspects of the present
disclosure. Those skilled in the art should appreciate that they may readily use the
present disclosure as a basis for designing or modifying other processes and structures
for carrying out the same purposes and/or achieving the same advantages of the embodiments
introduced herein. Those skilled in the art should also realize that such equivalent
constructions do not depart from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure, and
that they may make various changes, substitutions, and alterations herein without
departing from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure.