Browsing by Subject "microwave radiation"
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Item Open Access Experimental observation of cavity formation in composite metamaterials(Optical Society of American (OSA), 2008) Caglayan H.; Bulu I.; Loncar, M.; Özbay, EkmelIn this paper, we investigated one of the promising applications of left-handed metamaterials: composite metamaterial based cavities. Four different cavity structures operating in the microwave regime were constructed, and we observed cavity modes on the transmission spectrum with different quality factors. The effective permittivity and permeability of the CMM structure and cavity structure were calculated by use of a retrieval procedure. Subsequently, in taking full advantage of the effective medium theory, we modeled CMM based cavities as one dimensional Fabry-Perot resonators with a subwavelength cavity at the center. We calculated the transmission from the Fabry-Perot resonator model using the one-dimensional transfer matrix method, which is in good agreement with the measured result. Finally, we investigated the Fabry-Perot resonance phase condition for a CMM based cavity, in which the condition was satisfied at the cavity frequency. Therefore, our results show that it is possible to treat metamaterial based cavities as one-dimensional Fabry-Perot resonators with a subwavelength cavity. © 2008 Optical Society of America.Item Open Access Graphene-enabled electrically switchable radar-absorbing surfaces(Nature Publishing Group, 2015) Balci O.; Polat, E.O.; Kakenov, N.; Kocabas, C.Radar-absorbing materials are used in stealth technologies for concealment of an object from radar detection. Resistive and/or magnetic composite materials are used to reduce the backscattered microwave signals. Inability to control electrical properties of these materials, however, hinders the realization of active camouflage systems. Here, using large-area graphene electrodes, we demonstrate active surfaces that enable electrical control of reflection, transmission and absorption of microwaves. Instead of tuning bulk material property, our strategy relies on electrostatic tuning of the charge density on an atomically thin electrode, which operates as a tunable metal in microwave frequencies. Notably, we report large-area adaptive radar-absorbing surfaces with tunable reflection suppression ratio up to 50 dB with operation voltages <5 V. Using the developed surfaces, we demonstrate various device architectures including pixelated and curved surfaces. Our results provide a significant step in realization of active camouflage systems in microwave frequencies. © 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.Item Open Access Surface plasmon based enhanced transmission of electromagnetic waves(2004) Bıyıklı, Süheyla Sena AkarcaGrating-coupling phenomena between surface plasmons and electromagnetic waves are studied in the microwave spectrum using metallic gratings. Transmission and reflection measurements were carried out to observe the transmitted and reflected radiation around the surface plasmon resonance frequencies. Grating structures with subwavelength apertures were designed for transmission experiments. Measurements were done in the microwave spectrum of 10−37.5 GHz, corresponding to a wavelength region of 8−30 mm. The Al samples had a grating periodicity of 16 mm. A 2 mm-wide subwavelength slit was opened for transmission samples. Samples with one/double-sided gratings displayed remarkably enhanced transmission and directivity with respect to the reference sample without gratings. The experimental results agreed well with theoretical simulations. ~50% transmission at 20.7 mm, ~25-fold enhancement, and ±4° angular divergence was achieved with a ~λ/10 aperture. Reflection measurements of one-sided grating sample resulted in clear observation of surface plasmon coupling phenomena. Reflectivity peaks were measured around theoretically calculated resonance frequencies.Item Open Access Transmission enhancement through deep subwavelength apertures using connected split ring resonators(Optical Society of American (OSA), 2010) Ates, D.; Cakmak, A.O.; Colak, E.; Zhao, R.; Soukoulis, C.M.; Özbay, EkmelWe report astonishingly high transmission enhancement factors through a subwavelength aperture at microwave frequencies by placing connected split ring resonators in the vicinity of the aperture. We carried out numerical simulations that are consistent with our experimental conclusions. We experimentally show higher than 70,000-fold extraordinary transmission through a deep subwavelength aperture with an electrical size of λ/31xλ/12 (width x length), in terms of the operational wavelength. We discuss the physical origins of the phenomenon. Our numerical results predict that even more improvements of the enhancement factors are attainable. Theoretically, the approach opens up the possibility for achieving very large enhancement factors by overcoming the physical limitations and thereby minimizes the dependence on the aperture geometries. © 2010 Optical Society of America.