4.6 Article

Compact-sized and broadband carpet cloak and free-space cloak

Journal

OPTICS EXPRESS
Volume 17, Issue 22, Pages 19947-19959

Publisher

OPTICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.1364/OE.17.019947

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [60990320, 60990324, 60871016, 60671015, 60601002, 60621002]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK2008031]
  3. National Basic Research Program (973) of China [2004CB719802]
  4. 111 Project [111-2-05]

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Recently, invisible cloaks have attracted much attention due to their exciting property of invisibility, which are based on a solid theory of transformation optics and quasi-conformal mapping. Two kinds of cloaks have been proposed: free-space cloaks, which can render objects in free space invisible to incident radiation, and carpet cloaks (or ground-plane cloaks), which can hide objects under the conducting ground. The first free-space and carpet cloaks were realized in the microwave frequencies using metamaterials. The free-space cloak was composed of resonant metamaterials, and hence had restriction of narrow bandwidth and high loss; the carpet cloak was made of non-resonant metamaterials, which have broad bandwidth and low loss. However, the carpet cloak has a severe restriction of large size compared to the cloaked object. The above restrictions become the bottlenecks to the real applications of free-space and carpet cloaks. Here we report the first experimental demonstration of broadband and low-loss directive free-space cloak and compact-sized carpet cloak based on a recent theoretical study. Both cloaks are realized using non-resonant metamaterials in the microwave frequency, and good invisibility properties have been observed in experiments. This approach represents a major step towards the real applications of invisibility cloaks. (C) 2009 Optical Society of America

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