4.0 Article

A Beam-Splitting Bianisotropic Metasurface Designed by Optimization and Machine Learning

Journal

IEEE OPEN JOURNAL OF ANTENNAS AND PROPAGATION
Volume 3, Issue -, Pages 798-811

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/OJAP.2022.3190224

Keywords

Surface treatment; Metasurfaces; Microscopy; Optimization; Surface impedance; Machine learning; Method of moments; metasurfaces; surface waves; inverse design; machine learning; non-uniform metasurface; optimization; surrogate models

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)

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Electromagnetic metasurfaces have attracted attention due to their low profile and advantageous applications, but the design process is challenging and requires macroscopic and microscopic design steps. Through iterative optimization and machine learning surrogate models, successful realization of surface properties with far-field patterns compliant with constraints has been achieved.
Electromagnetic metasurfaces have attracted significant interest recently due to their low profile and advantageous applications. Practically, many metasurface designs start with a set of constraints for the radiated far-field, such as main-beam direction(s) and side lobe levels, and end with a non-uniform physical structure for the surface. This problem is quite challenging, since the required tangential field transformations are not completely known when only constraints are placed on the scattered fields. Hence, the required surface properties cannot be solved for analytically. Moreover, the translation of the desired surface properties to the physical unit cells can be time-consuming and difficult, as it is often a one-to-many mapping in a large solution space. Here, we divide the inverse design process into two steps: a macroscopic and microscopic design step. In the former, we use an iterative optimization process to find the surface properties that radiate a far-field pattern that complies with specified constraints. This iterative process exploits non-radiating currents to ensure a passive and lossless design. In the microscopic step, these optimized surface properties are realized with physical unit cells using machine learning surrogate models. The effectiveness of this end-to-end synthesis process is demonstrated through measurement results of a beam-splitting prototype.

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