Ultrahigh-efficient material informatics inverse design of thermal metamaterials for visible-infrared-compatible camouflage

Multispectral camouflage technologies, especially in the most frequently-used visible and infrared (VIS-IR) bands, are in increasing demand for the ever-growing multispectral detection technologies. Nevertheless, the efficient design of proper materials and structures for VIS-IR camouflage is still...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2023-08, Vol.14 (1), p.4694-4694, Article 4694
Hauptverfasser: Xi, Wang, Lee, Yun-Jo, Yu, Shilv, Chen, Zihe, Shiomi, Junichiro, Kim, Sun-Kyung, Hu, Run
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Multispectral camouflage technologies, especially in the most frequently-used visible and infrared (VIS-IR) bands, are in increasing demand for the ever-growing multispectral detection technologies. Nevertheless, the efficient design of proper materials and structures for VIS-IR camouflage is still challenging because of the stringent requirement for selective spectra in a large VIS-IR wavelength range and the increasing demand for flexible color and infrared signal adaptivity. Here, a material-informatics-based inverse design framework is proposed to efficiently design multilayer germanium (Ge) and zinc sulfide (ZnS) metamaterials by evaluating only ~1% of the total candidates. The designed metamaterials exhibit excellent color matching and infrared camouflage performance from different observation angles and temperatures through both simulations and infrared experiments. The present material informatics inverse design framework is highly efficient and can be applied to other multi-objective optimization problems beyond multispectral camouflage. The progress development of multispectral camouflage technologies has been limited to the choice of materials and structural design. Here, authors propose a material-informatics-based inverse design framework to efficiently design multilayer metamaterials with satisfying visible-infrared camouflage performance.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-023-40350-6