Far-Field Magnification of Subdiffraction Conducting Features Using Metamaterial-Lined Aperture Arrays
This paper offers a new approach for far-field high-resolution imaging of conducting obstacles based on arrays of frequency-multiplexed subwavelength resonant elements. Each resonator is a circular aperture in a metallic screen that is strongly miniaturized by means of loading by a thin epsilon-nega...
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Veröffentlicht in: | IEEE transactions on antennas and propagation 2018-07, Vol.66 (7), p.3482-3490 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This paper offers a new approach for far-field high-resolution imaging of conducting obstacles based on arrays of frequency-multiplexed subwavelength resonant elements. Each resonator is a circular aperture in a metallic screen that is strongly miniaturized by means of loading by a thin epsilon-negative and near-zero metamaterial (MTM) liner. Each MTM-lined aperture exhibits a fano-shape transmission profile, i.e., a peak followed by a minimum, and the resonance frequencies of different apertures are chosen such that the resonance of one lies within/very close to the antiresonance of the other to ensure strong decoupling. This paper shows that blocking an aperture using a conducting disc removes the corresponding resonance peak/minimum from the transmission/far-field amplitude spectrum, enabling far-field detection of any distribution of such obstacles with a spatial resolution determined by the aperture sizes, which measure less than one-sixth of free-space wavelength at their respective resonance frequencies. The proposed imaging mechanism is verified through full-wave HFSS simulations as well as far-field measurements. Some challenges associated with this approach are then discussed. |
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ISSN: | 0018-926X 1558-2221 |
DOI: | 10.1109/TAP.2018.2829822 |