Space-Time Metallic Metasurface for Frequency Conversion and Beamforming
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Moreno Rodríguez, Salvador; Alex Amor, Antonio; Padilla De La Torre, Pablo; Valenzuela Valdés, Juan Francisco; Molero Jiménez, CarlosEditorial
American Physical Society
Materia
beam control frequency conversion optoelectronics wave scattering metagratings metasurfaces wireless communication networks finite-difference time-domain method
Date
2024-06-07Referencia bibliográfica
Salvador Moreno-Rodríguez et al. “Space-time Metallic Metasurfaces for Frequency Conversion and Beamforming”. Physical Review Applied, vol. 21, no. 6, 064018, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.21.064018
Sponsorship
Grupo de investigación SWAT-TIC244; MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 TED2021-129938B-I00, PID2020-112545RB-C54, PDC2022-133900-100, PDC2023-145862-I00, IJC2020-043599-I; European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTRAbstract
This paper details a class of metal-based space-time metasurfaces for application in wireless com-
munications scenarios. Concretely, we describe space-time metasurfaces that periodically alternate their
properties in time between three spatial states: “air,” “conductor,” and “grating.” We analyze the physics of
these metastructures via a computationally efficient analytical technique based on the use of Floquet-Bloch
series, integral equations, and circuit models. By doing so, we reveal features of these spatiotemporal
metasurfaces: scattering parameters, field profiles, diffraction angles, and the nature of the space-time
harmonics. The results, corroborated with a self-implemented numerical finite-difference time-domain
approach, show the potential application of these space-time metasurfaces as beamformers acting in
reflection, in transmission or both. The amplitude and direction of the diffracted orders can be electroni-
cally controlled with the parameters of the metasurface. Moreover, the intrinsic ability of time-modulated
diffractive metasurfaces to mix and multiply frequencies is tested. We show how two different modulations
can lead to the same diffraction angle but with different mixed output frequencies.