Glide-Symmetric Metallic Structures with Elliptical Holes for Lens Compression
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Alex Amor, Antonio; Ghasemifard, Fetemeh; Valerio, Guido; Ebrahimpouri, Mahsa; Padilla De La Torre, Pablo; Fernández González, José Manuel; Quevedo Teruel, ÓscarEditorial
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Materia
Dispersion analysis Elliptical holes Anisotropy Mode-matching Metasurfaces Periodic structures Glide symmetry Generalized Floquet theorem Mathieu functions PPW
Fecha
2020-08-04Referencia bibliográfica
A. Alex-Amor et al., "Glide-Symmetric Metallic Structures With Elliptical Holes for Lens Compression," in IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, vol. 68, no. 10, pp. 4236-4248, Oct. 2020
Patrocinador
Ministerio de Ciencia Innovación y Universidades under the project TIN2016-75097-P, with European Union FEDER funds under the project FUTURERADIO “Radio systems and technologies for high capacity terrestrial and satellite communications in an hyperconnected world” (project number TEC2017-85529-C3-1-R). French National Research Agency Grant Number ANR-16-CE24-0030, by the Vinnova project High-5 (2018- 01522) under the Strategic Programme on Smart Electronic Systems, and by the Stiftelsen ˚Aforsk project H-Materials (18-302)Resumen
In this paper, we study the wave propagation in a
metallic parallel-plate structure with glide-symmetric elliptical
holes. To perform this study, we derived a mode-matching
technique based on the generalized Floquet theorem for glide-symmetric structures. This mode-matching technique benefits
from a lower computational cost since it takes advantage of
the glide symmetry in the structure. It also provides physical
insight on the specific properties of Floquet modes propagating
in these specific structures. With our analysis, we demonstrate
that glide-symmetric structures with periodic elliptical holes
exhibit an anisotropic refractive index over a wide range of
frequencies. The equivalent refractive index can be controlled
by tuning the dimensions of the holes. Finally, by combining
the anisotropy related to the elliptical holes and transformation
optics, a Maxwell fish-eye lens with a 33.33% size compression
is designed. This lens operates in a wideband frequency range
from 2.5 GHz to 10 GHz.




