Electromagnetic Metasurfaces. Christophe Caloz

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rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_d0fc1bb0-3092-5f10-9ca9-32d55f3698fa">2.3a)StartLayout 1st Row 1st Column bold upper D 2nd Column equals epsilon 0 left-parenthesis upper I overbar overbar plus chi overbar overbar Subscript ee Baseline right-parenthesis dot bold upper E plus StartFraction 1 Over c 0 EndFraction chi overbar overbar Subscript em Baseline dot bold upper H comma EndLayout

      (2.3b)StartLayout 1st Row 1st Column bold upper B 2nd Column equals mu 0 left-parenthesis upper I overbar overbar plus chi overbar overbar Subscript mm Baseline right-parenthesis dot bold upper H plus StartFraction 1 Over c 0 EndFraction chi overbar overbar Subscript me Baseline dot bold upper E comma EndLayout

      where upper I overbar overbar is the unity dyadic tensor. Sometimes, these relations are also expressed in the more compact form

      (2.4b)StartLayout 1st Row 1st Column bold upper B 2nd Column equals zeta overbar overbar dot bold upper E plus mu overbar overbar dot bold upper H comma EndLayout

      where epsilon overbar overbar (F/m), mu overbar overbar (H/m), xi overbar overbar (s/m), and zeta overbar overbar (s/m) are the permittivity, permeability, magnetic-to-electric, and electric-to-magnetic tensors, respectively.

      Practically, some of the 16 media types represented in Figure 2.1 are still challenging. For instance, time-varying (ModifyingAbove Above ModifyingAbove chi With bar With bar left-parenthesis t right-parenthesis) or spatially dispersive (ModifyingAbove Above ModifyingAbove chi With bar With bar left-parenthesis bold k right-parenthesis) metamaterials are more difficult to realize than spatially varying ones (ModifyingAbove Above ModifyingAbove chi With bar With bar left-parenthesis bold r right-parenthesis), which only involve a spatial modulation in their geometry. Moreover, all the materials are de facto temporally dispersive,2 and particularly metamaterials, which strongly rely on resonant scattering particles to manipulate electromagnetic waves. Finally, some of these dependency combinations are also restricted by the uncertainty principle, as shown in [24]. Thus, metamaterial technology is often limited to a subset of the material types in Figure 2.1. Specifically, the most common types of metamaterials exhibit material parameters such as ModifyingAbove Above ModifyingAbove chi With bar With bar left-parenthesis omega right-parenthesis (e.g. quarter/half-wave plates) and ModifyingAbove Above ModifyingAbove chi With bar With bar left-parenthesis bold r comma omega right-parenthesis (e.g. lenses and refractors) and, to a lesser extent, ModifyingAbove Above ModifyingAbove chi With bar With bar left-parenthesis bold k comma omega right-parenthesis (e.g. angularly asymmetric absorbers) and ModifyingAbove Above ModifyingAbove chi With bar With bar left-parenthesis bold r comma bold k comma omega right-parenthesis (e.g. diffractionless refractors). It should be emphasized that this rich diversity of space–time variance and dispersion illustrated in Figure 2.1 is restricted to linear metamaterials. As we will see in Section 4.3, the introduction of nonlinearity further increases the number of degrees of freedom for controlling electromagnetic waves.

Schematic illustration of the classification of (bianisotropic) metamaterials in terms of their space-time variance and dispersion. The I- and D-notations refer to the inverse and direct space/time domains.

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