Bulky devices are an obvious flaw for those interested in Harry Potter-style applications.

Invisibility cloaks put forward by scientists have been fairly bulky devices, until now.  University of Texas at Austin researchers have now developed a cloak that is just micrometers thick and can hide three-dimensional objects from microwaves in their natural environment, in all directions and from all of the observers’ positions.

 

 

Presenting their study on March 26 in the Institute of Physics and German Physical Society’s New Journal of Physics, the researchers, from the Cockrell School of Engineering’s Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, have used a new, ultrathin layer called a “metascreen.”

While previous cloaking studies have used metamaterials to divert, or bend, the incoming waves around an object, this new method, which the researchers dub “mantle cloaking”, uses an ultrathin metallic metascreen to cancel out the waves as they are scattered off the cloaked object.

“When the scattered fields from the cloak and the object interfere, they cancel each other out and the overall effect is transparency and invisibility at all angles of observation,” said co-author and Electrical and Computer Engineering assistant professor Andrea Alú.

Mantle cloaking has potential applications in both the defense and healthcare industries. For instance, this cloaking method could be used for radar camouflaging to avoid detection by radars.

“Mantle cloaking would work better than stealth because it can suppress the shadow of an object, not only its reflections,” Alu said. “It may also have applications for radio communications by eliminating the interference between closely spaced atennas, improving cellular or radio communications in crowded environments.”

The metascreen cloak was made by attaching thin strips of copper tape to a flexible polycarbonate film, which is a fraction of a millimeter thick, in a fishnet design. It was used to cloak an 18 cm cylindrical rod from microwaves and showed optimal functionality when the microwaves were at a frequency of 3.6 GHz and over a moderately broad bandwidth.

(top left) Near-field setup for the cloaked object, illuminated at oblique incidence; (bottom left) far-field scattering measurements; (right) comparison of the near-field measurements for the cloaked and uncloaked objects at normal and oblique incidence; (bottom right) far-field measured scattering cross-sections.

The researchers also predict that due to the inherent conformability of the metascreen and the robustness of the proposed cloaking technique, oddly shaped and asymmetrical objects can be cloaked with the same principles.

Objects are detected when waves – whether they are sound, light, x-rays or microwaves – rebound off its surface. The reason we see objects is because light rays bounce off their surface toward our eyes and our eyes are able to process the information.

“The advantages of the mantle cloaking over existing techniques are its conformability, ease of manufacturing and improved bandwidth,” Alú said. “We have shown that you don’t need a bulk metamaterial to cancel the scattering from an object – a simple patterned surface that is conformal to the object may be sufficient and, in many regards, even better than a bulk metamaterial.”

Last year, the same group of researchers were the first to successfully cloak a 3-D object in another paper published in New Journal of Physics, using a method called “plasmonic cloaking,” which used more bulky materials to cancel out the scattering of waves.

Moving forward, one of the key challenges for the researchers will be to use “mantle cloaking” to hide an object from visible light.

“In principle this technique could also be used to cloak light. In fact, metascreens are easier to realize at visible frequencies than bulk metamaterials, and this concept could put us closer to a practical realization,” Alú said. “However, the size of the objects that can be efficiently cloaked with this method scales with the wavelength of operation, so when applied to optical frequencies we may be able to efficiently stop the scattering of micrometer-sized objects.

“Still,” Alú said, “we have envisioned other exciting applications using the mantle cloak and visible light, such as realizing optical nanotags and nanoswitches and noninvasive sensing devices, which may provide several benefits for biomedical and optical instrumentation.”

Photo credit: Extreme Tech

Via University of Texas at Austin