top of page

ARTICLE

Engineered metasurfaces reflect waves in unusual directions



Photo of the actual metasurface.  @ Aalto University

In our daily lives, we can find many examples of manipulation of reflected waves such as mirrors to see our reflections or reflective surfaces for sound that improve auditorium acoustics. When a wave impinges on a reflective surface with a certain angle of incidence and the energy is sent back, the angle of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence. This classical reflection law is valid for any homogenous surface. Researchers at Aalto University have developed new metasurfaces for the arbitrary manipulation of reflected waves, essentially breaking the law to engineer the reflection of a surface at will.

Metasurfaces are artificial structures, composed of periodic arranged of meta-atoms at subwavelength scale. Meta-atoms are made of traditional materials but, if they are placed in a periodic manner, the surface can show many unusual effects that cannot be realized by the materials in nature. In their article published 15 February 2019 in Science Advances, the researchers use power-flow conformal metasurfaces to engineer the direction of reflected waves.

'Existing solutions for controlling reflection of waves have low efficiency or difficult implementation,' says Ana Díaz-Rubio, postdoctoral researcher at Aalto University. 'We solved both of those problems. Not only did we figure out a way to design high efficient metasurfaces, we can also adapt the design for different functionalities. These metasurfaces are a versatile platform for arbitrary control of reflection.'

'This is really an exciting result. We have figured out a way to design such a device and we test it for controlling sound waves. Moreover, this idea can be applied to electromagnetic fields,' Ana explains.

Power flow–conformal metamirrors for engineering wave reflections Ana Díaz-Rubio, Junfei Li, Chen Shen, Steven A. Cummer and Sergei A. Tretyakov Science Advances, 15 Feb 2019: Vol. 5, no. 2 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aau7288

Contact information:

Ana Diaz Rubio Postdoctoral Researcher at Aalto's Dept. of Electronics & Nanoengineering ana.diazrubio@aalto.fi Tel: +358504099203

Aalto University

  • RSS

Subscribe to our monthly Newsletter

Get the nanotech news that matters directly in your inbox.

Thank you registering!

Follow us on social media

  • LinkedIn
  • X
  • Youtube
  • Tumblr
  • Facebook

Oct 20, 2024

Kobe, Hyogo, Japan

IEEE Sensors 2024

Oct 21, 2024

Athens, Greece

Future Materials Conference 2024

Oct 22, 2024

Salt Lake City UT, United States

IEEE NMDC 2024

bottom of page