|
|
-
Seeing the light
Metamaterials produced by Costas Soukoulis, Distinguished Professor
of liberal arts and sciences and professor of physics and astronomy, found
to work for visible light.
- For the first time ever, researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's
Ames Laboratory have developed a material with a negative refractive index
for visible light.
Ames Laboratory senior physicist Costas Soukoulis, working with colleagues
in Karlsruhe, Germany, designed a silver-based, mesh-like material that
marks the latest advance in the rapidly evolving field of metamaterials,
materials that could lead to a wide range of new applications as varied
as ultrahigh-resolution imaging systems and cloaking devices.
Soukoulis is also a Distinguished Professor of liberal arts and sciences
and professor of physics and astronomy.
The discovery, detailed in the Jan. 5 issue of Science and the Jan. 1 issue
of Optic Letters, and noted in the journal Nature, marks a significant step
forward from existing metamaterials that operate in the microwave or far
infrared - but still invisible - regions of the spectrum. Those materials,
announced this past summer, were heralded as the first step in creating
an invisibility cloak.
Metamaterials, also known as left-handed materials, are exotic, artificially
created materials that provide optical properties not found in natural materials.
Natural materials refract light, or electromagnetic radiation, to the right
of the incident beam at different angles and speeds. However, metamaterials
make it possible to refract light to the left, or at a negative angle. This
backward-bending characteristic provides scientists the ability to control
light similar to the way they use semiconductors to control electricity,
which opens a wide range of potential applications.
"Left-handed materials may one day lead to the development of a type
of flat superlens that operates in the visible spectrum," said Soukoulis.
"Such a lens would offer superior resolution over conventional technology,
capturing details much smaller than one wavelength of light to vastly improve
imaging for materials or biomedical applications," such as giving researchers
the power to see inside a human cell or diagnose disease in a baby still
in the womb.
The challenge that Soukoulis and other scientists who work with metamaterials
face is to fabricate them so that they refract light at ever smaller wavelengths.
The "fishnet" design developed by Soukoulis' group and produced
by researchers Stefan Linden and Martin Wegener at the University of Karlsruhe
was made by etching an array of holes into layers of silver and magnesium
fluoride on a glass substrate. The holes are roughly 100 nanometers wide.
For some perspective, a human hair is about 100,000 nanometers in diameter.
"We have fabricated for the first time a negative-index metamaterial
with a refractive index of -0.6 at the red end of the visible spectrum (wavelength
780 nm)," said Soukoulis. "This is the smallest wavelength obtained
so far."
While the silver used in the fishnet material offers less resistance when
subjected to electromagnetic radiation than the gold used in earlier materials,
energy loss is still a major limiting factor. The difficulties in manufacturing
materials at such a small scale also limit the attempts to harness light
at ever smaller wavelengths.
"Right now, the materials we can build at THz and optical wavelengths
operate in only one direction," Soukoulis said, "but we've still
come a long ways in the six years since negative-index materials were first
demonstrated.
"However, for applications to come within reach, several goals need
to be achieved," he added. "First, reduction of losses by using
crystalline metals and/or by introducing optically amplifying materials;
developing three-dimensional isotropic designs rather than planar structures;
and finding ways of mass producing large-area structures."
Kerry Gibson
Ames Laboratory

Costas Soukoulis
Around LAS
February 5-18, 2007
|
|