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Shrinking a gradient-index-lens antenna system with a spaceplate

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posted on 2025-03-17, 11:30 authored by Michal Mrnka, Thomas Whittaker, David Phillips, Euan Hendry, William WhittowWilliam Whittow

The miniaturization of optical systems is an ongoing challenge across the electromagnetic spectrum. While the thickness of optical elements themselves can be reduced using advances in metamaterials, it is the voids between these elements—which are necessary parts of an optical system—that occupy most of the volume. Recently, a novel optical element coined a “spaceplate” has been proposed, which replaces a region of free space with a thinner optical element that emulates the free-space optical response function—thus having the potential to substantially shrink the volume of optical systems. While there have been a few proof-of-principle demonstrations of spaceplates, they have not yet been deployed in a real-world optical system. In this work, we use a bespoke-designed spaceplate to reduce the length of a gradient-index- (GRIN) lens microwave antenna. Our antenna is designed to operate at 23.5 GHz and the incorporation of a nonlocal metamaterial spaceplate enables the distance between the antenna feed and the GRIN lens to be reduced by almost a factor of 2. We find that the radiation patterns from a conventional and space-squeezed antenna are very similar, with a very low cross-polarization, and only a minor increase in the side-lobe levels when introducing the spaceplate. Our work represents a demonstration of a spaceplate integrated into a real-world optical system operating in microwave spectral region, highlighting the potential for this concept to reduce the physical size of systems in applications including imaging, spectroscopy, radar, and communications.


Funding

"Computational spectral imaging in the THz band"

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

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A-Meta: A UK-US Collaboration for Active Metamaterials Research

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

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The Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Grants - EP/030301/1

European Research Council (Grant No. 804626)

Royal Academy of Engineering

History

School

  • Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering

Published in

Physical Review Applied

Volume

22

Issue

3

Pages

034039-1 - 034039-9

Publisher

American Physical Society

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© The Author(s)

Publisher statement

Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article’s title, journal citation, and DOI.

Acceptance date

2024-08-26

Publication date

2024-09-16

Copyright date

2024

ISSN

2331-7019

eISSN

2331-7019

Language

  • en

Depositor

Prof Will Whittow. Deposit date: 23 September 2024

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