Uladzislau Papou soutiendra sa thèse intitulée "Conformal and reconfigurable sparse metasurfaces: advanced analytical models and antenna applications" jeudi 16 juillet à 14h.
La soutenance se déroulera :
Composition du jury :
Abstract :
This PhD thesis deals with electromagnetic metasurfaces for wavefront manipulation represented by arrays of scatterers engineered at subwavelength scale. The manuscript develops novel analytical and numerical models that allow one to solve the inverse scattering problem by taking into account all interactions between elements of a metasurface. Specifically, the manuscript focuses on sparse arrays, periodic or not, of structured wires for the application to electronically reconfigurable antennas. The manuscript is divided into two main parts, one on periodic arrangements of wires called metagratings and one on sparse metasurfaces when there is no periodicity imposed. Each part is endorsed by experiments performed at microwave frequencies. In the first part, theoretical conditions for arbitrary control of the diffraction patterns with metagratings, whose period is composed of multiple individually-engineered wires, are established and the importance of the near-field regulation is highlighted. Moreover, an analytical retrieval technique is developed and allows one to consider, with the help of full-wave simulations, arbitrarily structured wires for metagratings operating from microwave to optical domains. In the second part of the thesis, the analytical model of metagratings is generalized, from planar periodic, to arbitrarily-shaped non-periodic distributions of wires by means of numerical calculation of a Green’s function. The concept is applied to design sparse metasurfaces in Fabry-Perot cavity and semi-cylindrical antenna configurations. Finally, the approach is applied to design a reconfigurable planar sparse metasurface. A fabricated sample is exploited to experimentally demonstrate dynamic control of the far-field radiation pattern and the near-field intensity distribution. As such beam-steering, multi-beam manipulation and subdiffraction focusing are shown.