标签:
传媒科学科技it杂谈隐形斗篷哈利波特超材质metamaterial矽材料 |
分类: 科学 |
灵活的隐形斗篷“超材料”:下一代光学3D超材料
Invisibility cloak closer with flexible 'metamaterial'
Metamaterials work by interrupting and channelling the flow of
light
“超材质薄膜”研制隐形斗篷
这种薄膜是由微小的纳米结构组成的一种“超材质”。
科学技术的日新月异可以让人们的梦想成为现实,材料研究朝向“隐形斗篷”又近了一步。
隐身斗篷,是一种很神奇的东西,穿上可以隐身。在英国女作家JK·罗琳所著的《哈利·波特》系列小说中是一件神奇的道具。
英国科学家日前发现了一种软性薄膜,这意味着哈利·波特电影中的“隐形斗篷”或将成为现实。
这项研究成果刊登于新一期的英国《新物理学期刊》(New Journal of Physics)。
“超材质”
由圣安德鲁大学(St. Andrews)的法尔科(Andrea Di Falco)带领的研究团队利用一种聚合物和矽材料,通过复杂的技术,研发出这种薄膜。
这种薄膜是由微小的纳米结构组成的一种“超材质”(metamaterial),在混合表面由于光线的处理而制造透明的效果。
灵活的“超材料”之前已经出现过,只有在特定波长、颜色的光谱下,才能产生透明效果。
物理学家奥尔特温赫斯(Ortwin Hess)表示,虽然这项研究成果还不是真正意义上的“隐形斗篷”,但在许多方面朝着这个方向迈出了巨大一步。
原文:
Scientists in the UK have demonstrated a flexible film that
represents a big step toward the "invisibility cloak" made famous
by Harry Potter.
The film contains tiny structures that together form a "metamaterial", which can, among other tricks, manipulate light to render objects invisible.
Flexible metamaterials have been made before, but only work for light of a colour far beyond that which we see.
Physicists have hailed the approach a "huge step forward".
The bendy approach for visible light is reported in the New Journal of Physics.
Metamaterials work by interrupting and channelling the flow of light at a fundamental level; in a sense they can be seen as bouncing light waves around in a prescribed fashion to achieve a particular result.
But light waves can only be herded around by structures about the size of their wavelength - a property which is connected to their colour.
Until now, the most striking demonstrations of invisibility have occurred for light waves with a much longer wavelength than we can see. This is because it is simply easier to construct metamaterials with relatively large structures.
Even flexible metamaterial films have been shown off for this high-wavelength range.
For the far shorter waves we can see, a metamaterial requires structures so tiny - nanostructures - that they push the boundaries of manufacturing.
"The first step is imagining first of all that this could be done," said Andrea Di Falco of St Andrews University, the author of the paper.
"All the typical results have been reached in flat and rigid surfaces because this is the legacy of the procedures used to create nanostructures."
So instead of building the typical stacks of the "fishnet" structures on hard, brittle silicon, Dr Di Falco used a thin polymer film.
"Typically what you do is stack several layers of fishnet structures and this all together will give you a metamaterial," Dr Di Falco explained.
"What I've done here is fabricate a single layer - I lift it off so that at the end I am left with a self-standing membrane - and show that it has the properties required to create a 3D flexible metamaterial."
Tents moment
Ortwin Hess, a physicist who recently took up the Leverhulme Chair
in Metamaterials at Imperial College London, called the work "a
huge step forward in very many ways".
"It clearly isn't an invisibility cloak yet - but it's the right step toward that," he told BBC News.
He added that the next step would be to characterise the way that the material's optical properties change as it is bent and folded.
If the properties were sensitive to the movement, it may be useful for next-generation optics and lenses in, for example, handheld cameras.
If instead they were impervious to bending and motion, the invisibility cloak could be that much closer - but Professor Hess added that is still some way off.
"Harry Potter has to wait still - that's the huge goal," he said.
"So far he's had to live in a house and now he can live in
something like a tent; it's not the cloak that adjusts to his
shape, but it's a bit more flexible. Now we have to take the next
step forward."