Liquid Metal-Based Microfluidic Metasurface for Controllable Electromagnetic Wave Reflection Attenuation

We demonstrated a liquid metal based microfluidic chip that enabled consistent, continuous and large liquid metal unit structure array reconfiguration. The chips were assembled into a metasurface, which preliminary achieved controllable electromagnetic wave reflection attenuation. The chip contained...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Xu Gao, Ping Li, Zhou Yang, Lingchun An, Zhenhai Wang, Jiarui Guo, Nuo Xu, Wei Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2022-01-01
Series:IEEE Journal of the Electron Devices Society
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9845387/
Description
Summary:We demonstrated a liquid metal based microfluidic chip that enabled consistent, continuous and large liquid metal unit structure array reconfiguration. The chips were assembled into a metasurface, which preliminary achieved controllable electromagnetic wave reflection attenuation. The chip contained a <inline-formula> <tex-math notation="LaTeX">$5{\times }6$ </tex-math></inline-formula> Galinstan split-ring resonator (SRR) array, and the SRRs could be reconfigured continuously by NaOH solution pressure driven. A fin shaped microvalve was designed and integrated onto the chip, which could withstand a high fluid driving pressure (over 210 kPa), so the SRRs could be reconfigured with a large split angle. The flow resistance of each SRR chamber was analyzed for consistent and robust SRRs deformation. The SRRs enabled more than 250&#x00B0; reconfiguration and showed consistent deformation with a standard derivation less than 8.5&#x00B0;. The metasurface showed 7.5 dB and 13.5 dB attenuation at 3 GHz and 4 GHz respectively. Also, with the different split angles, there could be three attenuation peaks that reach &#x2212;10 dB when the frequency ranged from 2.9&#x2013;3.1 GHz, 3.7&#x2013;4.2 GHz and 4.8&#x2013;5.0 GHz, respectively. The metasurface we proposed can be potentially used in multiband controllable electromagnetic wave absorption.
ISSN:2168-6734