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Elastic Metasurfaces for Deep and Robust Subwavelength Focusing and Imaging
Archive ouverte : Article de revue
Edité par HAL CCSD ; American Physical Society
International audience. Metasurfaces are planar metamaterials with a flat surface and a subwavelength thickness that are able to shape arbitrary wave fronts such as focusing or imaging. There is a broad interest in the literature about subwavelength focusing and imaging based on bulk metamaterials while the utilization of metasurfaces for elastic waves has rarely been reported. Here, we present a type of elastic metasurface consisting of a line of gradient resonant pillars for robust deep subwavelength focusing and imaging of elastic waves in a plate. Numerical approaches supported by analytic Huygens-Fresnel demonstrations show that the subwavelength full width at half maximum (FWHM) behaves linearly as a function of the ratio F/D where F is the measured focal length and D the metasurface length. We discuss the range of F/D where FWHM remains smaller than half a wavelength in the near field. The focal length F and the FWHM exhibit stable performances when submitted to disorder perturbations in the geometrical parameters and to frequency fluctuations. We show that the enhanced focusing resolution with smaller FWHM can be very beneficial for energy harvesting since the output electric power can be increased by more than one order of magnitude. The proposed elastic metasurfaces bring a way for high resolution focusing and imaging which is useful for applications in various domains such as energy harvesting, wave sensing, communication, nondestructive evaluation.