Slow waves in locally resonant metamaterials line defect waveguides
Nad\`ege Kaina, Alexandre Causier, Yoan Bourlier, Mathias Fink, Thomas, Berthelot, Geoffroy Lerosey

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that locally resonant metamaterials with line defect waveguides can achieve significantly slowed wave propagation at deep sub-wavelength scales, with high group indices and broad bandwidths, in the microwave regime.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach using coupled resonant defects in locally resonant metamaterials to create deep sub-wavelength waveguides with tunable slow wave propagation.
Findings
Achieved group indices up to 227.
Demonstrated broad bandwidths for slow wave propagation.
Validated the concept through experiments and numerical simulations.
Abstract
In the past decades, many efforts have been devoted to the temporal manipulation of waves, especially focusing on slowing down their propagation. In electromagnetism, from microwave to optics, as well as in acoustics or for elastic waves, slow wave propagation indeed largely benefits both applied and fundamental physics. It is for instance essential in analog signal computing through the design of components such as delay lines and buffers, and it is one of the prerequisite for increased wave/matter interactions. Despite the interest of a broad community, researches have mostly been conducted in optics along with the development of wavelength scaled structured composite media, that appear promising candidates for compact slow light components. Yet their minimum structural scale prevents them from being transposed to lower frequencies where wavelengths range from sub-millimeter to…
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