Experimental demonstration and in-depth investigation of analytically designed anomalous reflection metagratings
Oshri Rabinovich, Ilan Kaplon, Jochanan Reis, and Ariel Epstein

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a PCB metagrating designed analytically for efficient anomalous reflection, validated through experiments showing broadband, multifunctional, and multichannel capabilities, with insights into loss mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces an analytically designed, single-element PCB metagrating capable of efficient wide-angle anomalous reflection and multifunctionality, validated through comprehensive experimental investigation.
Findings
Achieves highly-efficient wide-angle anomalous reflection.
Performs well under different illumination angles, acting as a multichannel reflector.
Losses correlate with edge diffraction effects rather than power dissipation.
Abstract
We present the design, fabrication and experimental investigation of a printed circuit board (PCB) metagrating (MG) for perfect anomalous reflection. The design follows our previously developed analytical formalism, resulting in a single-element MG capable of unitary coupling of the incident wave to the specified (first order) Floquet-Bloch (FB) mode while suppressing the specular reflection. We characterize the MG performance experimentally using a bistatic scattering pattern measurement, relying on an original beam-power integration approach for accurate evaluation of the coupling to the various modes across a wide frequency range. The results show that highly-efficient wide-angle anomalous reflection is achieved, as predicted by the theory, with a relatively broadband response. In addition, the MG is found to perform well when illuminated from different angles, acting as a…
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