Bounds on the Uniaxial Effective Complex Permittivity of Two-phase Composites and Optimal or Near Optimal Microstructures
Kshiteej J. Deshmukh, Graeme W. Milton

TL;DR
This paper derives improved bounds on the uniaxial complex permittivity of two-phase composites, identifies optimal microstructures, and extends existing theoretical techniques to better predict electromagnetic responses of advanced metamaterials.
Contribution
It introduces conjectured tighter bounds, constructs optimal hierarchical laminates, and extends translation bounds to uniaxial composites, advancing the design and analysis of electromagnetic metamaterials.
Findings
Classical bounds on $oldsymbol{ ext{permittivity}}_ot$ are not optimal.
Optimal rank-4 hierarchical laminates achieve the conjectured bounds.
Derived bounds on the sensitivity of effective permittivity in low-loss composites.
Abstract
Electromagnetic materials with a uniaxial effective permittivity tensor, characterized by its transverse () and axial () components, play a central role in the design of advanced photonic and electromagnetic materials including hyperbolic metamaterials, and biological imaging platforms. Tight bounds on the complex effective permittivity of such metamaterials are critical for predicting and optimizing their macroscopic electromagnetic response. While rigorous tight bounds exist for isotropic two-phase composites, corresponding results for uniaxial composites remain relatively unexplored. In this work, we systematically investigate the attainable range of and in the quasistatic regime for two-phase metamaterials with isotropic homogeneous phases. By analyzing known microgeometries and constructing hierarchical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComposite Material Mechanics · Advanced Mathematical Modeling in Engineering · Material Properties and Applications
