| Literature DB >> 30111878 |
Tiancheng Han1, Yuexia Liu2, Lei Liu2, Jin Qin2, Ying Li3, Jiayu Bao2, Dongyuan Ni2, Cheng-Wei Qiu4.
Abstract
Impressive progresses have been achieved in the field of metamaterial to mimic the illusion or camouflage effects in nature. These include invisible cloaks and many other cloak-based illusion meta-devices. However, to date many experiments only present single, static or discretized functionalities. The dynamical control of multiple kinds of illusion signals can only be achieved by embedding complex active sources directly connected to external stimuli, leading to limited on/off switching effect in a contact fashion. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a distinct scheme to incorporate multi-functions into one passive Laplacian DC meta-device, assisted by light illumination. It is shown that light-programmable cloaking, full illusion, and partial illusion can be achieved on the same device without physical contact of the heating pads or electric bias, at the cost of only four kinds of natural bulk materials with homogeneous parameters throughout. A DC network is fabricated to demonstrate the proof of concept, with measurement results in good agreement with the numerical simulations. The proposed scheme may open a new avenue to the non-contact multiphysical control of multi-illusion functions for Laplacian fields.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30111878 PMCID: PMC6093913 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-30612-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) The skin texture and color pattern of cephalopods can be fully controlled to mimic their surroundings, showing smart camouflage in nature. (b) A typical switchable illusion device for Laplace field, whose active modules (red colored) are connected with and controlled by a FPGA. (c) Schematic demonstration of the proposed light-programmable illusion meta-device. (d) The schematic of coordinate transformation in which a “man” shrouded by the proposed meta-device will be perceived as two “woman”.
Figure 2Simulated voltage distributions based on FEM in different scenarios. (a) A bare object (a square copper) is connected to ground. (b) The object is shrouded by the proposed meta-device that acts as an invisibility cloak. (c) The object is shrouded by the proposed meta-device that acts as an illusion device. (d) Two equivalent triangular insulators in virtually homogeneous space. Equipotential lines are represented with white color in the panel.
Figure 3(a) Schematic illustration for experimental realization of the proposed light-programmable illusion meta-device. The inset is the detail of chip resistors. (b) Simulated voltage distribution for the reference DC cloak with the central region connected to ground. (c) Measured voltage distribution corresponding to (b). Equipotential lines are represented with white color in the panel.
Figure 4(a) Simulated voltage distribution of the meta-device when the whole device is exposed to bright field. (b) Measured voltage distribution corresponding to (a). (c,d) The simulated and measured voltage comparison along the observation lines x = −16 cm (the green dotted line in (a)) and x = 16 cm (the red dotted line in (a)), respectively. Equipotential lines are represented with white color in the panel.
Figure 5Demonstration of a partial illusion when a part of the device is exposed to bright field. (a) Simulated voltage distribution when the lower part of the meta-device is illuminated. (b) Measured voltage distribution corresponding to (a). (c) Simulated voltage distribution of the equivalent object corresponding to (a). (d) Simulated voltage distribution when the upper part of the meta-device is illuminated. (e) Measured voltage distribution corresponding to (d). (f) Simulated voltage distribution of the equivalent object corresponding to (d). Equipotential lines are represented with white color in the panel.