Shaping contactless mechanical forces through anomalous metasurface scattering
ORAL
Abstract
Waves impart momentum and exert force on obstacles in their path. The transfer of wave momentum is a fundamental mechanism for contactless manipulation, yet the rules of conventional scattering intrinsically limit the radiation force based on the shape and the size of the manipulated object. In this work, we show that this intrinsic limit can be broken for acoustic waves with subwavelength-structured surfaces (metasurfaces), where the force becomes controllable by the arrangement of surface features, independent of the object's overall shape and size. We will discuss how such anomalous metasurface scattering can be harnessed to demonstrate complex actuation phenomena, such as self-guidance, where a metasurface object is autonomously guided by an acoustic wave, and tractor beaming, where a metasurface object is pulled by the wave. Our results show that bringing metasurface physics of acoustic waves, and its full arsenal of tools, to the domain of mechanical manipulation opens new frontiers in contactless actuation and enables diverse actuation mechanisms that are beyond the limits of traditional wave-matter interactions.
–
Publication: Stein, Keller, Luo, Ilic, arXiv: 2204.04137 (in press in Nature Communications, 2022)
Presenters
-
Ognjen Ilic
University of Minnesota
Authors
-
Ognjen Ilic
University of Minnesota
-
Matthew Stein
University of Minnesota
-
Sam Keller
University of Minnesota
-
Yujie Luo
University of Minnesota