Novel sensor provides bigger picture
Duke University |
Duke
University engineers have developed a novel sensor that is more efficient,
versatile and cheaper for potential use in such applications as airport
security scanners and collision avoidance systems for aircraft, cars or
maritime vessels. The researchers fabricated a unique material, known as a
metamaterial, that acts as a lens to image scenes using fewer components than
conventional detectors. Because of the properties of this human-made material,
much of the additional equipment needed for conventional detector systems --
like lenses, mechanical positioners and data storage or transmissions devices
-- are not required.
The
material itself is a thin laminate with row-upon-row of tiny squares etched
onto copper, each one of which is tuned to a different frequency of light. The
material is flexible and durable enough to be attached to a wall, wrapped
around corners or even laid on the floor like a rug, making it an inexpensive
alternative for a variety of sensing applications.
The new
system works with microwave light and produces two-dimensional images. The
researchers are currently exploring moving the technology to three-dimensional
capability in real-world settings.
The Duke researchers reported their findings Jan. 18 online in
the journalScience. The
research was supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research.
"By
taking advantage of the unique properties of these metamaterials, we were able
to create a system capable of microwave imaging without lenses or any moving
parts, " said John Hunt, a graduate student working in the laboratory of
senior investigator David R. Smith, William Bevan Professor of electrical and
computer engineering at Duke's Pratt School of Engineering.
As an
example, Hunt said that in many security situations, imaging systems move a
single sensor device with a small aperture in front of the body of the subject,
creating an effectively larger aperture. The scanning waves travel through clothing,
but skin or other objects reflect the waves. The new device can scan the entire
field at once, which would allow for faster and more efficient screening, the
researchers said.
"Using
conventional systems such as airport security cameras or collision-detection
devices, you have to wait for a scan to complete before you can see an image,
while the new system can scan an entire range at once," Hunt said.
The
metamaterial is made of thousands of tiny apertures that can detect a wide
spectrum of frequencies, allowing it to obtain a more global image of the
scene, the researchers said.
"Each
individual element of the metamaterial is tuned to narrow frequency," said
Tom Driscoll, a post-doctoral fellow from the University of California -- San
Diego currently working in the Smith lab. "Together the individual
elements scan the entire range to capture information about a scene very
quickly."
"This
system allows us to collect and compress the image during collection, instead
of later, averting the detector, storage and transmission costs associated with
conventional imaging of a scene," Driscoll said.
Source: Duke
University
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