An accurate method for designing transmissive metasurfaces is presented that provides perfect transmission while transforming the amplitude and phase of the wavefront. The designed metasurfaces consist of three spatially-varying, electric impedance sheets separated by two dielectric substrates. The design method uses integral equations to account for interactions within and between the impedance sheets, allowing for accurate design. In this paper, a comparison between the integral equation method and the local periodicity approximation is presented. The comparison includes one design example for a transmitted field of uniform phase and amplitude. The design using integral equations provides better collimation. Two other examples involving an amplitude tapered transmitted field are reported to show the versatility of the proposed design technique. In all the examples, the metasurface is 7.35λ0 wide, the focal length is 4λ0, and has an overall thickness of 0.1355λ0 at the operating frequency of 5GHz. The designs are verified using a commercial finite element electromagnetic solver.
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